ffe - flat file extractor

ffe

This file documents version 0.3.4 of ffe, a flat file extractor.

Copyright © 2014 Timo Savinen

Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies.

Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one.

Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.

1 Preliminary information

The ffe is a program to extract fields from text and binary flat files and to print them in different formats. The input file structure and printing definitions are specified in a configuration file, which is always required. Default configuration file is ~/.fferc (ffe.rc in windows).

ffe is a command line tool developed for GNU/Linux and UNIX systems. ffe can read from standard input and write to standard output, so it can be used as a part of a pipeline.

There is also binary distribution for windows.

2 Samples using ffe

One example of using ffe for printing personnel information in XML format from fixed length flat file:

     $ cat personnel
     john     Ripper       23
     Scott    Tiger        45
     Mary     Moore        41
     $

A file personnel contains three fixed length fields: ‘FirstName’, ‘LastName’ and ‘Age’, their respective lengths are 9,13 and 2.

In order to print data above in XML, following configuration file must be available:

     $cat personnel.fferc
     structure personel {
         type fixed
         output xml
         record person {
             field FirstName 9
             field LastName  13
             field Age 2
         }
     }
     
     output xml {
         file_header "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"ISO-8859-1\"?>\n"
         data "<%n>%t</%n>\n"
         record_header "<%r>\n"
         record_trailer "</%r>\n"
         indent " "
     }
     $

Using ffe:

     $ffe -c personnel.fferc personnel
     <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
      <person>
       <FirstName>john</FirstName>
       <LastName>Ripper</LastName>
       <Age>23</Age>
      </person>
      <person>
       <FirstName>Scott</FirstName>
       <LastName>Tiger</LastName>
       <Age>45</Age>
      </person>
      <person>
       <FirstName>Mary</FirstName>
       <LastName>Moore</LastName>
       <Age>41</Age>
      </person>
     $

3 How to run ffe

ffe is a command line tool. Normally ffe can be invoked as:

ffe -o OUTPUTFILE INPUTFILE...

ffe uses the definitions from the configuration file and tries to guess the input file structure.

If the structure cannot be guessed the option -s must be used.

3.1 Program invocation

The format for running the ffe program is:

     ffe option ...

ffe supports the following options:

-c file
--configuration=file
Configuration is read from file, instead of ~/.fferc (ffe.rc in windows).
-s structure
--structure=structure
Use structure structure for input file, suppresses guessing.
-p output
--print=output
Use output format output for printing. If not given, then the record or structure related output format is used. Printing can be suppressed using format no. Original data is printed using format raw.
-o file
--output=file
Write output to file instead of standard output.
-f list
--field-list=list
Print only fields and constants listed in the comma separated list list. Order of names in list specifies also the printing order.
-e expression
--expression=expression
Print only those records for which the expression evaluates to true.
-a
--and
Expressions are combined with logical and, default is logical or. Note that if the same field and operator appear several time in expressions they are always compared with logical or.
-X
--casecmp
Expressions are evaluated using case insensitive comparison
-v
--invert-match
Print only those records which don't match the expression.
-l
--loose
Normally ffe stops when it encounters an input line or binary block which doesn't match any of the records in selected structure. Defining this option causes ffe continue despite the error. Note that invalid lines are reported only for text input. In case of binary input next valid block is silently searched.
-r
--replace=field=value
Replace fields contents with value in output. value can contain same directives as output option data.
-d
--debug
All invalid input lines are written to ffe_error_<pid>.log, where <pid> is the process ID.
-I
--info
Show structure information in the configuration file and exit successfully. For every structure following information in shown:
Structures: Name, type and maximum record length.
Records: Name and length
Fields: Name, position and length. First position is number one.
-?
--help
Print an informative help message describing the options and then exit successfully.
-V
--version
Print the version number of ffe and then exit successfully.

All remaining options are names of input files, if no input files are specified or - is given, then the standard input is read.

Expressions (option -e, --expression)

Expression can be used to select specific records comparing field values. Expression has syntax fieldxvalue, where x is the comparison operator. Expression is used to compare field's contents to value and if comparison is successful the record is printed. Several expressions can be given and at least one must evaluate to true in order to print a record. If option -a is given all expressions must evaluate to true.

If value starts with string file: then the rest of value is considered as a file name. Every line in file is used as value in comparison. Comparison evaluates true if one or more values matches, so this makes possible use several different values in comparison. Note: The file size is limited by available memory because the file contents is loaded to memory.

When comparing binary fields the value must have the representation which can be shown using the %d output directive. Note that the printing option hex-caps takes effect in comparison.

Expression notation:

field=value
Field field is equal to value.
field^value
Field field starts with value.
field~value
Field field contains value.
field!value
Field field is not equal to value.
field?value
Field field matches the regular expression value. ffe supports POSIX extended regular expressions.

