How do I read a file's contents into a Perl scalar?

久未见 提交于 2019-12-25 00:32:54

问题


what i am trying to do is get the contents of a file from another server. Since im not in tune with perl, nor know its mods and functions iv'e gone about it this way:

 my $fileContents;
 if( $md5Con =~ m/\.php$/g ) {
     my $ftp = Net::FTP->new($DB_ftpserver, Debug => 0) or die "Cannot connect to some.host.name: $@";
     $ftp->login($DB_ftpuser, $DB_ftppass) or die "Cannot login ", $ftp->message;
     $ftp->get("/" . $root . $webpage, "c:/perlscripts/" . md5_hex($md5Con) . "-code.php") or die $ftp->message;
     open FILE, ">>c:/perlscripts/" . md5_hex($md5Con) . "-code.php" or die $!;
     $fileContents = <FILE>;
     close(FILE);
     unlink("c:/perlscripts/" . md5_hex($md5Con) . "-code.php");
     $ftp->quit;
 }

What i thought id do is get the file from the server, put on my local machine, edit the content, upload to where ever an then delete the temp file.

But I cannot seem to figure out how to get the contents of the file;

open FILE, ">>c:/perlscripts/" . md5_hex($md5Con) . "-code.php" or die $!;
$fileContents = <FILE>;
close(FILE);

keep getting error;

Use of uninitialized value $fileContents

Which im guessing means it isn't returning a value.

Any help much appreciated.

>>>>>>>>>> EDIT <<<<<<<<<<

my $fileContents;
if( $md5Con =~ m/\.php$/g ) {
    my $ftp = Net::FTP->new($DB_ftpserver, Debug => 0) or die "Cannot connect to some.host.name: $@";
    $ftp->login($DB_ftpuser, $DB_ftppass) or die "Cannot login ", $ftp->message;
    $ftp->get("/" . $root . $webpage, "c:/perlscripts/" . md5_hex($md5Con) . "-code.php") or die $ftp->message;
    my $file = "c:/perlscripts/" . md5_hex($md5Con) . "-code.php";
    {
        local( $/ ); # undefine the record seperator
        open FILE, "<", $file or die "Cannot open:$!\n";
        my $fileContents = <FILE>;
        #print $fileContents;
        my $bodyContents;
        my $headContents;

        if( $fileContents =~ m/<\s*body[^>]*>.*$/gi ) {
            print $0 . $1 . "\n";
            $bodyContents = $dbh->quote($1);    
        }
        if( $fileContents =~ m/^.*<\/head>/gi ) {
            print $0 . $1 . "\n";
            $headContents = $dbh->quote($1);    
        }

        $bodyTable = $dbh->quote($bodyTable);
        $headerTable = $dbh->quote($headerTable);
        $dbh->do($createBodyTable) or die " error: Couldn't create body table: " . DBI->errstr;
        $dbh->do($createHeadTable) or die " error: Couldn't create header table: " . DBI->errstr;
        $dbh->do("INSERT INTO $headerTable ( headData, headDataOutput ) VALUES ( $headContents, $headContents )") or die " error: Couldn't connect to database: " . DBI->errstr;
        $dbh->do("INSERT INTO $bodyTable ( bodyData, bodyDataOutput ) VALUES ( $bodyContents, $bodyContents )") or die " error: Couldn't connect to database: " . DBI->errstr;
        $dbh->do("INSERT INTO page_names (linkFromRoot, linkTrue, page_name, table_name, navigation, location) VALUES ( $linkFromRoot, $linkTrue, $page_name, $table_name, $navigation, $location )") or die " error: Couldn't connect to database: " . DBI->errstr;

        unlink("c:/perlscripts/" . md5_hex($md5Con) . "-code.php");
    }
    $ftp->quit;
}

the above using print WILL print the whole file. BUT, for some reason the two regular expresions are returning false. Any idea why?

if( $fileContents =~ m/<\s*body[^>]*>.*$/gi ) {
            print $0 . $1 . "\n";
            $bodyContents = $dbh->quote($1);    
        }
        if( $fileContents =~ m/^.*<\/head>/gi ) {
            print $0 . $1 . "\n";
            $headContents = $dbh->quote($1);    
        }

回答1:


This is covered in section 5 of the Perl FAQ included with the standard distribution.

How can I read in an entire file all at once?

You can use the Path::Class::File::slurp module to do it in one step.

use Path::Class;
$all_of_it = file($filename)->slurp; # entire file in scalar
@all_lines = file($filename)->slurp; # one line per element

The customary Perl approach for processing all the lines in a file is to do so one line at a time:

open (INPUT, $file) || die "can't open $file: $!";
while (<INPUT>) {
    chomp;
    # do something with $_
}
close(INPUT)        || die "can't close $file: $!";

This is tremendously more efficient than reading the entire file into memory as an array of lines and then processing it one element at a time, which is often—if not almost always—the wrong approach. Whenever you see someone do this:

@lines = <INPUT>;

you should think long and hard about why you need everything loaded at once. It's just not a scalable solution. You might also find it more fun to use the standard Tie::File module, or the DB_File module's $DB_RECNO bindings, which allow you to tie an array to a file so that accessing an element the array actually accesses the corresponding line in the file.

You can read the entire filehandle contents into a scalar.

{
local(*INPUT, $/);
open (INPUT, $file) || die "can't open $file: $!";
$var = <INPUT>;
}

That temporarily undefs your record separator, and will automatically close the file at block exit. If the file is already open, just use this:

$var = do { local $/; <INPUT> };

For ordinary files you can also use the read function.

read( INPUT, $var, -s INPUT );

The third argument tests the byte size of the data on the INPUT filehandle and reads that many bytes into the buffer $var.




回答2:


Use Path::Class::File::slurp if you want to read all file contents in one go.

However, more importantly, use an HTML parser to parse HTML.




回答3:


open FILE, "c:/perlscripts" . md5_hex($md5Con) . "-code.php" or die $!;
while (<FILE>) {
    # each line is in $_
}
close(FILE);

will open the file and allow you to process it line-by-line (if that's what you want - otherwise investigate binmode). I think the problem is in your prepending the filename to open with >>. See this tutorial for more info.

I note you're also using regular expressions to parse HTML. Generally I would recommend using a parser to do this (e.g. see HTML::Parser). Regular expressions aren't suited to HTML due to HTML's lack of regularity, and won't work reliably in general cases.




回答4:


Also, if you are in need of editing the contents of the files take a look at the CPAN module Tie::File
This module relieves you from the need to creation of a temp file for editing the content and writing it back to the same file.

EDIT:
What you are looking at is a way to slurp the file. May be you have to undefine the record separator variable $/

The below code works fine for me:

use strict;
my $file = "test.txt";
{
    local( $/ ); # undefine the record seperator
    open FILE, "<", $file or die "Cannot open:$!\n";
    my $lines =<FILE>;
    print $lines;
}

Also see the section "Traditional Slurping" in this article.




回答5:


BUT, for some reason the two regular expresions are returning false. Any idea why?

. in a regular expression by default matches any character except newline. Presumably you have newlines before the </head> tag and after the <body> tag. To make . match any character including newlines, use the //s flag.

I'm not sure what your print $0 . $1 ... code is about; you aren't capturing anything in your matches to be stored in $1, and $0 isn't a variable used for regular expression captures, it's something very different.




回答6:


if you want to get the content of the file,

 @lines = <FILE>;



回答7:


Use File::Slurp::Tiny. As convenient as File::Slurp, but without the bugs.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2213485/how-do-i-read-a-files-contents-into-a-perl-scalar

标签
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!