I am having trouble with in-place file editing, having browsed the web for a couple of hours without results.
I really don't want to use the general temporary file scheme, i.e. writing everything to a new file and replace the old one. I need modification timestamps to reflect actual changes, permissions and ownership to remain unchanged etc.
If I understand correctly, using $I^
is just a short-hand for the temp-file scheeme - or am I wrong?
The "+<" mode should open the file for both reading and writing.
My test code so far:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
open(FILE, "+<", "testingfile") or die "$!";
while (<FILE>) {
print;
s/world/WORLD/;
print FILE $_;
print;
}
The "testingfile" has three lines, and I just want to replace "world" with "WORLD" for now:
hello
world
foo
Result
When I run the Perl script, garbage is produced and the terminal is left hanging until interrupted (Ctrl+C):
hello
hello
foo
foo
o
o
llo
llo
ÈÈ'>jËNgs}>¾ØKeh%P8* * + + p+ ÑÑÀ+ + p+ p+ ¨° #!/u8in/puse ct;
ÈÈ'>jËNgs}>¾ØKeh%P8* * + + p+ ÑÑÀ+ + p+ p+ ¨° #!/u8in/puse ct;
The "testingfile" now contains:
hello
world
foo
hello
hello
foo
I'm running an old Perl on a SunOS (Solaris) production system:
This is perl, v5.8.4 built for i86pc-solaris-64int
world
toWORLD
is simple because the two strings are the same length. If you want to append data to the end of the file then that is simple, but if you want to shorten or -- even worse -- lengthen lines before the end of the file then it becomes much harder