3.2 Configuration

ffe uses configuration file in order to read the input file and print the output.

Configuration file for ffe is a text file. The file may contain empty lines. Commands are case sensitive. Comments begin with the #-character and end at the end of the line. The string definitions can be enclosed in double quotation " characters. char is a single character. string and char can contain following escape codes: \a, \b, \t, \n, \v, \f, \r, \" and \#. A backslash can be escaped as \\.

Configuration has two main parts: the structure, which specifies the input file structure and the output, which specifies how the input data is formatted for output.

Common syntax

Common syntax for configuration file is:

     #comment
     `command`
     const name value
     ...
     structure name {
         option value ...
         ...
         record name {
             option value ...
             ...
         }
         record name {
             option value ...
             ...
         }
         ...
     }
     structure name {
         ...
     }
     ...
     output name {
         option value ...
         ...
     }
     output name {
         ...
     }
     ...
     lookup name {
         option value ...
         ...
     }
     lookup name {
         ...
     }
     
     ...

Structure

Keyword structure is used to specify the input file content. An input file can contain several types of records (lines or binary blocks). E.g. file can have a header, data and trailer record types. Records must be distinguishable from each other, this can be achieved defining different 'keys' (id in record definition) or having different line lengths (for fixed length) or different count of fields (for separated structure) for different records.

If binary structure has several records, then all records must have at least one key (id), because binary blocks can be distinguished only by using keys.

The structure notation:

     structure name {
         option value ...
         ...
     }

A structure can contain following options:

type fixed|binary|separated [char] [*]
The fields in the input are fixed length fields (text or binary) or text fields separated by char. If * is given, multiple sequential separators are considered as one. Default separator is comma.
quoted [char]
Fields may be quoted with char, default quotation mark is the double quotation mark '"'. A quotation mark is assumed to be escaped as \char or doubling the mark as charchar in input. Non escaped quotation marks are not preserved in output.
header first|all|no
Controls the occurrence of the header line. Default is no. If set as first or all, the first line of the first input file is considered as header line containing the names of the fields. first means that only the first file has a header, all means means that all files have a header, although the names are still taken from the header of the first file. Header line is handled according the record definition, meaning that the name positions, separators etc. are the same as for the fields. Binary files cannot have a header.
output name|no|raw
All records belonging to this structure are printed according output format name. Default is to use output named as ‘default’. ‘no’ prints nothing and ‘raw’ prints only the original data.
record name {options ...}
Specifies one record for a structure. A structure can contain several record types.

Record

A record specifies one type of input line or binary block in a file. Different records can be distinguished using the id option or different line lengths or field counts. In multi-record binary structure every record must have at least one id because binary records do not have a special end of record marker as text lines have.

The record notation:

     record name {
         option value ...
         ...
     }

A record can contain following options:

id position string
rid position regexp
Identifies a record in the input file. Records are identified by the string or by the regular expression regexp in input record position position. For fixed length and binary input the position is the byte position of input record and for separated input the position is the position'th field of the input record. Positions starts always from one.

A record definition can contain several id's, then all id's must match the input line (id's are and-ed).

Non printable characters can be escaped as ‘\xnn’, where ‘nn’ is characters hexadecimal value.

field name|FILLER|* [length]|* [lookup]|* [output]
Defines one field in a text input structure. length is mandatory for fixed length input structure.

The last field of a fixed length input structure can have a * in place of length. That means that the last field has no exact length specified and it gets the remainder of the input line after all other fields. This allows a fixed record to have arbitrary long last field.

Length is also used for printing the fields in fixed length format (directive %D in output definitions).

If * is given instead of the name, then the name will be the ordinal number of the field, or if the header option has value first or all, then the name of the field will be taken from the header line (first line of the input).

If lookup is given then the fields contents is used to make a lookup in lookup table lookup. If length is not needed (separated format) but lookup is needed, use asterisk (*) in place of length definition.

If output is given the field will be printed using output definition output. If length and/or lookup are not needed use asterisk in place of them.

If field is named as FILLER, the field will not appear in output.

