How to split larger files into smaller parts?
There are several ways to accomplish this. Let's start with the basic ones.
Using the split and cat commands:
Lets says I have an image and its too big (10MB). All I do is:
split --bytes=1M /path/to/image/image.jpg /path/to/image/prefixForNewImagePieces
and then to put it together I use cat:
cat prefixFiles* > newimage.jpg
For example:
Assuming am inside the folder where the image is:
split --bytes=1M myimage.jpg new
if the image is inside a directory called images you can also do this:
split --bytes=1M images/myimage.jpg new
If the image is inside the directory /home/cyrex/images you can do this:
split --bytes=1M /home/cyrex/images/myimage.jpg new
(In all the cases above it will split myimage.jpg
in 1MB pieces and prefix the name of the pieces with the word new. So they would look like newaa
, newab
, newac
, newad
...)
If you are splitting a Text file and want to split it by lines you can do this:
split -l 1000 book.txt new
Which will split the text file in output files of 1000 lines each. This is another way to split a file and is mostly used for text files like logs, sql dumps, csv files, etc..
Then I merge them
cat new* > newimage.jpg
This is one way. You can even change the size of the splitted pieces. Just change the part that says --bytes=1M
to --bytes=1K
for 1 kilobyte or 1G for giga, or another number like --bytes=4K
for 4KB pieces.
Using Nautilus
Another way is the compress option in the gui of Nautilus. It gives you an option to split the file or files you want to compress into smaller megabyte sizes. Its simple and easy.
Yet another way is using 7z
Assuming you have an ISO image called ubuntu.iso
you could do this:
7z a -v5m -mx0 ubuntu.7z ubuntu.iso
This will create 5MB size files from the ubuntu.iso
. The -v5m
is the volume size so you can change it to 10, 12, 1, 3 and also the m can be changed to k for kilobytes, etc; the -mx0
switch tells 7-Zip to use no compression, that is, just to split data into parts.
To extract just do
7z x ubuntu.7z.001
this way you extract the first file and 7z starts extracting from the following files in order. You can also do
7z e ubuntu.7z.001
which has the same effect here.
Using split -b
with the appropriate number, you can get three pieces.
Number could be:
size=$(wc -c <"file name")
one_third=$((size/3+1))
To reassemble, use cat
cat "file name"* > "file name"
Manual pages will help fill the details.
Gnome split? http://gnome-split.org/
GNOME Split is a tool that allows you to split files and merge them back. It is written in Java and uses a GTK+ user interface (thanks to the java-gnome project). The goal is to offer a native implementation of similar projects which can handle multiple file formats (e.g. Xtremsplit).
http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2010/08/split-large-files-easily-in-ubuntu-with-gnome-split/