Hi All,
I have a file that I need to be able to find a pattern match on one line then parse data on the next or subsequent lines - I will know which line needs to be parsed beforehand.
This is what I currently have:
while (<COMMAND_OUT>) {
if ($_ =~ m/TEST/) {
... (4 Replies)
I want to get filenames from the following input. How can I parse this in bash.
input data
-------------------------------------------------------------------
path=/aaa/bbb/filename1;/aaa/filename2;/aaa/bbb/ccc/ddd/filename3
-------------------------------------------------------------------... (13 Replies)
Hello,
Is there a quick way to parse the values from a variable?
The variable has the following sample input:
TA=
The values of the TA variable is not fixed/hardcoded
Basically I need to get the IV_Test and PF_SAPP_FWK values.
I created a script that first use sed to remove ,... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am wondering if there's a simpler way to extract the second occurrence of a word enclosed in that matches my search criteria.
Sample Input is as follows:
Error installing feature - com.er.nms.cif.ist.NoMatchingUpgra
Error installing feature -... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have got this value 18:21:23.330 in one of my variables.
Now I need to parse this time to something.
And then I have to compare it with 2 times, let's say, 15:00 hrs to 23:00 hrs.
Can Date::Manip rescue me from this horrifying situation?
I am quite new to Perl and especially this... (1 Reply)
Hi, I need to parse a string, check if there are periods and strip the string.
For example i have the following domains and subdomains: mydomain.com, dev.mydomain.com
I need to strip all periods so i have a string without periods or domain extensions: mydomain, devmydomain.
I use this for... (12 Replies)
Hi
I'm writing simple perl script to parse the ftp log as below:
Local directory now /home/user/testing
227 Entering Passive Mode (192,254,19,34,8,228).
125 Data connection already open; Transfer starting.
09-25-09 02:33PM 25333629 abc.tar
09-14-09 12:50PM 18015752... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I would like to be able to parse out a substring matching a basic pattern, which is a character followed by 3 or 4 digits (for example S1234 out of a larger string). The main string would just be a filename, like Thisis__the FileName_S1234_ToParse.txt. The filename isn't fixed, but the... (2 Replies)
Hi folks,
I have a line in log from which I need to parse few data.
Jul 6 00:05:58 dg01aipagnfe01p %FWSM-3-106011: Deny inbound (No xlate)
From the above... I need to parse the %FWSM-3-106011: substring.
Another example
Jul 13 00:08:55 dq01aipaynas01p %FWSM-6-302010: 2 in use, 1661... (3 Replies)
The below code works great to parse out a file if the input is in the attached SNP format ">".
perl -ne 'next if $.==1; while(/\t*NC_(\d+)\.\S+g\.(\d+)()>()/g){printf("%d\t%d\t%d\t%s\t%s\n",$1,$2,$2,$3,$4,$5)}' out_position.txt > out_parse.txt
My question is if there is another format in... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
appconfig::getopt
AppConfig::Getopt(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation AppConfig::Getopt(3)NAME
AppConfig::Getopt - Perl5 module for processing command line arguments via delegation to Getopt::Long.
SYNOPSIS
use AppConfig::Getopt;
my $state = AppConfig::State->new(\%cfg);
my $getopt = AppConfig::Getopt->new($state);
$getopt->parse(@args); # read args
OVERVIEW
AppConfig::Getopt is a Perl5 module which delegates to Johan Vroman's Getopt::Long module to parse command line arguments and update values
in an AppConfig::State object accordingly.
AppConfig::Getopt is distributed as part of the AppConfig bundle.
DESCRIPTION
USING THE AppConfig::Getopt MODULE
To import and use the AppConfig::Getopt module the following line should appear in your Perl script:
use AppConfig::Getopt;
AppConfig::Getopt is used automatically if you use the AppConfig module and create an AppConfig::Getopt object through the getopt() method.
AppConfig::Getopt is implemented using object-oriented methods. A new AppConfig::Getopt object is created and initialised using the new()
method. This returns a reference to a new AppConfig::Getopt object. A reference to an AppConfig::State object should be passed in as the
first parameter:
my $state = AppConfig::State->new();
my $getopt = AppConfig::Getopt->new($state);
This will create and return a reference to a new AppConfig::Getopt object.
PARSING COMMAND LINE ARGUMENTS
The "parse()" method is used to read a list of command line arguments and update the state accordingly.
The first (non-list reference) parameters may contain a number of configuration strings to pass to Getopt::Long::Configure. A reference to
a list of arguments may additionally be passed or @ARGV is used by default.
$getopt->parse(); # uses @ARGV
$getopt->parse(@myargs);
$getopt->parse(qw(auto_abbrev debug)); # uses @ARGV
$getopt->parse(qw(debug), @myargs);
See Getopt::Long for details of the configuartion options available.
A Getopt::Long specification string is constructed for each variable defined in the AppConfig::State. This consists of the name, any
aliases and the ARGS value for the variable.
These specification string are then passed to Getopt::Long, the arguments are parsed and the values in the AppConfig::State updated.
See AppConfig for information about using the AppConfig::Getopt module via the getopt() method.
AUTHOR
Andy Wardley, <abw@wardley.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1997-2007 Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright (C) 1997,1998 Canon Research Centre Europe Ltd.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Many thanks are due to Johan Vromans for the Getopt::Long module. He was kind enough to offer assistance and access to early releases of
his code to enable this module to be written.
SEE ALSO
AppConfig, AppConfig::State, AppConfig::Args, Getopt::Long
perl v5.12.1 2007-05-30 AppConfig::Getopt(3)