You could open a filehandle to read the nmap command and read each line in a loop. That way your script receives the command output, not the user, and you can parse the results and sanitise them for consumption by your clients. Something like
use strict;
use warnings;
my $nmapCmd = q{/path/to/nmap -and -any -args};
open my $nmapFH, q{-|}, $nmapCmd
or die qq{fork: $nmapCmd: $!\n};
while ( <$nmapFH> )
{
chomp;
# Do something with nmap output here
...
print qq{Sanitised stuff for user\n};
}
close $nmapFH
or die qq{close: $nmapCmd: $!\n};
I hope this is of use.
Cheers,
JohnGG
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