How to select lines between two marker patterns which may occur multiple times with awk/sed
Use awk
with a flag to trigger the print when necessary:
$ awk '/abc/{flag=1;next}/mno/{flag=0}flag' file
def1
ghi1
jkl1
def2
ghi2
jkl2
How does this work?
/abc/
matches lines having this text, as well as/mno/
does./abc/{flag=1;next}
sets theflag
when the textabc
is found. Then, it skips the line./mno/{flag=0}
unsets theflag
when the textmno
is found.- The final
flag
is a pattern with the default action, which is toprint $0
: ifflag
is equal 1 the line is printed.
For a more detailed description and examples, together with cases when the patterns are either shown or not, see How to select lines between two patterns?.
Using sed
:
sed -n -e '/^abc$/,/^mno$/{ /^abc$/d; /^mno$/d; p; }'
The -n
option means do not print by default.
The pattern looks for lines containing just abc
to just mno
, and then executes the actions in the { ... }
. The first action deletes the abc
line; the second the mno
line; and the p
prints the remaining lines. You can relax the regexes as required. Any lines outside the range of abc
..mno
are simply not printed.
This might work for you (GNU sed):
sed '/^abc$/,/^mno$/{//!b};d' file
Delete all lines except for those between lines starting abc
and mno