The order of fields in configuration file is essential, it specifies the field order in a record.

field name|FILLER|* length|type [lookup]|* [output]
Defines one field in a binary structure. All other features are same as for text structure fields except the type parameter.

type specifies the field length and type and can have the following values:

char
Printable character.
short
Short integer having current system length and byte order.
int
Integer having current system length and byte order.
long
Long integer having current system length and byte order.
llong
Long long integer having current system length and byte order.
ushort
Unsigned short integer having current system length and byte order.
uint
Unsigned integer having current system length and byte order.
ulong
Unsigned long integer having current system length and byte order.
ullong
Unsigned long long integer having current system length and byte order.
int8
8 bit integer.
int16_be
Big endian 16 bit integer.
int32_be
Big endian 32 bit integer.
int64_be
Big endian 64 bit integer.
int16_le
Little endian 16 bit integer.
int32_le
Little endian 32 bit integer.
int64_le
Little endian 64 bit integer.
uint8
Unsigned 8 bit integer.
uint16_be
Unsigned big endian 16 bit integer.
uint32_be
Unsigned big endian 32 bit integer.
uint64_be
Unsigned big endian 64 bit integer.
uint16_le
Unsigned little endian 16 bit integer.
uint32_le
Unsigned little endian 32 bit integer.
uint64_le
Unsigned little endian 64 bit integer.
float
Float having current system length and byte order.
float_be
Float having current system length and big endian byte order.
float_le
Float having current system length and little endian byte order.
double
Double having current system length and byte order.
double_be
Double having current system length and big endian byte order.
double_le
Double having current system length and little endian byte order.
bcd_be_len
Bcd number having length len and nybbles in big endian order.
bcd_le_len
Bcd number having length len and nybbles in little endian order.
hex_be_len
Hexadecimal data in big endian order having length len.
hex_le_len
Hexadecimal data in little endian order having length len.

If length is given instead of the type, then the field is assumed to be a printable string having length length. String is printed until length characters are printed or NULL character is found.

Bcd number (bcd_be_len and bcd_le_len) is printed until len bytes are read or a nybble having hexadecimal value f is found. Bcd number having big endian order is printed in order: most significant nybble first and least significant nybble second and bcd number having little endian order is printed in order: least significant nybble first and most significant nybble second. Bytes are always read in big endian order.

Hexadecimal data (hex_be_len and hex_le_len) is printed as hexadecimal values. Big endian data is printed starting from lower address and little endian data starting from upper address.

field-count number
Same effect as having "field *" number times. This can be used in separated structure instead of writing sequential "field *" definitions. Several field-counts can be used in the same record and they can be mixed with field.
fields-from record
Fields in this record are the same as in record record. field and fields-from are mutually exclusive.
output name|no|raw
This record is printed according to output format name. Default is to use output format specified in structure.
level number [element_name|*] [group_name]
Levels can be used to print the file in hierarchical multi-level nested form document. number is the level of the record, starting from number one (highest level), element_name is the name for the record, group_name is used to group records in the same and lower levels. Only number is mandatory. Use * instead of the element name if group name is needed.
record-length strict|minimum
strict
Input record length (fixed format) or field count (separated format) must match the record definition in order to get it processed. This is the default value.
minimum
Input record length or field count can be the same or longer as defined for the record. The rest of the input line is ignored.

Output

Keyword output specifies a output format for formatting the input data for output. Formatting is controlled using options and printf style directives. An output definition is independent from structur, so one output format can be used with different input file formats.

The output notation:

     output name {
         option value ...
         ...
     }

Actual formatting and printing is controlled using pictures in output options. Pictures can contain following printf style directives:

%f
Name of the input file.
%s
Name of the current structure.
%r
Name of the current record.
%o
Input record number in current file.
%O
Input record number starting from the first file.
%i
Byte offset of the current record in the current file. Starts from zero.
%I
Byte offset of the current record starting from the first file. Starts from zero.
%n
Field name.
%t
Field contents, without leading and trailing whitespaces.
%d
Field contents. Binary integer is printed as a decimal value. Floating point number is printed in the style [-]ddd.ddd, where the number of digits after the decimal-point character is 6. Bcd number is printed as a decimal number and hexadecimal data as consecutive hexadecimal values.
%D
Field contents, right padded to the field length (requires length definition for the field).
%C
Field contents, right padded to the field length (requires length definition for the field). Contents is cutted if the input field is longer than output length.
%x
Unsigned hexadecimal value of a binary integer. Other fields are printed as directive %d would be used.
%l
Lookup value which has been found using current field as a search key.
%L
Lookup value, right padded to the field length.
%p
Fields start position in a record. For fixed and binary structure this is field's byte position in the input line and for separated structure this is the ordinal number of the field. Starts from one.
%h
Hexadecimal dump of a field. Byte values are printed as consecutive xnn values, where the nn is the hexadecimal value of a byte. Data is printed before any endian conversion.
%e
Does not print anything, causes still the "field empty" check to be performed. Can be used when only the names of non-empty fields should be printed.
%g
Group name given by the keyword group_name in record definition.
%m
Element name given by the keyword element_name in record definition.
%%
Percent sign.

