3

When i execute the below command in command prompt it works fine. but when i include the same in perl script, it shows the whole process name.

ps -ef | grep truecontrol | awk '{print$2}'

returns

4567
3456

When I execute it throught perl, it shows the whole process details. I want to assign it to a variable array and work on it. Let me know how to do it?

my $process_chk_command = `ps -ef | grep truecontrol | awk '{print$2}'`;
print($process_chk_command);


root      9902  9890  0 05:50 ?        00:00:03 /opt/abc/jre/bin/java -DTCFTP=1 -d64 -Xms16m -Xmx64m -Djava.library.path=/opt/abc/server/ext/wrapper/lib -cla
1
  • Of course, the proper way to write that is ps -ef | awk '/truecontrol/{print$2}' or just run ps -ef and do the filtering in Perl.
    – tripleee
    Nov 19, 2013 at 17:44

4 Answers 4

7

perl's backticks and qx// interpolate variables, so when you write:

my $process_chk_command = `ps -ef | grep truecontrol | awk '{print $2}'`;

perl interpolates the special variable $2. In your case, $2 is not set, and thus expands to the empty string, so the awk command is simply {print}.

You could escape the dollar sign (`ps ... | awk '{print \$2}'`) to avoid this.

(As an aside, I'd recommend grep [t]ruecontrol to prevent grep from matching its own process table entry, or that of its parent shell which constructs the pipeline. sh aficionados with a POSIX bent might additionally suggest `ps -eo pid,comm,args | awk '/[t]ruecontrol/{print \$1}'`.)

5

Try using pgrep

my $process_chk_command = `pgrep truecontrol`;
0
3
my $process_chk_command = `ps -ef | grep truecontrol`;

my (undef,$pid) = split(' ', $process_chk_command, -1);    

ps, there's a perl utility that converts awk scripts to perl: a2p

0

True to Perl's motto, another way:

my $pcc=`killall -s truecontrol`;
my (undef,undef,$pid)=split(' ',$pcc);
print $pid;

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