Thanks for the suggestion, but as I'm not reading the input in a loop, I can't see a way to implement it.
My input is in the form of a stream consisting of many tar'ed text files written to standard-out when they're extracted by bzcat (from .tar.bz2 files).
I'm trying to use perl to do the grepping, but that's only a part of a larger shell script that looks something like this (snipped for clarity):
#! /bin/sh
## other stuff happens here, but snipped for clarity
scdir=/var/log
find $scdir -type f -name "nts_*.bz2" | # find interesting files in
+ $scdir
perl -wnl -e '7 > -M and print;' | # ignore old files
xargs bzcat -k | # unpack contents to STDOUT
perl -wn00 -e ' # paragraph mode
m[kernel\.hostname\s.\s(.*?)\n] and print "Hostname:\t$1\n"; #
+grep for hostname
m[\/bin\/date\n(.*?)\n] and print "Generated:\t$1\n"; # grep fo
+r date
## I grep for other stuff here, but snipped for clarity
m[Settings.for\s(.*?):\n] and print "Interface:\t$1\n"; # g
+rep for eth interfaces
m[Speed:\s(.*?)Mb\/s] and # grep for interface spee
+d
print "\ -speed:\t$1Mb\/s\n" ;
m[Duplex:\s(.*?)\n] and # grep for interface duplex
print "\ -duplex:\t$1\n" ;
m[Auto-negotiation:\s(.*?)\n] and # grep for interface
+autoneg
print "\ -autoneg:\t$1\n" ;
m[cpuinfo\nvendor_id\s+:\s(.*?)\n] and # grep for cpu id
print "CPU:\t\t$1\n" ;
'
exit $!
I'm a Perl novice, so am open to suggestions that I'm not approaching this the right way.
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