Question

Over at Can you modify text files when committing to subversion? Grant suggested that I block commits instead.

However I don't know how to check a file ends with a newline. How can you detect that the file ends with a newline?

Was it helpful?

Solution

@Konrad: tail does not return an empty line. I made a file that has some text that doesn't end in newline and a file that does. Here is the output from tail:

$ cat test_no_newline.txt
this file doesn't end in newline$ 

$ cat test_with_newline.txt
this file ends in newline
$

Though I found that tail has get last byte option. So I modified your script to:

#!/bin/sh
c=`tail -c 1 $1`
if [ "$c" != "" ]; then echo "no newline"; fi

OTHER TIPS

Or even simpler:

#!/bin/sh
test "$(tail -c 1 "$1")" && echo "no newline at eof: '$1'"

But if you want a more robust check:

test "$(tail -c 1 "$1" | wc -l)" -eq 0 && echo "no newline at eof: '$1'"

Here is a useful bash function:

function file_ends_with_newline() {
    [[ $(tail -c1 "$1" | wc -l) -gt 0 ]]
}

You can use it like:

if ! file_ends_with_newline myfile.txt
then
    echo "" >> myfile.txt
fi
# continue with other stuff that assumes myfile.txt ends with a newline

You could use something like this as your pre-commit script:

#! /usr/bin/perl

while (<>) {
    $last = $_;
}

if (! ($last =~ m/\n$/)) {
    print STDERR "File doesn't end with \\n!\n";
    exit 1;
}

Worked for me:

tail -n 1 /path/to/newline_at_end.txt | wc --lines
# according to "man wc" : --lines - print the newline counts

So wc counts number of newline chars, which is good in our case. The oneliner prints either 0 or 1 according to presence of newline at the end of the file.

Using only bash:

x=`tail -n 1 your_textfile`
if [ "$x" == "" ]; then echo "empty line"; fi

(Take care to copy the whitespaces correctly!)

@grom:

tail does not return an empty line

Damn. My test file didn't end on \n but on \n\n. Apparently vim can't create files that don't end on \n (?). Anyway, as long as the “get last byte” option works, all's well.

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