This perl one liner will print the lines from the file called test.. If it gets the string DISPLAY, it just exit from the execution. Hope this helps you.
Can we please modify this perl one-liner to print lines between pattern1 and pattern2 in a file?
Hello all
i have this simple loop that gets me every time the match of "<#" in my string
something like that :
my $str ="gggg<#nnnnn#>kkkk<#ssss#>llllll";
while($str =~m/<#/g){
print pos($str);
}
but now i like to get another pos in the same loop iteration , i will like to get the... (1 Reply)
When we give an input sequence , the program should match with the pattern and give the matches and mismatches in the output.
i will give you 2 small examples. if you cant get it pls let me know.
i will try to give a clear idea.
example 1:
$a=APPLE; # let it be a pattern... (0 Replies)
Hi Scripting Gurus, I am new bee in perl, and trying to write a script which must print the free disk space availability of C and E drives. Please advice.
Here is the script snippet and expected output:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use CGI qw/:html3 :standard/;
$spaceuselog =... (4 Replies)
Hey Guys,
I have some weird problem with printing scalars ...
When I'm executing script both are printing in terminal ...
But only one is printed to the file ?
I don't know whats going on .. :)
Btw .. I'm noobie :) took me lots of time to put this simple script together :)
Thank you... (3 Replies)
#!/usr/bin/perl
use Shell;
open THEFILE, "C:\galileo_integration.txt" || die "Couldnt open the file!";
@wholeThing = <THEFILE>;
close THEFILE;
foreach $line (@wholeThing){
if ($line =~ m/\\0$/){
@nextThing = $line;
if ($line =~ s/\\0/\\LATEST/g){
@otherThing =... (2 Replies)
Hey guys i am using perl and trying to pull a list of books from a database and then populate the list in a separate TT2 file. When the list is generated there should be 39 book names. When I do the foreach statement in my tt2 below, the first statement gives me 39 Array(random number) and the... (1 Reply)
Hi,
A perl newbie here so pretty sure it's something simple. Trying to figure out how to count matches with perl pattern matching. The following script opens a text data file and finds lines containing
"PORT:" and I'd like to count how many of these are found.
Any ideas?
open(LOG,"<... (3 Replies)
Hi
I have below script which is used to grep specific errors and if error string matches send an email alert.
Script is working fine , however , i wish to print next 10 lines of the string match to get the details of error in the email alert
Current code:-
#!/bin/bash
tail -Fn0 --retry... (2 Replies)
Dear All,
Here is my input
TAACGCACTTGCGGCCCCGGGATAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAATGGATT
NAGAGGGACGGCCGGGGGCATAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGGGATTTC
NGGGTTTTAAGCAGGAGGTGTCAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGGGATTT
NTGGAACCTGGCGCTAGACCAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAATGGATTTTTG
ATACTTACCTGGCAGGGGAGATACCATGATCAATAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jacobs.smith
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
regexp_table
REGEXP_TABLE(5) File Formats Manual REGEXP_TABLE(5)NAME
regexp_table - format of Postfix regular expression tables
SYNOPSIS
regexp:/etc/postfix/filename
DESCRIPTION
The Postfix mail system uses optional tables for address rewriting or mail routing. These tables are usually in dbm or db format. Alterna-
tively, lookup tables can be specified in POSIX regular expression form.
To find out what types of lookup tables your Postfix system supports use the postconf -m command.
The general form of a Postfix regular expression table is:
pattern result
When pattern matches a search string, use the corresponding result.
blank lines and comments
Empty lines and whitespace-only lines are ignored, as are lines whose first non-whitespace character is a `#'.
multi-line text
A logical line starts with non-whitespace text. A line that starts with whitespace continues a logical line.
pattern1!pattern2 result
Matches pattern1 but not pattern2.
Each pattern is a regular expression enclosed by a pair of delimiters. The regular expression syntax is described in re_format(7). The
expression delimiter can be any character, except whitespace or characters that have special meaning (traditionally the forward slash is
used). The regular expression can contain whitespace.
By default, matching is case-insensitive, although following the second slash with an `i' flag will reverse this. Other flags are `x' (dis-
able extended expression syntax), and `m' (enable multi-line mode).
Each pattern is applied to the entire lookup key string. Depending on the application, that string is an entire client hostname, an entire
client IP address, or an entire mail address. Thus, no parent domain or parent network search is done, and user@domain mail addresses are
not broken up into their user and domain constituent parts, nor is user+foo broken up into user and foo.
Patterns are applied in the order as specified in the table, until a pattern is found that matches the search string.
Substitution of substrings from the matched expression into the result string is possible using $1, $2, etc.. The macros in the result
string may need to be written as ${n} or $(n) if they aren't followed by whitespace.
EXAMPLE SMTPD ACCESS MAP
# Disallow sender-specified routing. This is a must if you relay mail
# for other domains.
/[%!@].*[%!@]/ 550 Sender-specified routing rejected
# Postmaster is OK, that way they can talk to us about how to fix
# their problem.
/^postmaster@/ OK
# Protect your outgoing majordomo exploders
/^(.*)-outgoing@(.*)$/!/^owner-/ 550 Use ${1}@${2} instead
EXAMPLE HEADER FILTER MAP
# These were once common in junk mail.
/^Subject: make money fast/ REJECT
/^To: friend@public.com/ REJECT
SEE ALSO pcre_table(5) format of PCRE tables
AUTHOR(S)
The regexp table lookup code was originally written by:
LaMont Jones
lamont@hp.com
That code was based on the PCRE dictionary contributed by:
Andrew McNamara
andrewm@connect.com.au
connect.com.au Pty. Ltd.
Level 3, 213 Miller St
North Sydney, NSW, Australia
Adopted and adapted by:
Wietse Venema
IBM T.J. Watson Research
P.O. Box 704
Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA
REGEXP_TABLE(5)