1

I have a file abc.txt that has data of the form

sHost = "Arun";
sUid ="Abc";

I want to get Arun for sHost and so forth using Perl. My code:

my $filename = "abc.txt";

use strict;
use warnings;

open(my $fh, '<:encoding(UTF-8)', $filename)
  or die "Could not open file '$filename' $!";

while (my $row = <$fh>)
{
  chomp $row;
  if ($row=~m/sHost/)
  {
    print $row;
  }
}

The output I am getting sHost = Arun;

But I want only 'Arun'. What logic should I apply here? I am very new to Perl and Linux.

4 Answers 4

2

After the chomp, alter to this and the variable $host will contain the value

if ($row=~m/sHost = "(.*)"/) {
  $host=$1;

In simple terms the ( ) section is given to $1 if there is a match. See man perlre for the details

To generalise this to read any key and any value do something like this

 while (my $row = <$fh>) {
   if ($row = ~ /^(\w+) = "([^"]+)"/) {
     $value{$1} = $2;
   }

Then $value{'sHost'} will be "Arun" etc

1

For universal config file parsing you can use following piece of code:

my %config;
if ($row =~ m/^\s*(["'`])?(\S+)\1?\s*=\s*(["'`])?(\S+?)\3?;?$/) {
    my $key       = $2;
    my $value     = $4;
    $config{$key} = $value;
}

This regexp allows you to process key-value lines with plain or surrounded by different quote type (" ' `, but you can add your symbols if you like) key/value with leading or/and trailing whitespaces, semicolon is not ogligatory. Also you can change (\S+) according to your requirements of key/value possible values (\S - all except whitespaces).

0

use m/.*=\s*([^\s]*)/g instead of m/sHost/

use print $1 instead of print $row

-1

Replace

if ($row=~m/sHost/)

with

if ($row=~s/sHost//)

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