I want to use and manipulate the result of a program I call from Perl:
system (zgrep "failed at" $in_fname);
I want to take the lines made by zgrep
manipulate them and then write the manipulated lines to a new file.
how do I do it?
system
does not return the results but the external program exit status.
You must capture the result with the ` operator (backquote):
my $var = `zgrep "failed at" $in_fname`;
my @var = `zgrep ...`;
and each entry at @var
was one result line.
qx{}
since the shape of the characters is visually "enclosing".
May 13, 2012 at 14:34
You can also use Perl's open statement. Just add a pipe (|) at the end. See: http://perldoc.perl.org/perlipc.html#Using-open()-for-IPC
use warnings;
use strict;
open my $zgreph, 'zgrep "failed at" $in_fname |'
or die "can't fork: $!";
while (my $data = <$zgreph>) {
print $data;
}
close $zgreph
or die "error closing: $! $?";
This might be a better approach, because you get the data as it comes, rather than all at once. At least if you set the predefined variable $| (autoflush). See http://www.ira.cnr.it/manuals/perl/manual/pod/perlvar.html for predefined variables.
OP: "I want to use and manipulate the result of a system call"
No, you don't.
You want to run a program and capture the results.
A system call is something entirely different.
As tchrist so ably pointed out, syscall
is the perl function to use to access system calls.
zgrep
is agrep
command working on zipped files.zgrep
is a bareword. What exact code are you using to execute zgrep?zgrep
is a Linux command: linux.about.com/library/cmd/blcmdl1_zgrep.htm$in_fname
is defined before, I didn't write that line because I think that it's obvious that I define all my variables. You put doubt in my heart so I tried it now on a windows machine (I have don't have a Linux machine at home) withsystem (dir);
and it worked just fine.