Commands using perl (369)

  • This is from perldoc -q random.*line, which says: This has a significant advantage in space over reading the whole file in. You can find a proof of this method in The Art of Computer Programming, Volume 2, Section 3.4.2, by Donald E. Knuth. Who am I to argue with Don Knuth?


    1
    perl -e 'rand($.) < 1 && ($line = $_) while <>;'
    unixmonkey20842 · 2011-04-25 21:28:26 3
  • Can also just use the debug mode like this. Show Sample Output


    1
    perl -dwe 1
    bashrc · 2011-05-05 20:28:03 6
  • Replace PACKAGE with desired package name. Found here: http://mikebeach.org/2011/04/undo-apt-get-build-dep/


    1
    sudo aptitude markauto $(apt-cache showsrc PACKAGE | grep Build-Depends | perl -p -e 's/(?:[\[(].+?[\])]|Build-Depends:|,|\|)//g')
    Lexton · 2011-05-08 14:18:52 6
  • Recursively delete empty directories. Use with care.


    1
    perl -MFile::Find -e"finddepth(sub{rmdir},'.')"
    igorfu · 2011-05-23 08:45:34 7

  • 1
    arp-scan -I eth0 -l | perl -ne '/((\d{1,3}\.){3}\d{1,3})/ and $ip=$1 and $_=`nmblookup -A $ip` and /([[:alnum:]-]+)\s+<00>[^<]+<ACTIVE>/m and printf "%15s %s\n",$ip,$1'
    bandie91 · 2011-07-08 07:41:41 3

  • 1
    perl -mText::Highlight -E 'say Text::Highlight->new(ansi => 1)->highlight(Perl => do { local (@ARGV,$/) = shift; <> }) ' path/to/perl-file.pl
    dbr · 2011-07-12 04:55:12 5
  • this command example converts to 25 fps subtitles that were originally created for 24 fps movie


    1
    cat subtitles.txt | perl -pe 's/} /}/g; s/{(\d+)}/=1=/; $f1=(24/25*$1); s/{(\d+)}/=2=/; $f2=(24/25*$1); $f1=~s/\..*//; $f2=~s/\..*//; s/=1=/{$f1}/; s/=2=/{$f2}/; ' > subtitles_newfps.txt
    ciekawy · 2011-07-30 15:34:43 18
  • Calls the POSIX strerror() function to look up the meaning of integer ERRNOs set by some functions.


    1
    perl -MPOSIX -e 'print strerror($ARGV[0])."\n";' ERRNO
    sethjust · 2011-09-21 18:16:19 5

  • 1
    perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/START.*?STOP/replace_string/smg' file_to_change
    hute37 · 2011-10-05 11:22:36 10
  • the output of svn log is annoying to grep, since it spreads the useful info over multiple lines. This compacts the output down to one line so eg you can grep for a comment and see the rev, date & committer straight away. Updated: MUCH shorter, easier to remember. Now it just replaces newlines with spaces, except on '---' lines. Show Sample Output


    1
    svn log | perl -l40pe 's/^-+/\n/'
    bazzargh · 2011-10-14 16:02:22 6

  • 1
    perl -ane 'END{printf(" %d %d %d\n", $x, $y, $z)} $x+=1; $y+=@F; $z+=length' file.txt
    kev · 2011-10-24 06:14:02 10
  • The crypt function takes a password, key, as a string, and a salt character array which is described below, and returns a printable ASCII string which starts with another salt. It is believed that, given the output of the function, the best way to find a key that will produce that output is to guess values of key until the original value of key is found. from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crypt_(Unix)


    1
    useradd -m -p $(perl -e'print crypt("passwordscelta", "stigghiola")') user
    0disse0 · 2012-02-06 19:53:01 7
  • This one line Perl script will display the smallest to the largest files sizes in all directories on a server. Show Sample Output


    1
    du -k | sort -n | perl -ne 'if ( /^(\d+)\s+(.*$)/){$l=log($1+.1);$m=int($l/log(1024)); printf ("%6.1f\t%s\t%25s %s\n",($1/(2**(10*$m))),(("K","M","G","T","P")[$m]),"*"x (1.5*$l),$2);}' | more
    Q_Element · 2012-02-07 15:49:19 10
  • Requires perl 5.14 or greater


    1
    perl -e 'rename $_, s/ /-/gr for <*.mp3>'
    ironcamel · 2012-02-21 17:07:18 4
  • This prints file access rights in octal - useful when "stat" is unavailable. Show Sample Output


    1
    perl -e 'printf "%04o\n", (stat shift)[2] & 0777;' file
    zlemini · 2012-03-22 15:05:04 9
  • extract data in multiline blocks of data with perl pattern matching loop Show Sample Output


    1
    cat z.log | perl -ne 'BEGIN{ print "DATE;RATE\n"; } /\[(\d.*)\]/ && print $1; /CURRENT RATE: +(\S+) msg.*/ && print ";" .$1 . "\n"; '
    hute37 · 2012-04-03 13:52:20 3