Output options:

file_header picture
picture is printed once before file contents.
file_trailer picture
picture is printed once after file contents.
header picture
If given, then the header line describing the field names is printed before records. Every field name is printed according the picture using the same separator and field length as given for the fields. Picture can contain only %n directive.
data picture
Field contents is printed according picture.
lookup picture
If current field is related to lookup table, then this picture is used instead of picture from data. This makes possible to use different picture when the field is related to a lookup table. Default is to use the picture from data.
separator string
All fields are terminated by string, except the last field of the record. Default is not to print separator.
record_header picture
picture is printed before the record content. Default is not to print the record header.
record_trailer picture
picture is printed after the record content. Default is newline.
justify left|right|char
The output from the data option is left or right justified. char justifies output according the first occurrence of char in the data picture. Default is left.
indent string
Record contents is intended by string. Field contents is intended by two times the string. Default is not to indent. If file contents is printed in hierarchial form (keyword level in record definition) then contents is indented according the level of a record.
field-list name1,name2,...
Only fields and constants named as name1,name2,... are printed, same effect as has option -f. Default is print all fields and no constants. Fields and constants are also printed in the same order as they are listed.
no-data-print yes|no
If field-list is given and and this is set as no and none of the fields in field-list does not belong to the current record, then the record_header and record_trailer are not printed. Default is yes.
field-empty-print yes|no
When set as no, nothing is printed for the fields which consist entirely of characters from empty-chars. If none of the fields of a record are printed, then the printing of record_trailer is also suppressed. Default is yes.
empty-chars string
string specifies a set of characters which consist an "empty" field. Default is " \f\n\r\t\v" (space, form-feed, newline, carriage return, horizontal tab and vertical tab).
output-file file
Output is written to file instead of the default output (standard output or given by -o, --output). If - is given the output is written to standard output.
group_header picture
If a record has a level and a group name defined, picture is printed before the first record in a group or if the group name has changed in the same level. Note: Level related pictures can contain printing directives %g and %n only.
group_trailer picture
If a record has a level and a group name defined, picture is printed after the records in lower levels are printed or if the group name has changed in the same level or if a higher level record is found.
element_header picture
If a record has a level and a element name defined, picture is printed before the records contents.
element_trailer picture
If a record has a level and a element name defined, picture is printed after the records contents or after the following lower level records.
hex-caps yes|no
Print hexadecimal numbers in capital letters. Default is no.

Lookup

Keyword lookup specifies a lookup table which can be searched using field contents. Found values can be printed using output directives %l and %L.

The lookup table notation:

     lookup name {
         option value ...
         ...
     }

Lookup options:

search exact | longest
Search method for this table. Either exact or longest match is used when searching the table. Default is exact.
pair key value
Defines one key/value pair for the lookup table. In case of binary file key must have the same representation as can be shown using the %d printing directive.
file name [separator]
Data for the lookup table is read from file name. Each line in file name is considered as a key/value pair separated by a single character separator. Default separator is semicolon. Lines without separator are silently omitted. Note: The file size is limited by available memory because the file contents is loaded to memory.
default-value value
If searching the lookup table is unsuccessful then value is used in printing. Default is empty string.

Constants

Keyword const specifies one name/value pair which can be used as an additional output field. Constants can be used only in field lists (option -f,--field-list, or output option field-list).

Constants can be used to add fields to output which do not appear in input. E.g. new fields for separated output or adding spaces after a fixed length field (changing the field length).

Note that value is printed as it is for every record. It cannot be changed record by record.

If a constant has the same name as one of the input fields, the value value is printed instead of the input field contents.

The constant notation:

     const name value

When name appears in field list it is treated as one of the input fields having contents value.

Command Substitution

Command Substitution allows the output of a command to replace parts of the configuration file. Syntax for command substitution is:

`command`

The command is executed and the `command` is substituted with the standard output of the command, with any trailing newlines deleted. Command substitutions may not be nested.

Before executing the command ffe sets following environment variables:

FFE_STRUCTURE
The name of the structure from -s,--structure.
FFE_OUTPUT
The name of the output file from -o,--output.
FFE_FORMAT
The name of the output format from -p,--print.
FFE_FIRST_FILE
The name of the first input file.
FFE_FILES
A space-separated list of all input files.
If variable is already set it will not be replaced.

Input Preprocessor

It is possible to define an input preprosessor for ffe. An input preprocessor is simply an executable program which writes the contents of the input file to standard output which will be read by ffe. If the input preprosessor does not write any characters on its standard output, then ffe uses the original file.

To set up an input preprocessor, set the FFEOPEN environment variable to a command line which will invoke your input preprocessor. This command line should include one occurrence of the string %s, which will be replaced by the input filename when the input preprocessor command is invoked.

The input preprocessor is not used if ffe is reading standard input.

Convenient way is to use lesspipe (or lesspipe.sh), which is availabe in many UNIX-systems, for example

     export FFEOPEN="/usr/bin/lesspipe %s"

Using the example above is it possible to give a zipped input file to ffe, then the input processor will unzip the file before it is processed by ffe.

