Suspect your problem is that
while(<perlIN>) is causing it to read the whole binary file, all at once, right there. Boom -- out of memory.
Instead, as noted by others, read only what you need -- one record at a time.
A common approach is to use a flag variable to indicate when you reach end of file; control the loop based on that.
Two ways to do this:
- Read one record at the top of the loop (use read and your $recln value); use substr to extract the pieces, or;
- Don't read anything at the top of the loop, but instead, read each variable like you do currently do; modify each one to check for end of file (sample below).
my $TRUE = 1;
my $FALSE = 0;
[...]
my $EofFlag = $FALSE;
while(!$EofFlag)
{
[...]
my $cmtseq_cnt = read(perlIN,$cmtseq,5);
if ($cmtseq_cnt < 5)
{
$EofFlag = $TRUE; # Redundant, given what we do next, but h
+ere for example
last;
}
}
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