I think what you're looking for is to use a hash to store
the values, and a regexp or two to parse the values:
use strict;
my %count = ();
# Read the stuff from STDIN
while (<STDIN>)
{
if (/GET .*(\.[^\s]+) ([0-9]{3})/)
{
my ($ftype, $reason) = ($1, $2);
$count{"$ftype-$reason"}++;
}
}
# Now print the stuff out
foreach (keys(%count))
{
if (/^(.*)-(.*)$/)
{
print "Filetype $1, reason $2 has a count of $count{$_}\n";
}
}
See
perlre for details on regular expressions and
perldata for information about hashes.
There is also an evil hacky way of doing this, which
is much faster, but requires you to know which filetypes
and reason codes you are looking for.
use strict;
{
local $/ = undef; # Slurp mode
my $file = <STDIN>;
my $html = $file=~s/\.html 200//g;
print "Count of HTML 200 is $html\n";
}
This works because s/// returns the number of items replaced,
and is surprisingly fast at doing this on large files...
Andrew.
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