3.3 Guessing

If -s is not given, ffe tries to guess the input structure.

When guessing binary data ffe reads the first block of input data and tries to match the structure definitions from configuration file to that block. The input block size is the maximum binary block size found in configuration file.

When guessing text data ffe reads the first 10 000 lines or 1 MB of input data and tries to match the structure definitions from configuration file to input stream. If all lines match one and only one structure, the structure is used for reading the input file.

Guessing uses following execution cycle:

  1. A input line or a binary block is read
  2. All record id's are compared to the input data, if all id's of a record match the input date and the records line length matches the total length (or total count for separated structure) of the fields, the record is considered to match the input line. If there are no id's, only the line length or field count is checked. In case of binary data only id's are used in matching.
  3. In case of text data: If all lines match at least one of the records in a particular structure, the structure is considered as selected. There must be only one structure matching all lines used for guessing.

    In case of binary data: If the first block matches at least one record of a structure, the structure is considered as selected. Only one structure must match.

3.4 Limitations

At least in GNU/Linux ffe should be able to handle big files (> 4 GB), other systems are not tested.

Regular expression can be used in operator ? in option -e, --expression and in record key word rid only in systems where regular expression functions (regcomp, regexec, ...) are available.

4 How ffe works

Following examples use two different input files:

Fixed length example

Fixed length personnel file with header and trailer, line (record) is identified by the first byte (H = Header, E = Employee, B = Boss, T = trailer).

     $cat personnel.fix
     H2006-02-25
     EJohn     Ripper       23
     BScott    Tiger        45
     EMary     Moore        41
     ERidge    Forrester    31
     T0004
     $

Structure for reading file above. Note that record ‘boss’ reuses fields from ‘employee’.

     structure personel_fix {
         type fixed
         record header {
             id 1 H
             field type 1
             field date 10
         }
         record employee {
             id 1 E
             field EmpType 1
             field FirstName 9
             field LastName  13
             field Age 2
         }
         record boss {
             id 1 B
             fields-from employee
         }
         record trailer {
             id 1 T
             field type 1
             field count 4
         }
     }

Separated example

Same file as above, but now separated by comma.

     $cat personnel.sep
     H,2006-02-25
     E,john,Ripper,23
     B,Scott,Tiger,45
     E,Mary,Moore,41
     E,Ridge,Forrester,31
     T,0004
     $

Structure for reading file above. Note that the field lengths are not needed in separated format. Length is need if the separated data is to be printed in fixed length format.

     structure personel_sep {
         type separated ,
         record header {
             id 1 H
             field type
             field date
         }
         record employee {
             id 1 E
             field type
             field FirstName
             field LastName
             field Age
         }
         record boss {
             id 1 B
             fields-from employee
         }
         record trailer {
             id 1 T
             field type
             field count
         }
     }

Printing in XML format

Data in examples above can be printed in XML using output definition like:

     output xml {
         file_header "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\"?>\n"
         data "<%n>%t</%n>\n"
         record_header "<%r>\n"
         record_trailer "</%r>\n"
         indent " "
     }

Example output using command (assuming definitions above are saved in ~/.fferc)

ffe -p xml personnel.sep

     <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
      <header>
       <type>H</type>
       <date>2006-02-25</date>
      </header>
      <employee>
       <type>E</type>
       <FirstName>john</FirstName>
       <LastName>Ripper</LastName>
       <Age>23</Age>
      </employee>
      <boss>
       <type>B</type>
       <FirstName>Scott</FirstName>
       <LastName>Tiger</LastName>
       <Age>45</Age>
      </boss>
      <employee>
       <type>E</type>
       <FirstName>Mary</FirstName>
       <LastName>Moore</LastName>
       <Age>41</Age>
      </employee>
      <employee>
       <type>E</type>
       <FirstName>Ridge</FirstName>
       <LastName>Forrester</LastName>
       <Age>31</Age>
      </employee>
      <trailer>
       <type>T</type>
       <count>0004</count>
      </trailer>

Printing sql commands

Data in examples above can be loaded to database by generated sql commands. Note that the header and trailer are not loaded, because only fields ‘FirstName’,‘LastName’ and ‘Age’ are printed and ‘no-data-print’ is set as no. This prevents the ‘record_header’ and ‘record_trailer’ to be printed for file header and trailer.

     output sql {
         file_header "delete table boss;\ndelete table employee;\n"
         record_header "insert into %r values("
         data "'%t'"
         separator ","
         record_trailer ");\n"
         file_trailer "commit\nquit\n"
         no-data-print no
         field-list FirstName,LastName,Age
     }

