Try Anacron
http://freshmeat.net/projects/anacron/?topic_id=136
-Original Message-
From: Troy May [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, May 22, 2002 12:02 AM
To: Beginners CGI List
Subject: Cron alternatives?
Hello,
A friend of mine has a task he wants to do daily, so I told him
--- Camilo Gonzalez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dudes,
>
> Someone has to have some inkling how to open filehandles for writing whilst
> running in taint mode (-T). C'mon there are some of the best Perl minds in
> the world here. Is it impossible?
[snip]
> but kept getting this error, "Insecure
Dudes,
Someone has to have some inkling how to open filehandles for writing whilst
running in taint mode (-T). C'mon there are some of the best Perl minds in
the world here. Is it impossible?
I've tried untainting the data I'm using to write with this snippet:
#untaint $count
if ($co
--- Matthew Weier O'Phinney
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've gone through and read all the other posts in
> reply to this, and they
> all seem to ignore a very simple solution.
>
> First: strip off the \r\n:
> s/\r\n/\n/sg
>
> Then look for the pattern \n\n (which would indicate
> the existence
Tagore,
Good points, and well taken. I was definitely planning to modify case using
tr/[A-Z]/[a-z]/ but just hadn't gotten that far yet.
I hadn't considered the hash idea but it makes a hell of a lot more sense
than what I was doing. Thanks.
Scot Robnett
inSite Internet Solutions
[EMAIL PROTECT
BTW, one thing you might consider is that there may be duplicate email
addresses that differ only in case. You might want to check for that.
Tagore Smith
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Scot Robnett wrote:
> I am concatenating several e-mail lists into one, and some of the
addresses
> are on multiple lists. I need to be able to print out a full,
alphabetically
> sorted list of all the names without printing duplicates. How would I
alter
> the following to make that happen?
>
>
Someone please help me. I need to be able to untaint filehandles.
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Hi There,
I have a question about Perl in combination with Apache.
You can set restricted areas within Apache to force autentication.
Afterwards you can read the userid using :
my $user = ($ENV{'REMOTE_USER'});
But as you can see below, there also is a group called htuser in this case.
Does an
I am concatenating several e-mail lists into one, and some of the addresses
are on multiple lists. I need to be able to print out a full, alphabetically
sorted list of all the names without printing duplicates. How would I alter
the following to make that happen?
This gets close; it *will* remove
ChaoZ Inferno wrote:
> Well, firstly, it ain't CGI, it's network programming.
if it ain't, why are you posting to a cgi list?
http://learn.perl.org/ - choose another list.
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Well, firstly, it ain't CGI, it's network programming.
Well, it's slightly one sublayer below HTML, it's HTTP request/response
headers. Thus, print, <>, read, write are not advisable, thus resorting to
these.
However, I would like to thank both felix and drieux for addressing this
problem. See
On Wednesday, May 22, 2002, at 03:26 , Sven Bentlage wrote:
> ok, found out myself why it didn't work.
> I am not sure if it's an elegant chunk of code, but it works.
> Since the data is in the $_ variable, fooling around with $date_today in
> the regex coulnd't work out.
> (Omitted =~ since I
On Tuesday, May 21, 2002, at 10:01 , Troy May wrote:
[..]
> His server is running RedHat 6.1 Cartman.
[..]
with little more than a quick peek at redhat.com - this
seems to be their old 6.1 release - so yes cron should be ok.
cf: man 5 crontab
> He needs to have a data file erased the fi
drieux wrote:
> but if you wanted to 'clean em all'
>
> $line =~ s/[$eol]+/\n/g
>
> would find the case of
>
> \r
> \r\n
> \n
> \r\n\n
>
>
> and replace them all with a single '\n' for all
> occurances in the $line that one is going through
wouldn't this reg
On Tuesday, May 21, 2002, at 05:52 , Jake wrote:
[..]
> If the latter method works, that's cool, i havent tested it. I will admit
> that as I learn this stuff, I tend to do everything the hard way first,
> then trim it down.
I have test it on [darwin|solaris|redhat linux 7.2] - I could
get ove
On Wednesday, May 22, 2002, at 01:07 , ChaoZ InferNo wrote:
[..]
