How to convert Windows end of line in Unix end of line (CR/LF to LF)

WindowsLinuxEnd of-Line

Windows Problem Overview


I'm a Java developer and I'm using Ubuntu to develop. The project was created in Windows with Eclipse and it's using the Windows-1252 encoding.

To convert to UTF-8 I've used the recode program:

find Web -iname \*.java | xargs recode CP1252...UTF-8

This command gives this error:

recode: Web/src/br/cits/projeto/geral/presentation/GravacaoMessageHelper.java failed: Ambiguous output in step `CR-LF..data

I've searched about it and get the solution in Bash and Windows, Recode: Ambiguous output in step `data..CR-LF' and it says:

> Convert line endings from CR/LF to a > single LF: Edit the file with Vim, > give the command :set ff=unix and save > the file. Recode now should run > without errors.

Nice, but I've many files to remove the CR/LF character from, and I can't open each to do it. Vi doesn't provide any option to command line for Bash operations.

Can sed be used to do this? How?

Windows Solutions


Solution 1 - Windows

There should be a program called dos2unix that will fix line endings for you. If it's not already on your Linux box, it should be available via the package manager.

Solution 2 - Windows

sed cannot match \n because the trailing newline is removed before the line is put into the pattern space, but it can match \r, so you can convert \r\n (DOS) to \n (Unix) by removing \r:

sed -i 's/\r//g' file

Warning: this will change the original file

However, you cannot change from Unix EOL to DOS or old Mac (\r) by this. More readings here:

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1251999/sed-how-can-i-replace-a-newline-n

Solution 3 - Windows

Actually, Vim does allow what you're looking for. Enter Vim, and type the following commands:

:args **/*.java
:argdo set ff=unix | update | next

The first of these commands sets the argument list to every file matching **/*.java, which is all Java files, recursively. The second of these commands does the following to each file in the argument list, in turn:

  • Sets the line-endings to Unix style (you already know this)

  • Writes the file out iff it's been changed

  • Proceeds to the next file

Solution 4 - Windows

I'll take a little exception to jichao's answer. You can actually do everything he just talked about fairly easily. Instead of looking for a \n, just look for carriage return at the end of the line.

sed -i 's/\r$//' "${FILE_NAME}"

To change from Unix back to DOS, simply look for the last character on the line and add a form feed to it. (I'll add -r to make this easier with grep regular expressions.)

sed -ri 's/(.)$/\1\r/' "${FILE_NAME}"

Theoretically, the file could be changed to Mac style by adding code to the last example that also appends the next line of input to the first line until all lines have been processed. I won't try to make that example here, though.

Warning: -i changes the actual file. If you want a backup to be made, add a string of characters after -i. This will move the existing file to a file with the same name with your characters added to the end.

Update: The Unix to DOS conversion can be simplified and made more efficient by not bothering to look for the last character. This also allows us to not require using -r for it to work:

sed -i 's/$/\r/' "${FILE_NAME}"

Solution 5 - Windows

The tr command can also do this:

tr -d '\15\32' < winfile.txt > unixfile.txt

and should be available to you.

You'll need to run tr from within a script, since it cannot work with file names. For example, create a file myscript.sh:

#!/bin/bash

for f in `find -iname \*.java`; do
    echo "$f"
    tr -d '\15\32' < "$f" > "$f.tr"
    mv "$f.tr" "$f"
    recode CP1252...UTF-8 "$f"
done

Running myscript.sh would process all the java files in the current directory and its subdirectories.

Solution 6 - Windows

In order to overcome

Ambiguous output in step `CR-LF..data'

simply the solution might be to add the -f flag to force the conversion.

Solution 7 - Windows

Try the Python script by Bryan Maupin found here (I've modified it a little bit to be more generic):

#!/usr/bin/env python

import sys

input_file_name = sys.argv[1]
output_file_name = sys.argv[2]

input_file = open(input_file_name)
output_file = open(output_file_name, 'w')

line_number = 0

for input_line in input_file:
    line_number += 1
    try:  # first try to decode it using cp1252 (Windows, Western Europe)
        output_line = input_line.decode('cp1252').encode('utf8')
    except UnicodeDecodeError, error:  # if there's an error
        sys.stderr.write('ERROR (line %s):\t%s\n' % (line_number, error))  # write to stderr
        try:  # then if that fails, try to decode using latin1 (ISO 8859-1)
            output_line = input_line.decode('latin1').encode('utf8')
        except UnicodeDecodeError, error:  # if there's an error
            sys.stderr.write('ERROR (line %s):\t%s\n' % (line_number, error))  # write to stderr
            sys.exit(1)  # and just keep going
    output_file.write(output_line)

input_file.close()
output_file.close()

You can use that script with

$ ./cp1252_utf8.py file_cp1252.sql file_utf8.sql

Solution 8 - Windows

Go back to Windows, tell Eclipse to change the encoding to UTF-8, then back to Unix and run d2u on the files.

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionMaikoIDView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - WindowscHaoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - WindowsJichaoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - WindowsArandurView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - WindowsJohn ChesshirView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - WindowsKeithLView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - WindowsV_VView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - WindowsAnthony O.View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - WindowsJonathanView Answer on Stackoverflow