Idea from thread below:
| awk '{if(a) print a;a=b;b=$0}'
Note that you might want to include a little more logic if you want
blanklines in there.. This doesn't store all of it in a file or in ram.
http://askubuntu.com/questions/475694/awk-command-to-print-all-the-lines-except-the-last-three-lines
On 2015-03-04 3:33 PM, Adam Thompson wrote:
> Like Tim said, you first have to know how many lines exist in the file
> before you can do anything other than stream processing.
> On moderately-sized inputs, "wc -l" works reasonably well. On large
> inputs, there's no way to do this efficiently unless you're willing to
> sacrifice accuracy.
>
> F=filename
> L=$(wc -l $F)
> head -n $(( $L - num_of_ignored_lines ))
>
> -Adam
>
> On March 4, 2015 2:36:24 PM CST, Kevin McGregor
> <kevin.a.mcgregor@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Can someone help me out? I'm too tired to think straight.
>
> Is there an easy/short way to get all BUT the last n lines of a
> text file/input? All I can think of is reversing the input line
> order and tail +n or something like that. FYI the input is not
> very big.
>
> Kevin
>
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