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vnl-sort
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vnl-sort
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#!/usr/bin/env perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use feature 'say';
use autodie;
use FindBin '$RealBin';
use lib "$RealBin/lib";
use Vnlog::Util qw(parse_options read_and_preparse_input ensure_all_legends_equivalent reconstruct_substituted_command get_key_index);
# This comes from the struct option long_options in sort.c in GNU coreutils
my @specs = ( # options with no args
"ignore-leading-blanks|b",
"debug",
"dictionary-order|d",
"ignore-case|f",
"general-numeric-sort|g",
"ignore-nonprinting|i",
"merge|m",
"month-sort|M",
"numeric-sort|n",
"human-numeric-sort|h",
"version-sort|V",
"random-sort|R",
"reverse|r",
"stable|s",
"unique|u",
"zero-terminated|z",
# options with args
"compress-program=s",
"files0-from=s",
"key|k=s@",
"random-source=s",
"sort=s",
"output|o=s",
"batch-size=s",
"buffer-size|S=s",
"field-separator|t=s",
"temporary-directory|T=s",
"parallel=s",
# '--check' and '--check=...' are valid. '--check ...' is NOT
# valid. parse_options handles that
"check:s",
"c|C",
"vnl-tool=s",
"help|h");
my %options_unsupported = ( 'files0-from' => <<'EOF',
Support for this could be added but has not been (yet)
EOF
'output' => <<'EOF',
Can't support this. sort calls ftruncate(file), so if I write out the legend
before calling sort, this is clobbered. Or if I use a pipe, the ftruncate() will
fail and sort barfs
EOF
'field-separator' => <<'EOF',
vnlog is built on assuming a particular field separator
EOF
'zero-terminated' => <<'EOF'
vnlog is built on assuming a particular record separator
EOF
);
my ($filenames,$options) = parse_options(\@ARGV, \@specs, 0, <<EOF);
$0 [options] logfile logfile logfile ... < logfile
The most common options are (from the GNU sort manpage)
-k, --key=KEYDEF
sort via a key. This is the vnlog field we're sorting on
-s, --stable
stabilize sort by disabling last-resort comparison
-u, --unique
with -c, check for strict ordering;
without -c, output only the first of an equal run
-f, --ignore-case
fold lower case to upper case characters
-r, --reverse
reverse the result of comparisons
These all choose the sort order:
-d, --dictionary-order
consider only blanks and alphanumeric characters
-g, --general-numeric-sort
compare according to general numerical value
-h, --human-numeric-sort
compare human readable numbers (e.g., 2K 1G)
-M, --month-sort
compare (unknown) < 'JAN' < ... < 'DEC'
-n, --numeric-sort
compare according to string numerical value
-R, --random-sort
shuffle, but group identical keys. See shuf(1)
-V, --version-sort
natural sort of (version) numbers within text
--sort=WORD
sort according to WORD: general-numeric -g, human-numeric -h,
month -M, numeric -n, random -R, version -V
There's also a vnlog-specific option
--vnl-tool tool
Specifies the path to the tool we're wrapping. By default we wrap 'sort',
so most people can omit this
EOF
$options->{'vnl-tool'} //= 'sort';
for my $key(keys %$options)
{
if($options_unsupported{$key})
{
my $keyname = length($key) == 1 ? "-$key" : "--$key";
die("I don't support $keyname: $options_unsupported{$key}");
}
}
$options->{'ignore-leading-blanks'} = 1;
my $inputs = read_and_preparse_input($filenames);
ensure_all_legends_equivalent($inputs);
substitute_field_keys($options, $inputs->[0]);
my $ARGV_new = reconstruct_substituted_command($inputs, $options, [], \@specs);
say '# ' . join(' ', @{$inputs->[0]{keys}});
exec $options->{'vnl-tool'}, @$ARGV_new;
sub substitute_field_keys
{
my ($options, $inputs) = @_;
return unless defined $options->{key};
