I'm trying to extract all ip addresses from a file. So far, I'm just using
cat foo.txt | perl -pe 's/.*?((\d{1,3}\.){3}\d{1,3}).*/\1/'
but this also prints lines that don't contain a match. I can fix this by piping through grep, but this seems like it ought to be unnecessary, and could lead to errors if the regexes don't match up perfectly.
Is there a simpler way to开发者_高级运维 accomplish this?
Try this:
cat foo.txt | perl -ne 'print if s/.*?((\d{1,3}\.){3}\d{1,3}).*/\1/'
or:
<foo.txt perl -ne 'print if s/.*?((\d{1,3}\.){3}\d{1,3}).*/\1/'
It's the shortest alternative I can think of while still using Perl.
However this way might be more correct:
<foo.txt perl -ne 'if (/((\d{1,3}\.){3}\d{1,3})/) { print $1 . "\n" }'
If you've got grep, then just call grep directly:
grep -Po "(\d{1,3}\.){3}\d{1,3}" foo.txt
You've already got a suitable answer of using grep to extract the IP addresses, but just to explain why you were seeing non-matches being printed:
perldoc perlrun
will tell you about all the options you can pass Perl on the command line.
Quoting from it:
-p causes Perl to assume the following loop around your program, which makes it
iterate over filename arguments somewhat like sed:
LINE:
while (<>) {
... # your program goes here
} continue {
print or die "-p destination: $!\n";
}
You could have used the -n
switch instead, which does similar, but does not automatically print, for example:
cat foo.txt | perl -ne '/((?:\d{1,3}\.){3}\d{1,3})/ and print $1'
Also, there's no need to use cat
; Perl will open and read the filenames you give it, so you could say e.g.:
perl -ne '/((?:\d{1,3}\.){3}\d{1,3})/ and print $1' foo.txt
ruby -0777 -ne 'puts $_.scan(/((?:\d{1,3}\.){3}\d{1,3})/)' file
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