  • 1
    perl -e 'printf "00:16:3E:%02X:%02X:%02X\n", rand 0xFF, rand 0xFF, rand 0xFF'
    Gular · 2012-07-02 09:59:43 5
  • Really helpfull when play with files having spaces an other bad name. Easy to store and access names and path in just a field while saving it in a file. This format (URL) is directly supported by nautilus and firefox (and other browsers) Show Sample Output


    1
    convert_path2uri () { echo -n 'file://'; echo -n "$1" | perl -pe 's/([^a-zA-Z0-9_\/.])/sprintf("%%%.2x", ord($1))/eg' ;} #convert2uri '/tmp/a b' ### convert file path to URI
    totti · 2013-07-01 08:54:45 7
  • Sets the @ A record for your domain hosted by namecheap to your current internet-facing IP address, logs success or failure with syslog, and logs the data returned to /root/dnsupdate. Change the XXX's as appropriate. More info at: http://www.namecheap.com/support/knowledgebase/article.aspx/29/ Show Sample Output


    1
    logger -tdnsupdate $(curl -s 'https://dynamicdns.park-your-domain.com/update?host=@&domain=xxx&password=xxx'|tee -a /root/dnsupdate|perl -pe'/Count>(\d+)<\/Err/;$_=$1eq"0"?"Update Sucessful":"Update failed"'&&date>>/root/dnsupdate)
    MagisterQuis · 2013-08-11 16:27:39 7
  • Use it to send raw data to a networked device. Used to interact with relay controller board whose documentation is lost, so use wireshark to sniff the sent data and replayed using the command.


    1
    echo -n 023135 | perl -pe 's/([0-9a-f]{2})/chr hex $1/gie' | nc -4u -q1 -p5001 192.168.0.100 2000
    sucotronic · 2013-09-18 14:31:47 7
  • Converts control codes and spaces (ASCII code ≤ 32) to visible Unicode Control Pictures, U+2400 ? U+2420. Skips \n characters, which is probably a good thing. Show Sample Output


    1
    /bin/echo -e '\002Hello, Folks\t!\r' | perl -pwle 'use v5.14; s/([\N{U+0000}-\N{U+0020}])/chr(9216+ord($1))/ge;'
    scruss · 2014-06-30 01:45:40 11
  • An advantage is that this doesn't modify remained string at all. One can change {0,1} with {0,n} to drop several columns


    1
    perl -pE's/(\S+\s*){0,1}//'
    pung96 · 2015-05-09 15:14:58 12
  • Better than the others, and actually works unlike some of them. Show Sample Output


    1
    objdump -d $1 | grep -Po '\s\K[a-f0-9]{2}(?=\s)' | sed 's/^/\\x/g' | perl -pe 's/\r?\n//' | sed 's/$/\n/'
    Daytona · 2015-05-23 01:21:58 10

  • 1
    echo "quit" | openssl s_client -connect facebook.com:443 | openssl x509 -noout -text | grep "DNS:" | perl -pe "s/(, )?DNS:/\n/g"
    lgarron · 2015-08-13 22:50:45 9

  • 1
    find . -type f | perl -ne 'print $1 if m/\.([^.\/]+)$/' | sort -u
    wuseman1 · 2018-11-11 01:09:42 538
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Find the 20 biggest directories on the current filesystem
This command will tell you the 20 biggest directories starting from your working directory and skips directories on other filesystems. Useful for resolving disk space issues.

display ip address
add this alias in .bashrc to fast check the ip address of your modem router alias myip="curl -s http://myip.dk | grep '' | sed -e 's/]*>//g'"

Create a mirror of a local folder, on a remote server
Create a exact mirror of the local folder "/root/files", on remote server 'remote_server' using SSH command (listening on port 22) (all files & folders on destination server/folder will be deleted)

When was your OS installed?
Show time and date when you installed your OS.

Look for English words in /dev/urandom
Little faster alternative.

Convert from octal format to umask
Umask is obtained subtracting 7 from each cypher of octal format. I store octal perm format in an array,then for each element of array I subtract 7. The result is the umask.

Which processes are listening on a specific port (e.g. port 80)
swap out "80" for your port of interest. Can use port number or named ports e.g. "http"

Clean up display when the bash prompt is displayed
This will cause bash to fix a garbled terminal before the prompt is printed. For example, if you cat a file with nonprintable character sequences, the terminal sometimes ends up in a mode where it only prints line drawing characters. This sequence will return the terminal to the standard character set after every command.

ssh autocomplete
Add to your bash profile to minimize carpal tunnel syndrome. Doesn't work with user@hostname but appending "-l user" works fine if needed. Works for ping as well.. complete -W "$(echo `cat ~/.ssh/known_hosts | cut -f 1 -d ' ' | sed -e s/,.*//g | uniq | grep -v "\["`;)" ping

Gets directory and files tree listing from a FTP-server
Creates a file with contents like `du -a`, only it is remote server filesystem hierarchy. Very usefull then for grep-ing without remote connection.


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