Is there a way to get the command line arguments.
I am using getopt(3) but if the arguments are more than one for a particular option than it just ignores the second argument. For eg
./a.out -x abc def
now abd will be got with -x using getopt "( x : )" and string abc\0def will get stored... (7 Replies)
how to parse the command line argument to look for '@' sign and the following with '.'.
In my shell script one of the argument passed is email address. I want to parse this email address to look for correct format.
rmjoe123@hotmail.com has '@' sign and followed by a '.'
to be more... (1 Reply)
Hi,
My perl script takes few switches which i'm parsing through GetOpt::Long module.
My script looks like something :
myscript.pl --file="foo" --or --file="bar"
The --file switch takes 2 arguments foo and bar.
The 2 values of file are separated by --or switch. I want to ensure that... (1 Reply)
Looking for a little help parsing some command line arguments in a bash script I am working on, this is probably fairly basic to most, but I do not have much experience with it.
At the command line, when the script is run, I need to make sure the argument passed is a file, it exists in the... (3 Replies)
I have a simple script that builds a complex program call which passes a number of parameters to the program. I'm trying to enhance the script to include the value of the command line parameter in the name of a file being created. The problem I'm having is that the parameter may include a forward... (11 Replies)
Hi,
I've a python script called aaa.py and passing an command line option " -a" to the script like, ./aaa.py -a
& Inside the script if the -a option is given I do some operation if not something else.
code looks like
./aaa.py -a
.
.
if options.a
---some operation---
if not options.a... (1 Reply)
I am trying to parse the XML Google contact file using tools like xmllint and I even dived into the XSL Style Sheets using xsltproc but I get nowhere.
I can not supply any sample file as it contains private data but you can download your own contacts using this script:
#!/bin/sh
# imports... (9 Replies)
below is the output xml string from some other command and i will be parsing it using awk
cat /tmp/alerts.xml
<Alert id="10102" name="APP-DS-ds_ha-140018-componentFailure-S" alertDefinitionId="13982" resourceId="11427" ctime="1359453507621" fixed="false" reason="If Event/Log Level(ANY) and... (2 Replies)
Hi all
I need to put a command line parser together to parse numeric fields and ranges passed to a script. I'm looking for a bash function that is as elegant and simple as possible.
So the input would be of the following form -
1,2,8-12
This would return -
1,2,8,9,10,11,12
Input can... (7 Replies)
I would like to take a fasta file formated like
>0001
agttcgaggtcagaatt
>0002
agttcgag
>0003
ggtaacctga
and use command line perl to move the all sample gt 8 in length to a new file. the result would be
>0001
agttcgaggtcagaatt
>0003
ggtaacctga
cat ${sample}.fasta | perl -lane... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jdilts
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
test::email
Test::Email(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test::Email(3pm)NAME
Test::Email - Test Email Contents
SYNOPSIS
use Test::Email;
# is-a MIME::Entity
my $email = Test::Email->new(@lines);
# all-in-one test
$email->ok({
# optional search parameters
from => ($is or qr/$regex/),
subject => ($is or qr/$regex/),
body => ($is or qr/$regex/),
headername => ($is or qr/$regex/),
}, "passed tests");
# single-test header methods
$email->header_is($header_name, $value, "$header_name matches");
$email->header_ok($header_name, $value, "$header_name matches");
$email->header_like($header_name, qr/regex/, "$header_name matches");
# single-test body methods
$email->body_is($header_name, $value, "$header_name matches");
$email->body_ok($header_name, $value, "$header_name matches");
$email->body_like($header_name, qr/regex/, "$header_name matches");
# how many MIME parts does the messages contain?
$email->parts_ok($parts_count, "there were $parts_count parts found");
# what is the MIME type of the firs part
my @parts = $email->parts(); # see MIME::Entity
$parts[0]->mime_type_ok('test/html', 'the first part is type text/html');
DESCRIPTION
Please note that this is ALPHA CODE. As such, the interface is likely to change.
Test::Email is a subclass of MIME::Entity, with the above methods. If you want the messages fetched from a POP3 account, use Test::POP3.
Tests for equality remove trailing newlines from strings before testing. This is because some mail messages have newlines appended to them
during the mailing process, which could cause unnecessary confusion.
This module should be 100% self-explanatory. If not, then please look at Test::Simple and Test::More for clarification.
METHODS
"my $email = Test::Email->new($lines_aref);"
This is identical to "MIME::Entity->new()". See there for details.
"$email->ok($test_href, $description);"
Using this method, you can test multiple qualities of an email message with one test. This will execute the tests as expected and will
produce output just like "Test::Simple::ok" and "Test::More::ok". Keys for $test_href are either "body", or they are considered to be
the name of a header, case-insensitive.
single-test methods
The single-test methods in the synopsis above are very similar to their counterparts in Test::Simple and Test::More. Please consult
those modules for documentation.
Please note that tests for equality remove newlines from their operands before testing. This is because some email messages have
newlines appended to them during mailing.
"my $ok = $email-"parts_ok($parts_count, $description);>
Check to see how many MIME parts this email contains. Each part is also a Test::Email object.
"my $ok = $email-"mime_type_ok($expected_mime_type, $description);>
Check the MIME type of an email or an email part.
EXPORT
None.
SEE ALSO
Test::Builder, Test::Simple, Test::More, Test::POP3
TODO
I am open to suggestions.
AUTHOR
James Tolley, <james@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2007-2008 by James Tolley
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or,
at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
perl v5.10.0 2008-10-24 Test::Email(3pm)