I think that
graff has the basic idea. There are some specific gotchas about isql from the command line that I have come across over the years.
my $qrycmd = '-S[Server] -U[userid] -P[password] -h-1 -n -s:';
# -h-1 suppresses headers
# -n removes numbering and the prompt symbol (>) from input lines
# -s: sets the field seperator to a colon, :, this eliminates a space
# between fields and in the first position of the line (tabs, \t,
# doesn't work reliably
open( DB, "isql $qrycmd -iperlmonk34.sql |" ) or die "can't run isql:
+$!";
while (<DB>) { # assuming the tool prints one line per row
chomp; # remove newline
my ( $lname, $fname ) = split(/:/);
# the if statement accounts for the last two lines of the isql output
# which consists of a blank line followed by a line listing rows
# affected
if(defined $fname){
push @fnames, $fname;
push @lnames, $lname;
}
}
close DB;
PJ
unspoken but ever present -- use strict; use warnings; use diagnostics; (if needed)
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