# manpage of sort says that key definitions are given as
# "F[.C][OPTS][,F[.C][OPTS]]". By default, sort works not just off the field
# alone, but off the whole line, starting at that field, which is crazy. To
# do the sane thing of just looking at the field you can do the after-,
# field spec. I.e. to sort JUST on field 2 you'd say 'sort -k 2,2'. That's
# weird, and vnl-sort always passes this syntax, and thus vnl-sort
# doesn't support the , in -k .... vnl-sort also doesn't support the C.
# I DO want to support OPTS, so the vnl-sort syntax is 'vnl-sort
# -k field[.OPTS] where OPTS are just like in sort: one or more of
# [bdfgiMhnRrV]
my $Nkeyoptions = scalar @{$options->{key}};
for my $i_keyoption (0..$Nkeyoptions-1)
{
$options->{key}[$i_keyoption] =~ /^([^\.]+)(?:\.([bdfgiMhnRrV]+?))?$/
or die "Couldn't parse '$_' as a sort KEYDEF. Excepted FIELDNAME or FIELDNAME.SORTOPTIONS";
my $key = get_key_index($inputs, $1);
my $opts = $2 // '';
$options->{key}[$i_keyoption] = "$key,$key$opts";
}
}
__END__
=head1 NAME
vnl-sort - sorts an vnlog file, preserving the legend
=head1 SYNOPSIS
$ cat a.vnl
# a b
AA 11
bb 12
CC 13
dd 14
dd 123
Sort lexically by a:
$ <a.vnl vnl-sort -k a
# a b
AA 11
CC 13
bb 12
dd 123
dd 14
Sort lexically by a, ignoring case:
$ <a.vnl vnl-sort -k a --ignore-case
# a b
AA 11
bb 12
CC 13
dd 123
dd 14
Sort lexically by a, then numerically by b:
$ <a.vnl vnl-sort -k a -k b.n
# a b
AA 11
CC 13
bb 12
dd 14
dd 123
Sort lexically by a, then numerically by b in reverse:
$ <a.vnl vnl-sort -k a -k b.nr
# a b
AA 11
CC 13
bb 12
dd 123
dd 14
Sort by month and then day:
$ cat dat.vnl
# month day
March 5
Jan 2
Feb 1
March 30
Jan 21
$ <dat.vnl vnl-sort -k month.M -k day.n
# month day
Jan 2
Jan 21
Feb 1
March 5
March 30
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Usage: vnl-sort [options] logfile logfile logfile ... < logfile
This tool sorts given vnlog files in various ways. C<vnl-sort> is a
wrapper around the GNU coreutils C<sort> tool. Since this is a wrapper, most
commandline options and behaviors of the C<sort> tool are present; consult the
L<sort(1)> manpage for detail. The differences from GNU coreutils C<sort> are
=over
=item *
The input and output to this tool are vnlog files, complete with a legend
=item *
The columns are referenced by name, not index. So instead of saying
sort -k1
to sort by the first column, you say
sort -k time
to sort by column "time".
=item *
The fancy C<KEYDEF> spec from C<sort> is only partially supported. I only allow
us to sort by full I<fields>, so the start/stop positions don't make sense. I
I<do> support the C<OPTS> to change the type of sorting in a given particular
column. For instance, to sort by month and then by day, do this (see example
above):
vnl-sort -k month.M -k day.n
=item *
C<--files0-from> is not supported due to lack of time. If somebody really needs
it, talk to me.
=item *
C<--output> is not supported due to an uninteresting technical limitation. The
output always goes to standard out.
=item *
C<--field-separator> is not supported because vnlog assumes
whitespace-separated fields
=item *
C<--zero-terminated> is not supported because vnlog assumes
newline-separated records
=item *
By default we call the C<sort> tool to do the actual work. If the underlying
tool has a different name or lives in an odd path, this can be specified by
passing C<--vnl-tool TOOL>
=back
Past that, everything C<sort> does is supported, so see that man page for
detailed documentation. Note that all non-legend comments are stripped out,
since it's not obvious where they should end up.
=head1 COMPATIBILITY
I use GNU/Linux-based systems exclusively, but everything has been tested
functional on FreeBSD and OSX in addition to Debian, Ubuntu and CentOS. I can
imagine there's something I missed when testing on non-Linux systems, so please
let me know if you find any issues.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<sort(1)>
=head1 REPOSITORY
https://github.com/dkogan/vnlog/
=head1 AUTHOR
Dima Kogan C<< <[email protected]> >>
=head1 LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2018 Dima Kogan C<< <[email protected]> >>
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free
Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any
later version.
=cut