Matching parts of the line separately has several advantages. No matching is duplicated. Individual regexes are shorter and extract fewer parameters. Uninteresting lines are discarded sooner. All variables are properly scoped.
use strict; use warnings; my $time_stamp = qr{^(\w+) (\d+) (\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2})}; while (<DATA>) { next if !(my($mon, $day, $time) = /$time_stamp/); next if !(my($interface, $updown) = $' =~ /.*:\seth(\d): link (up| +down)/); if ( $updown eq 'down' ) { #... # Process down print $time, "\n"; } else { my( $rate, $duplex, $lpa ) = $' =~ /,(\d+)Mbps, ([^,]+), lpa ( +\w+)/; next if !defined($lpa); # Invalid 'up' probably never happens. #... # Process up print $lpa, "\n"; } } __DATA__ May 03 10:15:21 some text: eth3: link down May 04 10:16:23 some text: eth3: link up,562Mbps, foos, lpa fum no time

UPDATE: Refer to @LAST_MATCH_START and @LAST_MATCH_END for documentation on $'.

Bill

In reply to Re: scan, match and extract by BillKSmith
in thread scan, match and extract by seismofish

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