man/cat1p/sort.1p.txt

sort(P) sort(P)
 
 
 
 
 
NAME
       sort - sort, merge, or sequence check text files
 
SYNOPSIS
       sort [-m][-o output][-bdfinru][-t char][-k keydef]...
       [file...]
 
       sort -c [-bdfinru][-t char][-k keydef][file]
 
 
DESCRIPTION
       The sort utility shall perform one of the following
       functions:
 
       Sort lines of all the named files together and write the
       result to the specified output.
 
       Merge lines of all the named (presorted) files together
       and write the result to the specified output.
 
       Check that a single input file is correctly presorted.
 
       Comparisons shall be based on one or more sort keys
       extracted from each line of input (or, if no sort keys
       are specified, the entire line up to, but not including,
       the terminating <newline>), and shall be performed using
       the collating sequence of the current locale.
 
OPTIONS
       The sort utility shall conform to the Base Definitions
       volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 12.2, Utility
       Syntax Guidelines, and the -k keydef option should fol-
       low the -b, -d, -f, -i, -n, and -r options.
 
       The following options shall be supported:
 
       -c Check that the single input file is ordered as
              specified by the arguments and the collating
              sequence of the current locale. No output shall
              be produced; only the exit code shall be
              affected.
 
       -m Merge only; the input file shall be assumed to be
              already sorted.
 
       -o output
              Specify the name of an output file to be used
              instead of the standard output. This file can be
              the same as one of the input files.
 
       -u Unique: suppress all but one in each set of lines
              having equal keys. If used with the -c option,
              check that there are no lines with duplicate
              keys, in addition to checking that the input file
              is sorted.
 
 
       The following options shall override the default order-
       ing rules. When ordering options appear independent of
       any key field specifications, the requested field order-
       ing rules shall be applied globally to all sort keys.
       When attached to a specific key (see -k), the specified
       ordering options shall override all global ordering
       options for that key.
 
       -d Specify that only <blank>s and alphanumeric char-
              acters, according to the current setting of
              LC_CTYPE , shall be significant in comparisons.
              The behavior is undefined for a sort key to which
              -i or -n also applies.
 
       -f Consider all lowercase characters that have
              uppercase equivalents, according to the current
              setting of LC_CTYPE , to be the uppercase equiva-
              lent for the purposes of comparison.
 
       -i Ignore all characters that are non-printable,
              according to the current setting of LC_CTYPE .
 
       -n Restrict the sort key to an initial numeric
              string, consisting of optional <blank>s, optional
              minus sign, and zero or more digits with an
              optional radix character and thousands separators
              (as defined in the current locale), which shall
              be sorted by arithmetic value. An empty digit
              string shall be treated as zero. Leading zeros
              and signs on zeros shall not affect ordering.
 
       -r Reverse the sense of comparisons.
 
 
       The treatment of field separators can be altered using
       the options:
 
       -b Ignore leading <blank>s when determining the
              starting and ending positions of a restricted
              sort key. If the -b option is specified before
              the first -k option, it shall be applied to all
              -k options. Otherwise, the -b option can be
              attached independently to each -k field_start or
              field_end option-argument (see below).
 
       -t char
              Use char as the field separator character; char
              shall not be considered to be part of a field
              (although it can be included in a sort key). Each
              occurrence of char shall be significant (for
              example, <char><char> delimits an empty field).
              If -t is not specified, <blank>s shall be used as
              default field separators; each maximal non-empty
              sequence of <blank>s that follows a non- <blank>
              shall be a field separator.
 
 
       Sort keys can be specified using the options:
 
       -k keydef
              The keydef argument is a restricted sort key
              field definition. The format of this definition
              is:
 
 
              field_start[type][,field_end[type]]
 
       where field_start and field_end define a key field
       restricted to a portion of the line (see the EXTENDED
       DESCRIPTION section), and type is a modifier from the
       list of characters 'b' , 'd' , 'f' , 'i' , 'n' , 'r' .
       The 'b' modifier shall behave like the -b option, but
       shall apply only to the field_start or field_end to
       which it is attached. The other modifiers shall behave
       like the corresponding options, but shall apply only to
       the key field to which they are attached; they shall
       have this effect if specified with field_start,
       field_end, or both. If any modifier is attached to a
       field_start or to a field_end, no option shall apply to
       either. Implementations shall support at least nine
       occurrences of the -k option, which shall be significant
       in command line order. If no -k option is specified, a
       default sort key of the entire line shall be used.
 
