Hi,
I am really sorry for the confusions, I tried like this way
where I got my output as
TEST=Name
TEST=Name
TEST=Name
TEST=Name
``
``.
``
The output is not ending,
My Real Need:
where I have declared the variable in my MAKEFILE
with the same format with single space delimiting but it not just only three, it can be 'n' number.
Now I need to parse each item with its value and export them for further usage in the same MAKEFILE , as you said a=b, c=d , e=f , g=h etc..
Like say, I have done parsing
TEST=Name
WORK=Ps
DEL=let
In the same MAKEFILE, I have to make use of this WORK, where
should print. I hope I cleared the context of my need.
Any help please, I am rolling my head to get this done.
Hello all, need a little help.
I have an input variable such as ARGV which equals something like
/use/home/name/script/test.dat
I need to be able to get just the "test.dat" (i.e. the file name) at the end of the directory and the directory can be anything and any length. To put it another... (3 Replies)
I have a variable (it is a date actually -> 2007-01-03) which
would be passed in as parameter, what I want is to parse in and put
year, month, and day in separate variables, I have tried the following
but doesn't work
echo $dt | awk -F- '{print $1 $2 $3}' | read y m d
Thanks in... (2 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)
I have a variable which has a full path to the file, for example :
A=/t1/bin/f410pdb
Does anybody know the command to parce this variable and assign the result to 3 other variables so each subdirectory name will be in a new variable like this
B=t1
C=bin
D=f410pdb
Many thanks -A (5 Replies)
Hi,
I need to parse a simple text file like below and store the word that starts with BR* to a variable say $BRno. I need to do this in sh script.
NOTE: the length of the numbers following BR is in constant. And there is only 1 BRXXX in a file at a given time.
.txt file:
BR276828... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I need to parse a simple text file like below and store the word that starts with BR* to a variable say $BRno. I need to do this in sh script.
NOTE: the length of the numbers following BR is not constant (eg: it could be BR1234 or BR22233). And there is only 1 BRxxxxx in a file at a given... (6 Replies)
I have a script with few pre defined variables.
Also have a config file. Something like this.
# config file
# Define Oracle User
MOD1_TAG=abcde
MOD2_TAG=xyzabc
MOD3_TAG=def
I need to parse the config file and have each of the value copied to different variables.
Please suggest what... (1 Reply)
In the wake of the post: how-parse-following-xml-file
Thank you for the very useful chakrapani response 302355585-post4 !
A close question.
How to pass a file to xmllint in variable?
For example, let it be:
NEARLY_FILE='<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?><html><set label="09/07/29"... (0 Replies)
Im trying to search for a single variable in the first field and from that output use awk to extract out the lines that contain a value less than a value stored in another variable. Both the variables are associated with each other.
Any guidance is appreciated.
File that contains the... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: ncwxpanther
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
apache::testmm
Apache::TestMM(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Apache::TestMM(3)NAME
Apache::TestMM - Provide MakeMaker Wrapper Methods
SYNOPSIS
require Apache::TestMM;
# import MY::test and MY::clean overrides for MM
Apache::TestMM->import(qw(test clean));
# parse command line args
Apache::TestMM::filter_args();
# autogenerate the script
Apache::TestMM::generate_script('t/TEST');
DESCRIPTION
"Apache::TestMM" provides wrappers for the "ExtUtils::MakeMaker" craft, making it easier to extend the autogenerated Makefile with
"Apache::Test".
FUNCTIONS
"import"
use Apache::TestMM qw(test clean);
or:
Apache::TestMM->import(qw(test clean));
Imports "MY::" overrides for the default "ExtUtils::MakeMaker" test and clean targets, as if you have defined:
sub MY::test {...}
sub MY::clean {...}
in Makefile.PL. "Apache::TestMM" does this for you so that these Makefile targets will run the Apache server and the tests for it, and
clean up after its mess.
"filter_args"
push @ARGV, '-apxs', $apxs_path;
Apache::TestMM::filter_args();
WriteMakefile(...);
When "WriteMakefile()" is called it parses @ARGV, hoping to find special options like "PREFIX=/home/stas/perl". "Apache::Test" accepts a
lot of configuration options of its own. When "Apache::TestMM::filter_args()" is called, it removes any "Apache::Test"-specific options
from @ARGV and stores them internally, so when "WriteMakefile()" is called they aren't in @ARGV and thus won't be processed by
"WriteMakefile()".
The options can be set when Makefile.PL is called:
% perl Makefile.PL -apxs /path/to/apxs
Or you can push them manually to @ARGV from the code:
push @ARGV, '-apxs', $apxs_path;
When:
Apache::TestMM::generate_script('t/TEST');
is called, "Apache::Test"-specific options extracted by "Apache::TestMM::filter_args()" are written to the autogenerated file. In our
example, the autogenerated t/TEST will include:
%Apache::TestConfig::Argv = qw(apxs /path/to/apxs);
which is going to be used by the "Apache::Test" runtime.
The other frequently used options are: "-httpd", telling where to find the httpd (usually when the "-apxs" option is not used),
"-libmodperl" to use a specific mod_perl shared object (if your mod_perl is built as DSO), "-maxclients" to change the default number of
the configured "MaxClients" directive, "-port" to start the server on a specific port, etc. To get the complete list of available
configuration options and their purpose and syntax, run:
% perl -MApache::TestConfig -le 'Apache::TestConfig::usage()'
You may wish to document some of these in your application's README file, especially the "-apxs" and "-httpd" options.
"generate_script"
Apache::TestMM::generate_script('t/TEST');
"generate_script()" accepts the name of the script to generate and will look for a template with the same name and suffix .PL. So in our
example it'll look for t/TEST.PL. The autogenerated script t/TEST will include the contents of t/TEST.PL, and special directives, including
any configuration options passed via "filter_args()" called from Makefile.PL, special fixup code, etc.
perl v5.18.2 2015-06-18 Apache::TestMM(3)