Try this:
use warnings; use strict; use Net::IPAddr; open(file_info,$file) or die "Can't open $file "; my @records; while (<file_info>) { my ( $src_ip, $src_port ) = /IP\s+(\d+(?:\.\d+){3})\.(\d+)/; my ( $dst_ip, $dst_port ) = />\s+(\d+(?:\.\d+){3})\.(\d+)/; push @records, [$src_ip , $src_port , $dst_ip , $dst_port]; } close(file_info); my %seen; my @result = map { $_->[5] } sort { $a->[0] != $b->[0] ? $a->[0] <=> $b->[0] : $a->[1] != $b->[1] ? $a->[1] <=> $b->[1] : $a->[2] != $b->[2] ? $a->[2] <=> $b->[2] : $a->[3] <=> $b->[3] } map { $seen{$_->[4]}++ ? () : $_ } map { [ip2num($_->[0]), $_->[1], ip2num($_->[2]), $_->[3], join(',', +@$_), $_ ] } @records; print join(' ',@$_)."\n" for @results;
[4] is the stringified record for efficient existence tests.
[5] is the original record format for better re-use.
-David
Updated: made this node more stand-alone.
In reply to Re^2: Using unix commands in perl?
by erroneousBollock
in thread Using unix commands in perl?
by Himi
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