I'm trying to do the opposite of this question, replacing Unix line endings with Windows line endings, so that I can use SQL Server bcp over samba to import the file. I have sed
installed but not dos2unix
. I tried reversing the examples but to no avail.
Here's the command I'm using.
sed -e 's/\n/\r\n/g' myfile
I executed this and then ran od -c myfile
, expecting to see \r\n
where there used to be \n
. But there all still \n
. (Or at least they appear to be. The output of od overflows my screen buffer, so I don't get to see the beginning of the file).
I haven't been able to figure out what I'm doing wrong. Any suggestions?
dos2unix
onto the machine?sed
or regular non-GNU sed
?On Solaris, /usr/bin/sed
requires:
sed 's/$/^M/'
where I entered the '^M' by typing controlV controlM. The '$' matches at the end of the line, and replaces the end of line with the control-M. You can script that, too.
Mechanisms expecting sed
to expand '\r
' or '\\r
' to control-M are going to be platform-specific, at best.