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Full Discussion: Spliting of two files
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Spliting of two files Post 302368934 by Scott on Friday 6th of November 2009 04:22:18 AM
Old 11-06-2009
Code:
/STARTOFREPORT/ { getline PATH; getline FILE; printf "" > PATH "/" FILE; p = 1; next }

 

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Log::Handler::Config(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 Log::Handler::Config(3pm)

NAME
Log::Handler::Config - The main config loader. SYNOPSIS
use Log::Handler; my $log = Log::Handler->new(); # Config::General $log->config(config => 'file.conf'); # Config::Properties $log->config(config => 'file.props'); # YAML $log->config(config => 'file.yaml'); Or use Log::Handler; my $log = Log::Handler->new(); $log->config( config => 'file.conf' plugin => 'YAML', ); DESCRIPTION
This module makes it possible to load the configuration from a file. The configuration type is determined by the file extension. It's also possible to mix file extensions with another configuration types. PLUGINS
Plugin name File extensions ------------------------------------------ Config::General cfg, conf Config::Properties props, jcfg, jconf YAML yml, yaml If the extension is not defined then "Config::General" is used by default. METHODS
config() With this method it's possible to load the configuration for your outputs. The following options are valid: config With this option you can pass a file name or the configuration as a hash reference. $log->config(config => 'file.conf'); # or $log->config(config => \%config); plugin With this option it's possible to say which plugin you want to use. Maybe you want to use the file extension "conf" with "YAML", which is reserved for the plugin "Config::General". Examples: # this would use Config::General $log->config( config => 'file.conf' ); # this would force .conf with YAML $log->config( config => 'file.conf', plugin => 'YAML' ); section If you want to write the configuration into a global configuration file then you can create a own section for the logger: <logger> <file> filename = file.log minlevel = emerg maxlevel = warning </file> <screen> minlevel = emerg maxlevel = debug </screen> </logger> <another_script_config> foo = bar bar = baz baz = foo </another_script_config> Now your configuration is placed in the "logger" section. You can load this section with $log->config( config => 'file.conf', section => 'logger', ); # or if you load the configuration yourself to %config $log->config( config => \%config, section => 'logger', ); # or just $log->config( config => $config{logger} ); PLUGINS
Config::General - inspired by the well known apache config format Config::Properties - Java-style property files YAML - optimized for human readability EXAMPLES
Config structures A very simple configuration looks like: $log->config(config => { file => { alias => 'file1', filename => 'file1.log', maxlevel => 'info', minlevel => 'warn', }, screen => { alias => 'screen1', maxlevel => 'debug', minlevel => 'emerg', } }); Now, if you want to add another file-output then you can pass the outputs with a array reference: $log->config(config => { file => [ { alias => 'file1, filename => 'file1.log', maxlevel => 'info', minlevel => 'warn', }, { alias => 'file2', filename => 'file2.log', maxlevel => 'error', minlevel => 'emergency', } ], screen => { alias => 'screen1', maxlevel => 'debug', minlevel => 'emerg', }, }); It's also possible to pass the outputs as a hash reference. The hash keys "file1" and "file2" will be used as aliases. $log->config(config => { file => { file1 => { filename => 'file1.log', maxlevel => 'info', minlevel => 'warn', }, file2 => { filename => 'file2.log', maxlevel => 'error', minlevel => 'emergency', } }, screen => { alias => 'screen1', maxlevel => 'debug', minlevel => 'emerg', }, }); If you pass the configuration with the alias as a hash key then it's also possible to pass a section called "default". The options from this section will be used as defaults. $log->config(config => { file => { default => { # defaults for all file-outputs mode => 'append', }, file1 => { filename => 'file1.log', maxlevel => 'info', minlevel => 'warn', }, file2 => { filename => 'file2.log', maxlevel => 'error', minlevel => 'emergency', } }, screen => { alias => 'screen1', maxlevel => 'debug', minlevel => 'emerg', }, }); Examples for the config plugins Config::General <file> alias = file1 fileopen = 1 reopen = 1 permissions = 0640 maxlevel = info minlevel = warn mode = append timeformat = %b %d %H:%M:%S debug_mode = 2 filename = example.log message_layout = '%T %H[%P] [%L] %S: %m' </file> Or <file> <file1> fileopen = 1 reopen = 1 permissions = 0640 maxlevel = info minlevel = warn mode = append timeformat = %b %d %H:%M:%S debug_mode = 2 filename = example.log message_layout = '%T %H[%P] [%L] %S: %m' </file1> </file> YAML --- file: alias: file1 debug_mode: 2 filename: example.log fileopen: 1 maxlevel: info minlevel: warn mode: append permissions: 0640 message_layout: '%T %H[%P] [%L] %S: %m' reopen: 1 timeformat: '%b %d %H:%M:%S' Or --- file: file1: debug_mode: 2 filename: example.log fileopen: 1 maxlevel: info minlevel: warn mode: append permissions: 0640 message_layout: '%T %H[%P] [%L] %S: %m' reopen: 1 timeformat: '%b %d %H:%M:%S' Config::Properties file.alias = file1 file.reopen = 1 file.fileopen = 1 file.maxlevel = info file.minlevel = warn file.permissions = 0640 file.mode = append file.timeformat = %b %d %H:%M:%S file.debug_mode = 2 file.filename = example.log file.message_layout = '%T %H[%P] [%L] %S: %m' Or file.file1.alias = file1 file.file1.reopen = 1 file.file1.fileopen = 1 file.file1.maxlevel = info file.file1.minlevel = warn file.file1.permissions = 0640 file.file1.mode = append file.file1.timeformat = %b %d %H:%M:%S file.file1.debug_mode = 2 file.file1.filename = example.log file.file1.message_layout = '%T %H[%P] [%L] %S: %m' PREREQUISITES
Carp Params::Validate EXPORTS
No exports. REPORT BUGS
Please report all bugs to <jschulz.cpan(at)bloonix.de>. If you send me a mail then add Log::Handler into the subject. AUTHOR
Jonny Schulz <jschulz.cpan(at)bloonix.de>. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2007-2009 by Jonny Schulz. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.14.2 2012-11-21 Log::Handler::Config(3pm)
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