Return code of sed for no match
as @cnicutar commented, the return code of a command means if the command was executed successfully. has nothing to do with the logic you implemented in the codes/scripts.
so if you have:
echo "foo"|sed '/bar/ s/a/b/'
sed will return 0
but if you write some syntax/expression errors, or the input/file doesn't exist, sed cannot execute your request, sed will return 1.
workaround
this is actually not workaround. sed has q
command: (from man page):
q [exit-code]
here you can define exit-code as you want. For example '/foo/!{q100}; {s/f/b/}'
will exit with code 100 if foo
isn't present, and otherwise perform the substitution f->b and exit with code 0.
Matched case:
kent$ echo "foo" | sed '/foo/!{q100}; {s/f/b/}'
boo
kent$ echo $?
0
Unmatched case:
kent$ echo "trash" | sed '/foo/!{q100}; {s/f/b/}'
trash
kent$ echo $?
100
I hope this answers your question.
edit
I must add that, the above example is just for one-line processing. I don't know your exact requirement. when you want to get exit 1
. one-line unmatched or the whole file. If whole file unmatching case, you may consider awk, or even do a grep
before your text processing...
This might work for you (GNU sed):
sed '/search-string/{s//replacement-string/;h};${x;/./{x;q0};x;q1}' file
If the search-string
is found it will be replaced with replacement-string
and at end-of-file sed
will exit with 0
return code. If no substitution takes place the return code will be 1
.
A more detailed explanation:
In sed the user has two registers at his disposal: the pattern space (PS) in which the current line is loaded into (minus the linefeed) and a spare register called the hold space (HS) which is initially empty.
The general idea is to use the HS as a flag to indicate if a substitution has taken place. If the HS is still empty at the end of the file, then no changes have been made, otherwise changes have occurred.
The command /search-string/
matches search-string
with whatever is in the PS and if it is found to contain the search-string
the commands between the following curly braces are executed.
Firstly the substitution s//replacement-string/
(sed uses the last regexp i.e. the search-string
, if the lefthand-side is empty, so s//replacement-string
is the same as s/search-string/replacement-string/
) and following this the h
command makes a copy of the PS and puts it in the HS.
The sed command $
is used to recognise the last line of a file and the following then occurs.
First the x
command swaps the two registers, so the HS becomes the PS and the PS becomes the HS.
Then the PS is searched for any character /./
(.
means match any character) remember the HS (now the PS) was initially empty until a substitution took place. If the condition is true the x
is again executed followed by q0
command which ends all sed processing and sets the return code to 0
. Otherwise the x
command is executed and the return code is set to 1
.
N.B. although the q
quits sed processing it does not prevent the PS from being reassembled by sed and printed as per normal.
Another alternative:
sed '/search-string/!ba;s//replacement-string/;h;:a;$!b;p;x;/./Q;Q1' file
or:
sed '/search-string/,${s//replacement-string/;b};$q1' file
These answers are all too complicated. What is wrong with writing a bit of shell script that uses grep to figure out if the thing you want to replace is there then using sed to replace it?
grep -q $TARGET_STRING $file
if [ $? -eq 0 ]
then
echo "$file contains the old site"
sed -e "s|${TARGET_STRING}|${NEW_STRING}|g" ....
fi