       When there are multiple key fields, later keys shall be
       compared only after all earlier keys compare equal.
       Except when the -u option is specified, lines that oth-
       erwise compare equal shall be ordered as if none of the
       options -d, -f, -i, -n, or -k were present (but with -r
       still in effect, if it was specified) and with all bytes
       in the lines significant to the comparison. The order in
       which lines that still compare equal are written is
       unspecified.
 
 
OPERANDS
       The following operand shall be supported:
 
       file A pathname of a file to be sorted, merged, or
              checked. If no file operands are specified, or if
              a file operand is '-' , the standard input shall
              be used.
 
 
STDIN
       The standard input shall be used only if no file oper-
       ands are specified, or if a file operand is '-' . See
       the INPUT FILES section.
 
INPUT FILES
       The input files shall be text files, except that the
       sort utility shall add a <newline> to the end of a file
       ending with an incomplete last line.
 
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The following environment variables shall affect the
       execution of sort:
 
       LANG Provide a default value for the internationaliza-
              tion variables that are unset or null. (See the
              Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,
              Section 8.2, Internationalization Variables for
              the precedence of internationalization variables
              used to determine the values of locale cate-
              gories.)
 
       LC_ALL If set to a non-empty string value, override the
              values of all the other internationalization
              variables.
 
       LC_COLLATE
 
              Determine the locale for ordering rules.
 
       LC_CTYPE
              Determine the locale for the interpretation of
              sequences of bytes of text data as characters
              (for example, single-byte as opposed to multi-
              byte characters in arguments and input files) and
              the behavior of character classification for the
              -b, -d, -f, -i, and -n options.
 
       LC_MESSAGES
              Determine the locale that should be used to
              affect the format and contents of diagnostic mes-
              sages written to standard error.
 
       LC_NUMERIC
 
              Determine the locale for the definition of the
              radix character and thousands separator for the
              -n option.
 
       NLSPATH
              Determine the location of message catalogs for
              the processing of LC_MESSAGES .
 
 
ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
       Default.
 
STDOUT
       Unless the -o or -c options are in effect, the standard
       output shall contain the sorted input.
 
STDERR
       The standard error shall be used for diagnostic mes-
       sages. A warning message about correcting an incomplete
       last line of an input file may be generated, but need
       not affect the final exit status.
 
OUTPUT FILES
       If the -o option is in effect, the sorted input shall be
       written to the file output.
 
EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
       The notation:
 
 
              -k field_start[type][,field_end[type]]
 
       shall define a key field that begins at field_start and
       ends at field_end inclusive, unless field_start falls
       beyond the end of the line or after field_end, in which
       case the key field is empty. A missing field_end shall
       mean the last character of the line.
 
       A field comprises a maximal sequence of non-separating
       characters and, in the absence of option -t, any preced-
       ing field separator.
 
       The field_start portion of the keydef option-argument
       shall have the form:
 
 
              field_number[.first_character]
 
       Fields and characters within fields shall be numbered
       starting with 1. The field_number and first_character
       pieces, interpreted as positive decimal integers, shall
       specify the first character to be used as part of a sort
       key. If .first_character is omitted, it shall refer to
       the first character of the field.
 
       The field_end portion of the keydef option-argument
       shall have the form:
 
 
              field_number[.last_character]
 
       The field_number shall be as described above for
       field_start. The last_character piece, interpreted as a
       non-negative decimal integer, shall specify the last
       character to be used as part of the sort key. If
       last_character evaluates to zero or .last_character is
       omitted, it shall refer to the last character of the
       field specified by field_number.
 
       If the -b option or b type modifier is in effect, char-
       acters within a field shall be counted from the first
       non- <blank> in the field. (This shall apply separately
       to first_character and last_character.)
 
EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values shall be returned:
 
        0 All input files were output successfully, or -c
              was specified and the input file was correctly
              sorted.
 
        1 Under the -c option, the file was not ordered as
              specified, or if the -c and -u options were both
              specified, two input lines were found with equal
              keys.
 
       >1 An error occurred.
 
 
CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS
       Default.
 
       The following sections are informative.
 
