hi,
i got a problem with understanding regular expressions. what i wanna do is
scanning the wtmp logfile for ips and if a specific ip is echoed id like to be a part of a text to be assigned to it.
the scanning is done with
#! /bin/bash
cat wtmp | strings | egrep -o "+\.+\.+\." | sort -u... (6 Replies)
Hi
I have a question on regex
There is a line in a script like
my_file="$(echo SunMonTueWed | sed "s//_&g") "
My question what does the expression _&g do.
Obviously in this example the output is
_Sun_Mon_Tue_Wed
Another question can i use some trick to get the result like... (3 Replies)
Hi, im sure this is really simple but i cant quite figure it out. how do i test against a word at the beginning of the line but up to the point of a delimiter i.e. ":"
for example if i wanted to test against the user in the /etc/passwd file
peter:x:101:100:peters account:/var/peter:/bin/sh
... (3 Replies)
I have a basic question regarding * and . while using regex:
# echo 3 | grep ^*$
3
I think I understood why it outputs "3" here (because '*' matches zero or more of the previous character) but I don't understand the output of the following command:
# echo 3 | grep ^.$
#
I thought I... (7 Replies)
I have dates in mm/dd/yy format that I wish to convert to yy-mm-dd format.
()/()/() finds them, but when I try to replace with $3-$1-$2 both kate and kwrite treat it as a text literal. (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to write a regex for myscript and need some input from experts.
here is what I must grep for
TICKET{Sapce}{Space}{hyphen}
so here is the example data
TICKET 34554, CT-12345, TICKET 12345: some text here
TICKET 2342, CT-12345, MA-12344: some text here
TICKET... (5 Replies)
Hi guys,
I have a file in the following format:
cmpr5551
cmpr6002
cmpr93
anne 5454
bbro 434
cmprsvc
cmprsvc7
ffgi55
vefe99
cmprsvc8
cmprsvc9
I need to "grep" only the entries which start with "cmpr" followed by the number. All other entries should be excluded.
I was trying to use... (3 Replies)
Hi guys,
I am trying to "grep" or "egrep" the following entry out of the file using regex:
MACCDB1 or MACCDB2
The problem is that the file might contain other entries which start with "MACCDB" string.
I was trying to use regex to "grep" the exact pattern but it fails to output the correct... (2 Replies)
Hi I am trying to match lines having following string
BIND dn="uid=
putting something like this is not working :
/\sBIND dn="uid=/
Any suggestion.
Thanks. John (9 Replies)
I want to match all occurrence of 01,03,05,07,10,11 at 9th and 10th position of a string .
I tried the following but its also matching characters like 33 or 11 on 9th and 10th position .
sed "/^\{8\}00/d" A.TXT
000000001000
433483433339 <<< wrong
121121211100 <<< wrong
167710000110... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: boncuk
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
mail::dkim::privatekey5.12
Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey(3)NAME
Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey - a private key loaded in memory for DKIM signing
SYNOPSIS
my $key1 = Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey->load(
File => "/path/to/private.key");
my $key2 = Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey->load(
Data => $base64);
# use the loaded key in a DKIM signing object
my $dkim = Mail::DKIM::Signer->new(
Key => $key2,
);
CONSTRUCTOR
load() - loads a private key into memory
my $key1 = Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey->load(
File => "/path/to/private.key");
Loads the Base64-encoded key from the specified file.
my $key2 = Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey->load(Data => $base64);
Loads the Base64-encoded key from a string already in memory.
my $key3 = Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey->load(Cork => $openssl_object);
Creates a Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey wrapper object for the given OpenSSL key object. The key object should be of type Crypt::OpenSSL::RSA.
METHODS
cork() - access the underlying OpenSSL key object
$openssl_object = $key->cork;
The returned object is of type Crypt::OpenSSL::RSA.
sign_digest()
Cryptographically sign the given message digest.
$key->sign_digest("SHA-1", sha1("my message text"));
The first parameter is the name of the digest: one of "SHA-1", "SHA-256".
The second parameter is the message digest as a binary string.
The result should be the signed digest as a binary string.
AUTHOR
Jason Long, <jlong@messiah.edu>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2006-2008 by Messiah College
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.6 or,
at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
perl v5.12.5 2010-11-14 Mail::DKIM::PrivateKey(3)