> I want to print out a variable to my client over the internet, but would
> like to use syswrite and sysread would help to reduce mistakes in EOF
> characters.
[..]
I back felix's main line - since sysread/syswrite are for
acces
I've gone through and read all the other posts in reply to this, and they
all seem to ignore a very simple solution.
First: strip off the \r\n:
s/\r\n/\n/sg
Then look for the pattern \n\n (which would indicate the existence of an
empty line. For example: "Some paragraph text\n\nA new paragraph")
on Wed, 22 May 2002 11:14:34 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Tim
Fletcher) wrote:
> Hi everyone,
> I'm intressted in learning socket programming in perl.
> does someone know of a good tutorial or mailing list that isn't
> beginer or CGI oriented?
Invest in Lincoln Stein's "Network Programming with Per
Hi Felix
thanks for the tips.
On Wednesday, May 22, 2002, at 01:20 PM, Felix Geerinckx wrote:
> You have a precedence problem here, since '||' has higher precedence
> than ','. You should either use
>
> open(FH, " open FH, "
didn't know that yet. fixed it.
> (Why are
on Wed, 22 May 2002 10:26:34 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Sven
Bentlage) wrote:
> my $date = `/bin/date +%d.%m.%y`;
> $date =~ tr/./-/;
> chomp $date;
There is no need to fork here. You can accomplish the same from
within Perl, by replacing the above lines with
my ($d, $m, $y) = (localtime)[3,
Hi everyone,
I'm intressted in learning socket programming in perl.
does someone know of a good tutorial or mailing list that isn't
beginer or CGI oriented?
TIA
Tim
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on Wed, 22 May 2002 09:54:33 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chaoz
Inferno) wrote:
> Well, the problem is that I have to print an html header back to
> the client, and the usual print, I am getting irregular response?
I never had any problems using 'print', in combination with the CGI.pm
module on an
ok, found out myself why it didn't work.
I am not sure if it's an elegant chunk of code, but it works.
Since the data is in the $_ variable, fooling around with $date_today in
the regex coulnd't work out.
(Omitted =~ since I use $_.)
Sven
my $date = `/bin/date +%d.%m.%y`;
$date =~ tr/./-/;
cho
Hi
I'l looking for a way to use a scalar in a regex. The snibblet below
shows in about what it is supposed to do.
if someone has a better idea how to compare the date value with the
$date_today value I extract from the text file, I'd be really happy
about any hints..
The snibblet doesn't work,
Well, the problem is that I have to print an html header back to the client,
and the usual print, I am getting irregular response?
Thus, I am hoping to use the sysread and syswrite command to help me pass
the html message over to prevent any EOF characters problem?
This is a rather sensitive i
Hi Sven,
I think you have to do it on another way.
Better to let perl find your date.
#!/usr/bin/perl
use Time::localtime
$tijd = localtime;
$year = $tijd->year+1900
print $tijd->sec;
print "Wir leben heute am jahr: $year";
In this order we have :
sec Seconds
min Minutes
hours hou
on Wed, 22 May 2002 08:07:07 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chaoz
Inferno) wrote:
> I want to print out a variable to my client over the internet, but
> would like to use syswrite and sysread would help to reduce
> mistakes in EOF characters.
Why do you think that?
> #!/usr/bin/perl
> my $buffer;
>
Hi all,
I am having some problem with sysread and syswrite. Example:-
I want to print out a variable to my client over the internet, but would
like to use syswrite and sysread would help to reduce mistakes in EOF
characters.
#!/usr/bin/perl
my $buffer;
my $test = "hello, how do u do";
#readi
Hi !
How can I convert a date value (I get via /bin/date) into a text value?
Thanks for your help.
Sven
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on Wed, 22 May 2002 00:22:30 GMT,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jake) wrote:
> open(outfile, ">".$pathToXML ) or die ("couldnt open xml file");
> [...]
> Unquoted string "outfile" may clash with future reserved word at
> /var/www/cgi-bin/adminWorkReport2.cgi line 66.
> [...]
> open(assignFile, ">".$pathToA
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