APPLICATION USAGE
       The default value for -t, <blank>, has different proper-
       ties from, for example, -t "<space>". If a line con-
       tains:
 
 
              <space><space>foo
 
       the following treatment would occur with default separa-
       tion as opposed to specifically selecting a <space>:
   Field Default -t "<space>"
   1 <space><space>foo empty
   2 empty empty
   3 empty foo
 
       The leading field separator itself is included in a
       field when -t is not used. For example, this command
       returns an exit status of zero, meaning the input was
       already sorted:
 
 
              sort -c -k 2 <<eof
              y<tab>b
              x<space>a
              eof
 
       (assuming that a <tab> precedes the <space> in the cur-
       rent collating sequence). The field separator is not
       included in a field when it is explicitly set via -t.
       This is historical practice and allows usage such as:
 
 
              sort -t "|" -k 2n <<eof
              Atlanta|425022|Georgia
              Birmingham|284413|Alabama
              Columbia|100385|South Carolina
              eof
 
       where the second field can be correctly sorted numeri-
       cally without regard to the non-numeric field separator.
 
       The wording in the OPTIONS section clarifies that the
       -b, -d, -f, -i, -n, and -r options have to come before
       the first sort key specified if they are intended to
       apply to all specified keys. The way it is described in
       this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 matches historical
       practice, not historical documentation. The results are
       unspecified if these options are specified after a -k
       option.
 
       The -f option might not work as expected in locales
       where there is not a one-to-one mapping between an
       uppercase and a lowercase letter.
 
EXAMPLES
       The following command sorts the contents of infile with
       the second field as the sort key:
 
 
              sort -k 2,2 infile
 
       The following command sorts, in reverse order, the con-
       tents of infile1 and infile2, placing the output in out-
       file and using the second character of the second field
       as the sort key (assuming that the first character of
       the second field is the field separator):
 
 
              sort -r -o outfile -k 2.2,2.2 infile1 infile2
 
       The following command sorts the contents of infile1 and
       infile2 using the second non- <blank> of the second
       field as the sort key:
 
 
              sort -k 2.2b,2.2b infile1 infile2
 
       The following command prints the System V password file
       (user database) sorted by the numeric user ID (the third
       colon-separated field):
 
 
              sort -t : -k 3,3n /etc/passwd
 
       The following command prints the lines of the already
       sorted file infile, suppressing all but one occurrence
       of lines having the same third field:
 
 
              sort -um -k 3.1,3.0 infile
 
RATIONALE
       Examples in some historical documentation state that
       options -um with one input file keep the first in each
       set of lines with equal keys. This behavior was deemed
       to be an implementation artifact and was not standard-
       ized.
 
       The -z option was omitted; it is not standard practice
       on most systems and is inconsistent with using sort to
       sort several files individually and then merge them
       together. The text concerning -z in historical documen-
       tation appeared to require implementations to determine
       the proper buffer length during the sort phase of opera-
       tion, but not during the merge.
 
       The -y option was omitted because of non-portability.
       The -M option, present in System V, was omitted because
       of non-portability in international usage.
 
       An undocumented -T option exists in some implementa-
       tions. It is used to specify a directory for intermedi-
       ate files. Implementations are encouraged to support
       the use of the TMPDIR environment variable instead of
       adding an option to support this functionality.
 
       The -k option was added to satisfy two objections.
       First, the zero-based counting used by sort is not con-
       sistent with other utility conventions. Second, it did
       not meet syntax guideline requirements.
 
       Historical documentation indicates that "setting -n
       implies -b". The description of -n already states that
       optional leading <blank>s are tolerated in doing the
       comparison. If -b is enabled, rather than implied, by
       -n, this has unusual side effects. When a character off-
       set is used in a column of numbers (for example, to sort
       modulo 100), that offset is measured relative to the
       most significant digit, not to the column. Based upon a
       recommendation from the author of the original sort
       utility, the -b implication has been omitted from this
       volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, and an application wish-
       ing to achieve the previously mentioned side effects has
       to code the -b flag explicitly.
 
FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       None.
 
SEE ALSO
       comm , join , uniq , the System Interfaces volume of
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, toupper()
 
COPYRIGHT
       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in
       electronic form from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition,
       Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operat-
       ing System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base Speci-
       fications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003 by the Insti-
       tute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and
       The Open Group. In the event of any discrepancy between
       this version and the original IEEE and The Open Group
       Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard
       is the referee document. The original Standard can be
       obtained online at http://www.open-
       group.org/unix/online.html .
 
 
 
POSIX 2003 sort(P)