Output from command

ffe -p sql personnel.sep

     delete table boss;
     delete table employee;
     insert into employee values('john','Ripper','23');
     insert into boss values('Scott','Tiger','45');
     insert into employee values('Mary','Moore','41');
     insert into employee values('Ridge','Forrester','31');
     commit
     quit

Human readable output

This output format shows the fields in format suitable for displaying in screen or printing.

     output nice {
         record_header "%s - %r - %f - %o\n"
         data "%n=%t\n"
         justify =
         indent " "
     }

Output from command

ffe -p nice personnel.fix

      personel - header - personnel.fix - 1
       type=H
       date=2006-02-25
     
      personel - employee - personnel.fix - 2
         EmpType=E
       FirstName=John
        LastName=Ripper
             Age=23
     
      personel - boss - personnel.fix - 3
         EmpType=B
       FirstName=Scott
        LastName=Tiger
             Age=45
     
      personel - employee - personnel.fix - 4
         EmpType=E
       FirstName=Mary
        LastName=Moore
             Age=41
     
      personel - employee - personnel.fix - 5
         EmpType=E
       FirstName=Ridge
        LastName=Forrester
             Age=31
     
      personel - trailer - personnel.fix - 6
        type=T
       count=0004

HTML table

Personnel data can be displayed as HTML table using output like:

     output html {
         file_header "<html>\n<head>\n</head>\n<body>\n<table border=\"1\">\n<tr>\n"
         header "<th>%n</th>\n"
         record_header "<tr>\n"
         data "<td>%t</td>\n"
         file_trailer "</table>\n</body>\n</html>\n"
         no-data-print no
     }

Output from command

ffe -p html -f FirstName,LastName,Age personnel.fix

     <html>
     <head>
     </head>
     <body>
     <table border="1">
     <tr>
     <th>FirstName</th>
     <th>LastName</th>
     <th>Age</th>
     
     <tr>
     <td>John</td>
     <td>Ripper</td>
     <td>23</td>
     
     <tr>
     <td>Scott</td>
     <td>Tiger</td>
     <td>45</td>
     
     <tr>
     <td>Mary</td>
     <td>Moore</td>
     <td>41</td>
     
     <tr>
     <td>Ridge</td>
     <td>Forrester</td>
     <td>31</td>
     
     </table>
     </body>
     </html>

Using expression

Printing only Scott's record using expression with previous example:

ffe -p html -f FirstName,LastName,Age -e FirstName^Scott personnel.fix

     <html>
     <head>
     </head>
     <body>
     <table border="1">
     <tr>
     <th>FirstName</th>
     <th>LastName</th>
     <th>Age</th>
     
     <tr>
     <td>Scott</td>
     <td>Tiger</td>
     <td>45</td>
     
     </table>
     </body>
     </html>

Using replace

Make all bosses and write a new personnel file printing the fields in fixed length format using directive %D:

Output definition:

     output fixed
     {
         data "%D"
     }

Write a new file:

     $ffe -p fixed -r EmpType=B -o personnel.fix.new personnel.fix
     $cat personnel.fix.new
     H2006-02-25
     BJohn     Ripper       23
     BScott    Tiger        45
     BMary     Moore        41
     BRidge    Forrester    31
     T0004
     $

Using constant

The length of the fields FirstName and LastName in fixed length format will be made two bytes longer. This will be done by printing a constant after those two fields. We use dots instead of spaces in order to make change more visible.

Because we do not want to change header and trailer we need specially crafted configuration file. Employee and boss records will be printed using new output fixed2 and other records will be printed using output default.

New definition file new_fixed.rc:

     const 2dots ".."
     
     structure personel_fix {
         type fixed
         record header {
             id 1 H
             field type 1
             field date 10
         }
         record employee {
             id 1 E
             field EmpType 1
             field FirstName 9
             field LastName  13
             field Age 2
             output fixed2
         }
         record boss {
             id 1 B
             fields-from employee
             output fixed2
         }
         record trailer {
             id 1 T
             field type 1
             field count 4
         }
     }
     
     output default
     {
         data "%D"
     }
     
     output fixed2
     {
         data "%D"
         field-list Emptype,FirstName,2dots,LastName,2dots,Age
     }

Print new flat file:

     $ ffe -c new_fixed.rc personel_fix
     H2006-02-25
     EJohn     ..Ripper       ..23
     BScott    ..Tiger        ..45
     EMary     ..Moore        ..41
     ERidge    ..Forrester    ..31
     T0004
     $

Using lookup table

Lookup table is used to explain the EmpTypes contents in output format nice:

Lookup definition:

     lookup Type
     {
         search exact
         pair H Header
         pair B "He is a Boss!"
         pair E "Not a Boss!"
         pair T Trailer
         default-value "Unknown record type!"
     }

