I have 20GB+ csv file like this:
**CallId,MessageNo,Information,Number**
1000,1,a,2
99,2,bs,3
1000,3,g,4
66,2,a,3
20,16,3,b
1000,7,c,4
99,1,lz,4
...
you should use python for this kind of tasks :)
have a look here for a similar, full working example:
Python: How to read huge text file into memory
EDIT:
in that same answer there is a link useful in case your file is really way bigger than available amount of RAM: http://code.activestate.com/recipes/466302/
This is a classical algorithm problem called External Sorting.
External sorting is required when the data being sorted do not fit into the main memory of a computing device (usually RAM) and instead they must reside in the slower external memory (usually a hard drive). External sorting typically uses a sort-merge strategy. In the sorting phase, chunks of data small enough to fit in main memory are read, sorted, and written out to a temporary file. In the merge phase, the sorted subfiles are combined into a single larger file
From .NET Framework
point of view I would recommend to leverage .NET 4
feature - Memory Mapped Files to project parts of the file in memory as separate views.
Here is an Java example of External Merge Sort, you should be able to adopt it to C# easily:
EDIT: Added usage example of the mentioned Java sample to demonstrate its simplicity
Comparator<String> comparator = new Comparator<String>()
{
public int compare(String r1, String r2)
{
return r1.compareTo(r2);
}
};
List<File> l = sortInBatch(new File(inputfile), comparator);
mergeSortedFiles(l, new File(outputfile), comparator);
You should use OS sort commands. Typically it's just
sort myfile
followed by some mystical switches. These commands typically work well with large files, and there are often options to specify temporary storage on other physical harddrives. See this previous question, and the Windows sort
command "man" page. Since Windows sort is not enough for your particular sorting problem, you may want to use GNU coreutils which bring the power of linux sort
to Windows.
Here's what you need to do.
sort.exe
from the bin folder to some folder on your machine, for example the folder where your to-be-sorted file is..dll
files to the same folder as sort.exe
Now assuming that your file looks like this:
1000,1,a,2
99,2,bs,3
1000,3,g,4
66,2,a,3
20,16,3,b
1000,7,c,4
99,1,lz,4
you can write in the command prompt:
sort.exe yourfile.csv -t, -g
which would output:
20,16,3,b
66,2,a,3
99,1,lz,4
99,2,bs,3
1000,1,a,2
1000,3,g,4
1000,7,c,4
See more command options here. If this is what you want, don't forget to provide an output file with the -o
switch, like so:
sort.exe yourfile.csv -t, -g -o sorted.csv