While not truly a beginner it feels that way after not doing anything substantial in Perl in many years.
I currently need a program to take Apache HTTPD configuration files in HTTPD 2.2 syntax used in current production and convert them to HTTPD 2.4 syntax in future production. I will need to do this many times weekly until we cut over to the new systems. My first challenge is converting the permissions syntax: Order deny,allow Deny from all To Require all denied And similar transformations. I was able to make this modification if I set $/ = undef and look at the file as a whole. My problem is I really want to process the file line by line to remove several <IfDefine BLAH> ... </IfDefine> blocks which may have other conditional code blocks contained within them. I have considered using two separate scripts and a two pass solution but there is a part of me which would rather have a single script do it all in one pass. My current attempt, after several tries, is: if ( m/{.*}[Oo]rder deny,allow(.*)\n(.*)[Dd]eny from all(.*)/) { print "\tRequire all denied\n"; next; } While not causing syntax errors it is not doing what I want either. I am probably using the 'm/' incorrectly and need your help. Darryl Baker -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: beginners-unsubscr...@perl.org For additional commands, e-mail: beginners-h...@perl.org http://learn.perl.org/