Mapping the EmpType field to lookup:

     structure personel_fix {
         type fixed
         record header {
             id 1 H
             field type 1
             field date 10
         }
         record employee {
             id 1 E
             field EmpType 1 Type
             field FirstName 9
             field LastName  13
             field Age 2
         }
         record boss {
             id 1 B
             fields-from employee
         }
         record trailer {
             id 1 T
             field type 1
             field count 4
         }
     }

Adding the lookup option to output definition nice.

     output nice {
         record_header "%s - %r - %f - %o\n"
         data "%n=%t\n"
         lookup "%n=%t (%l)\n"
         justify =
         indent " "
     }

Running ffe:

      $ffe -p nice personnel.fix
      personel_fix - header - personel_fix - 1
       type=H
       date=2006-02-25
     
      personel_fix - employee - personel_fix - 2
         EmpType=E (Not a Boss!)
       FirstName=John
        LastName=Ripper
             Age=23
     
      personel_fix - boss - personel_fix - 3
         EmpType=B (He is a Boss!)
       FirstName=Scott
        LastName=Tiger
             Age=45
     
      personel_fix - employee - personel_fix - 4
         EmpType=E (Not a Boss!)
       FirstName=Mary
        LastName=Moore
             Age=41
     
      personel_fix - employee - personel_fix - 5
         EmpType=E (Not a Boss!)
       FirstName=Ridge
        LastName=Forrester
             Age=31
     
      personel_fix - trailer - personel_fix - 6
        type=T
       count=0004

External lookup file

In previous example the lookup data could be read from external file like:

     $cat lookupdata
     H;Header
     B;He is a Boss!
     E;Not a Boss!
     T;Trailer
     $

Lookup definition using file above:

     lookup Type
     {
         search exact
         file lookupdata
         default-value "Unknown record type!"
     }

Making universal csv reader using command substitution

Command substitution can be used to make a configuration for reading any csv file. The number of fields will be read from the first file using awk. Input file names and date are printed in the file header:

     structure csv {
         type separated ,
         header first
         record csv {
             field-count `awk "-F," 'FNR == 1 {print NF;exit;}' $FFE_FIRST_FILE`
         }
     }
     
     output default {
         file_header "Files: `echo $FFE_FILES`\n`date`\n"
         data "%n=%d\n"
         justify =
     }

Reading binary data

A binary block having a 3 byte text (ABC) in 5 bytes long space, one byte integer (35), a 32 bit integer (12345678), a double (345.385), a 3 byte bcd number (45112) and a 4 byte hexadecimal data (f15a9188) can be read using following configuration:

     structure bin_data
     {
         type binary
         record b
         {
             field text 5
             field byte_int int8
             field integer int
             field number double
             field bcd_number bcd_be_3
             field hex hex_be_4
         }
     }
     
     output default
     {
         data "%n = %d (%h)\n"
     }

The %h directive gives a hex dump of the input data.

Hexadecimal dump of the data:

     $ od -t x1 example_bin
     0000000 41 42 43 00 08 23 4e 61 bc 00 5c 8f c2 f5 28 96
     0000020 75 40 45 11 2f f1 5a 91 88
     0000031

Using ffe:

     $ffe -c example_bin.fferc -s bin_data example_bin
     text = ABC (x41x42x43x00x08)
     byte_int = 35 (x23)
     integer = 12345678 (x4ex61xbcx00)
     number = 345.385000 (x5cx8fxc2xf5x28x96x75x40)
     bcd_number = 45112 (x45x11x2f)
     hex = f15a9188 (xf1x5ax91x88)

Note that the text has only 3 characters before NULL byte. Because this example was made in little endian machine, same result can be achieved with different configuration:

     structure bin_data
     {
         type binary
         record b
         {
             field text 5
             field byte_int int8
             field integer int32_le
             field number double_le
             field bcd_number bcd_be_3
             field hex hex_be_4
         }
     }

This configuration is more portable in case the same data is to be read in a different architecture because endianess of integer and double are explicit given.

If the bcd number is read with bcd_le_3 it would look as

     bcd_number = 5411 (x45x11x2f)

Note that nybbles are swapped and last byte is handled as f2 (f stops the printing) causing only first two bytes to be printed.

and if hexadecimal data is read with hex_le_4 it would look as

     hex = 88915af1 (xf1x5ax91x88)

Bytes are printed starting from the end of the data.

Printing nested XML

The keyword level in record definition can be used to print data in multi-level nested form. In this example a parent row is in level one and a child row is in level two. Children after a parent row belongs to the parent before child rows, so they are enclosed in a parent element.

Example data:

     P,John Smith,3
     C,Kathren,6,Blue
     C,Jimmy,4,Red
     C,Peter,2,Green
     P,Margaret Eelers,2
     C,Aden,16,White
     C,Amanda,20,Black

A parent row consistd of ID (P), parent name, and the count of the children. A child row consists of id (C), child name, age and favorite color.

