vote up 1 vote down star

Currently I monitoring a particular file with a simple shell one-liner:

filesize=$(ls -lah somefile |  awk '{print $5}')

I'm aware that Perl has some nice modules to deal with Excel files so the idea is to, let's say, run that check daily, perhaps with cron, and write the result on a spreadsheet for further statistical use.

flag

What is your question exactly? – Leon Timmermans Sep 16 '08 at 12:25
I think the question is, Can you please do this for me? :D – Brian G Sep 16 '08 at 14:29

5 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

You can check the size of the file using the -s operator.

use strict;
use warnings;

use File::Slurp qw(read_file write_file);
use Spreadsheet::ParseExcel;
use Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::SaveParser;
use Spreadsheet::WriteExcel;

my $file       = 'path_to_file';
my $size_file  = 'path_to_file_keeping_the_size';
my $excel_file = 'path_to_excel_file.xls';

my $current_size = -s $file;
my $old_size = 0;
if (-e $size_file) {
   $old_size = read_file($size_file);
}

if ($old_size new;
        my $excel = $parser->Parse($excel_file);
        my $row = 1;
        $row++ while $excel->{Worksheet}[0]->{Cells}[$row][0];
        $excel->AddCell(0, $row, 0, scalar(localtime));
        $excel->AddCell(0, $row, 1, $current_size);

        my $workbook = $excel->SaveAs($excel_file);
        $workbook->close;

    } else {
        my $workbook  = Spreadsheet::WriteExcel->new($excel_file);
        my $worksheet = $workbook->add_worksheet();
        $worksheet->write(0, 0, 'Date');
        $worksheet->write(0, 1, 'Size');

        $worksheet->write(1, 0, scalar(localtime));
        $worksheet->write(1, 1, $current_size);
        $workbook->close;
    }
}

write_file($size_file, $current_size);

A simple way to write Excel files would be using Spreadsheet::Write. but if you need to update an existing Excel file you should look into Spreadsheet::ParseExcel.

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Wow! I definitely have to try your snippet. Thanks a lot! – Nano Taboada Sep 16 '08 at 12:40
I think I'd have to do both, first create the spreadsheet then update it daily with the new size. May I ask you how could I deal with those modules in principle if I'm not the UNIX admin and I can't install new ones? – Nano Taboada Sep 16 '08 at 13:41
Maybe it's easier to create a CSV file. These can be loaded by Excel and are easy to generate using Perl without extra modules. – Peter Stuifzand Sep 16 '08 at 13:45
vote up 3 vote down

Perl also has the very nice (and very fast) Text::CSV_XS which allows you to easily make Excel-friendly CSV files, which may be a better solution than creating proper XLS files.

For example (over-commented for instructional value):

#!/usr/bin/perl
package main;
use strict; use warnings; # always!

use Text::CSV_XS;
use IO::File;

# set up the CSV file
my $csv = Text::CSV_XS->new( {eol=>"\r\n"} );
my $io  = IO::File->new( 'report.csv', '>')
  or die "Cannot create report.csv: $!\n";

# for each file specified on command line
for my $file (@ARGV) {
	unless ( -f $file ) {
		# file doesn't exist
		warn "$file doesn't exist, skipping\n";
		next;
	}

	# get its size
	my $size = -s $file;

	# write the filename and size to a row in CSV
	$csv->print( $io, [ $file, $size ] );
}

$io->close; # make sure CSV file is flushed and closed
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Whoa! I will try this one too. Thanks much! – Nano Taboada Sep 16 '08 at 15:06
One of the nice things about this approach is the output is human readable. – Brad Gilbert Sep 16 '08 at 16:48
vote up 3 vote down

You can also skip the hassle of writing .xls format files and use a more generic (but sufficiently Excel-friendly) format such as CSV:

#!/bin/bash
date=`date +%Y/%m/%d:%H:%M:%S`
size=$(ls -lah somefile |  awk '{print $5}')
echo "$date,$size"

Then, in your crontab:

0 0 * * * /path/to/script.sh >/data/sizelog.csv

Then you import that .csv file into Excel just like any other spreadsheet.

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Niceee! I LOVED the idea! A million of thanks! – Nano Taboada Sep 16 '08 at 15:07
How could I strip the magnitude "M" from the variable so I'd use it for comparisons, e.g. "if [$size -gt 500] then" – Nano Taboada Sep 16 '08 at 15:23
Nano: the "-h" argument to ls is what puts it in K/M/G format. Changing the "ls -lah" to "ls -la" would list the size in bytes without a magnitude. – Michael Cramer Sep 17 '08 at 15:06
vote up 2 vote down

The module you should be using is Spreadsheet::WriteExcel.

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vote up 8 vote down

You can use the -s operator to obtain the size of a file and the Spreadsheet::ParseExcel and Spreadsheet::WriteExcel modules to produce an updated spreadsheet with the information. Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::SaveParser lets you easily combine the two, in case you want to update an existing file with new information. If you are on Windows, you may want to automate Excel itself instead, probably with the aid of Win32::OLE.

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