The problem here is that the script is being passed to perl on stdin, so trying to process stdin from the script doesn't work.
1. String literal
perl -e '
while(<>) {
chomp;
print "xxx: $_\n";
}
'
Using a string literal is the most direct way to write this, though it's not ideal if the Perl script contains single quotes itself.
2. Use perl -e
#/bin/bash
script=$(cat <<'EOF'
while(<>) {
chomp;
print "xxx: $_\n";
}
EOF
)
perl -e "$script"
If you pass the script to perl using perl -e
then you won't have the stdin problem and you can use any characters you like in the script. It's a bit roundabout to do this, though. Heredocs yield input on stdin and we need strings. What to do? Oh, I know! This calls for $(cat <<HEREDOC)
.
Make sure to use <<'EOF'
rather than just <<EOF
to keep bash from doing variable interpolation inside the heredoc.
You could also write this without the $script
variable, although it's getting awfully hairy now!
perl -e "$(cat <<'EOF'
while(<>) {
chomp;
print "xxx: $_\n";
}
EOF
)"
3. Process substitution
perl <(cat <<'EOF'
while(<>) {
chomp;
print "xxx: $_\n";
}
EOF
)
Along the lines of #2, you can use a bash feature called process substitution which lets you write <(cmd)
in place of a file name. If you use this you don't need the -e
since you're now passing perl a file name rather than a string.
perl -we
?