This can be printed in nested XML using rc file:

     structure family
     {
         type separated ,
         record parent
         {
             id 1 P
             field FILLER
             field Name
             field Child_count
             level 1 parent
         }
     
         record child
         {
             id 1 C
             field FILLER
             field Name
             field Age
             field FavoriteColor
             level 2 child children
         }
     }
     
     output nested_xml
     {
         file_header "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\"?>\n"
         data "<%n>%t</%n>\n"
         indent " "
         record_trailer ""
         group_header "<%g>\n"
         group_trailer "</%g>\n"
         element_header "<%m>\n"
         element_trailer "</%m>\n"
     }

Output:

     <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
      <parent>
       <Name>John Smith</Name>
       <Child_count>3</Child_count>
       <children>
        <child>
         <Name>Kathren</Name>
         <Age>6</Age>
         <FavoriteColor>Blue</FavoriteColor>
        </child>
        <child>
         <Name>Jimmy</Name>
         <Age>4</Age>
         <FavoriteColor>Red</FavoriteColor>
        </child>
        <child>
         <Name>Peter</Name>
         <Age>2</Age>
         <FavoriteColor>Green</FavoriteColor>
        </child>
       </children>
      </parent>
      <parent>
       <Name>Margaret Eelers</Name>
       <Child_count>2</Child_count>
       <children>
        <child>
         <Name>Aden</Name>
         <Age>16</Age>
         <FavoriteColor>White</FavoriteColor>
        </child>
        <child>
         <Name>Amanda</Name>
         <Age>20</Age>
         <FavoriteColor>Black</FavoriteColor>
        </child>
       </children>
      </parent>

Some examples put in a single file

     structure personel_fix {
         type fixed
         record header {
             id 1 H
             field type 1
             field date 10
         }
         record employee {
             id 1 E
             field EmpType 1 Type
             field FirstName 9
             field LastName  13
             field Age 2
         }
         record boss {
             id 1 B
             fields-from employee
         }
         record trailer {
             id 1 T
             field type 1
             field count 4
         }
     }
     
     structure personel_sep {
         type separated ,
         record header {
             id 1 H
             field type
             field date
         }
         record employee {
             id 1 E
             field type
             field FirstName
             field LastName
             field Age
         }
         record boss {
             id 1 B
             fields-from employee
         }
             record trailer {
             id 1 T
             field type
             field count
         }
     }
     
     structure bin_data
     {
         type binary
         record b
         {
             field text 5
             field byte_int int8
             field integer int32_le
             field number double_le
             field bcd_number bcd_be_3
             field hex hex_be_4
         }
     }
     
     output xml {
         file_header "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\"?>\n"
         data "<%n>%t</%n>\n"
         record_header "<%r>\n"
         record_trailer "</%r>\n"
         indent " "
     }
     
     output sql {
         file_header "delete table boss;\ndelete table employee;\n"
         record_header "insert into %r values("
         data "'%t'"
         separator ","
         record_trailer ");\n"
         file_trailer "commit\nquit\n"
         no-data-print no
         field-list FirstName,LastName,Age
     }
     
     output nice {
         record_header "%s - %r - %f - %o\n"
         data "%n=%t\n"
         lookup "%n=%t (%l)\n"
         justify =
         indent " "
     }
     
     output html {
         file_header "<html>\n<head>\n</head>\n<body>\n<table border=\"1\">\n<tr>\n"
         header "<th>%n</th>\n"
         record_header "<tr>\n"
         data "<td>%t</td>\n"
         file_trailer "</table>\n</body>\n</html>\n"
         no-data-print no
     }
     
     output fixed
     {
         data "%D"
     }
     
     lookup Type
     {
         search exact
         pair H Header
         pair B "He is a Boss!"
         pair E "Not a Boss!"
         pair T Trailer
         default-value "Unknown record type!"
     }

Using ffe to test file integrity

ffe can be used to check flat file integrity, because ffe checks for all lines the line length and id's for fixed length structure and field count and id's for separated structure.

Integrity can be checked using command

ffe -p no -l inputfiles...

Because option -p has value no nothing is printed to output except the error messages. Option -l causes all erroneous lines to be reported, not just the first one.

Example output:

     ffe: Invalid input line in file 'inputfileB', line 14550
     ffe: Invalid input line in file 'inputfileD', line 12

5 Reporting Bugs

If you find a bug in ffe, please send electronic mail to tjsa@iki.fi. Include the version number, which you can find by running ‘ffe --version. Also include in your message the output that the program produced and the output you expected.

If you have other questions, comments or suggestions about ffe, contact the author via electronic mail to tjsa@iki.fi. The author will try to help you out, although he may not have time to fix your problems.

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