I'm really new to Perl, but I want to basically read in a file to get some data out of it. I want to parse this data into an array. Why an array? Because, I want to use the data to generate an graph (bar or pie of the data).
Here's my code for Perl so far:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use warnings;
#Creating an array
my @cpu_util;
#Creating a test file to read data from
my $file = "test.txt";
#Opening the while
open(DATA, $file) || die "Can't open $file: $!\n";
#Looping through the end of the file
while (<DATA>)
{
if (/(\w+)\s+\d+\s+(\d+)\.(\d+)\%/){ #Getting only the "processes"
chomp;
push @cpu_util, split /\t/; #I was hoping this would split the data at the tabs
}
}
close ($fi开发者_StackOverflow社区le);
foreach $value (@cpu_util) {
print $value . "\n";
}
Here's the file that I am reading in (test.txt):
=========================================
CPU Utilization
=========================================
Name CPU Time CPU Usage
-----------------------------------------
System 7962 3.00%
Adobe Photoshop 6783 0.19%
MSN Messenger 4490 0.01%
Google Chrome 8783 0.02%
Idle 120 94.00%
=========================================
However, what I notice is that I successfully populate the array, but it doesn't split the tabs and give me a multidimensional array. I don't really care about the CPU time field, but I do want the CPU Usage, So I want to print an XY chart with Y-axis having the CPU-usage and x-axis, the process name.
I was hoping to have an array "cpu_util" and have cpu_util[0][0] = System and cpu_util[0][1] = 3.00. Is this even possible? I thought the split /\/t\ would take care of it, but apparently I was mistaken ...
I think you want a hash there. The key would be the CPU name and the value would be the percent use. You're almost there. After a successful match, use the captures ($1
and $2
) to populate the hash:
my %cpu_util;
while (<DATA>)
{
if (/(.*?)\s+\d+\s+(\d+\.\d+)\%/){ #Getting only the "processes"
$cpu_util{ $1 } = $2;
}
}
use Data::Dumper;
print Dumper( \%cpu_util );
Your data structure should be much easier to use then:
$VAR1 = {
'Google Chrome' => '0.02',
'System' => '3.00',
'Adobe Photoshop' => '0.19',
'Idle' => '94.00',
'MSN Messenger' => '0.01'
};
Your split probably doesn't work because there aren't tabs there. It's not really the way to go anyway.
Here is your code fixed ihateme:
use Data::Dumper;
#use strict;
#Creating an array
my @cpu_util;
#Creating a test file to read data from
my $file = "bar.txt";
#Opening the while
open(DATA, $file) || die "Can't open $file: $!\n";
#Looping through the end of the file
while (<DATA>)
{
if (/(\w+)\s+\d+\s+(\d+)\.(\d+)\%/)
{
chomp;
my ( $name, $cpuusage, @rest ) = split ( /\s+\d+\s+(\d+\.\d+)\%/);
push @cpu_util, [$name, $cpuusage ];
}
}
close $file;
print Dumper(\@cpu_util);
$ref = $cpu_util[0]; # this will set the reference to the first array
$ref -> [2]; # this will return the 3rd value
print Dumper ($ref -> [1]);
$VAR1 = [
[
'System',
'3.00'
],
[
'Adobe Photoshop',
'0.19'
],
[
'MSN Messenger',
'0.01'
],
[
'Google Chrome',
'0.02'
],
[
'Idle',
'94.00'
]
];
$VAR1 = '3.00';
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