I'd go for
Time::Local -- it's simple and direct: convert each string to "seconds since the epoch" and subtract. The only downside is having to relate month names to numbers.
use Time::Local;
my $beginning = 'Thu Oct 24 17:37:58 2007';
my $end = 'Fri Oct 26 06:54:09 2007';
my %month = ( Jan => 0, Feb => 1, Mar => 2,
Apr => 3, May => 4, Jun => 5,
Jul => 6, Aug => 7, Sep => 8,
Oct => 9, Nov => 10, Dec => 11 );
for ( $beginning, $end ) {
my ( $mo, $dy, $hr, $mi, $se, $yr ) = ( split /[\s:]/ )[1..6];
$mo = $month{$mo};
$_ = timelocal( $se, $mi, $hr, $dy, $mo, $yr );
}
printf "%d sec elapsed\n", $end - $beginning;
That's just a very crude demonstration, but it gives you an idea what needs to be done.
update: here's a more perlish way to initialize month numbers:
my $i=0;
my %month = map {$_=>$i++} qw/Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct
+Nov Dec/;
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