| SPLIT(1) | General Commands Manual | SPLIT(1) | 
split — split a
    file into pieces
| split | [ -cd] [-lline_count] [-asuffix_length] [file
      [prefix]] | 
| split | [ -cd]-bbyte_count[K|k|M|m|G|g]
      [-asuffix_length]
      [file [prefix]] | 
| split | [ -cd]-nchunk_count [-asuffix_length] [file
      [prefix]] | 
| split | [ -cd]-ppattern [-asuffix_length] [file
      [prefix]] | 
The split utility reads the given
    file and breaks it up into files of 1000 lines each
    (if no options are specified), leaving the file
    unchanged. If file is a single dash
    (‘-’) or absent,
    split reads from the standard input.
The options are as follows:
-a
    suffix_length-b
    byte_count[K|k|M|m|G|g]k or K is appended to the
      number, the file is split into byte_count kilobyte
      pieces. If m or M is
      appended to the number, the file is split into
      byte_count megabyte pieces. If
      g or G is appended to the
      number, the file is split into byte_count gigabyte
      pieces.-c-d-l
    line_count-n
    chunk_count-p
    pattern-b and
      -l options.If additional arguments are specified, the first is used as the
    name of the input file which is to be split. If a second additional argument
    is specified, it is used as a prefix for the names of the files into which
    the file is split. In this case, each file into which the file is split is
    named by the prefix followed by a lexically ordered suffix using
    suffix_length characters in the range
    “a-z”. If
    -a is not specified, two letters are used as the
    initial suffix.
If the prefix argument is not specified, the
    file is split into lexically ordered files named with the prefix
    “x” and with suffixes as above.
By default, split will overwrite any
    existing output files. If the -c flag is specified,
    split will instead create files with names that do
    not already exist.
The LANG, LC_ALL,
    LC_CTYPE and LC_COLLATE
    environment variables affect the execution of split
    as described in environ(7).
The split utility exits 0 on
    success, and >0 if an error occurs.
Split input into as many files as needed, so that each file contains at most 2 lines:
$ echo -e "first line\nsecond line\nthird line\nforth line" | split -l2
Split input in chunks of 10 bytes using numeric prefixes for file names. This generates two files of 10 bytes (x00 and x01) and a third file (x02) with the remaining 2 bytes:
$ echo -e "This is 22 bytes long" | split -d -b10
Split input generating 6 files:
$ echo -e "This is 22 bytes long" | split -n 6
Split input creating a new file every time a line matches the regular expression for a “t” followed by either “a” or “u” thus creating two files:
$ echo -e "stack\nstock\nstuck\nanother line" | split -p 't[au]'
The split utility conforms to
    IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (“POSIX.1”).
A split command appeared in
    Version 3 AT&T UNIX.
Before FreeBSD 14, pattern and line matching only operated on lines shorter than 65,536 bytes.
| October 25, 2022 | Mac OS X 12 |