How to reverse column order of a file in Linux from the command line
More than two columns
printf "\
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
" | awk '{for(i=NF;i>1;i--)printf "%s ",$i;printf "%s",$1;print ""}'
Output:
4 3 2 1
8 7 6 5
See also: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/46275/swapping-an-unlimited-number-of-columns
Tested in GNU Awk 4.0.1.
The simplest solution is:
awk '{print $2 "\t" $1}'
However, there are some issues. If there may be white space in either of the fields, you need to do one of: (depending on if your awk supports -v)
awk -v FS='\t' '{print $2 "\t" $1}' awk 'BEGIN{ FS="\t" } {print $2 "\t" $1}'
Alternatively, you can do one of:
awk -v OFS='\t' '{print $2,$1}' awk 'BEGIN{ OFS="\t" } {print $2,$1}' awk -v FS='\t' -v OFS='\t' '{print $2,$1}' # if allowing spaces in fields
One of the comments asks, 'where does the filename go'? awk is used as a filter, so it would typically appear as:
$ some-cmd | awk ... | other-cmd
with no filename given. Or, a filename can be given as an argument after all commands:
$ awk ... filename
Use awk:
awk '{print $2,$1}' ip-list
That should give you what you want.