I am hopeful someone has done this before as I'm stuck... I have a 3TB disk image file and I am trying to find all the different email addresses that I've used over the past 22 years.
I can use hex editor tools to find them but it takes days to look at the data and pick out even a handful of matches.
I use Perl regularly but I normally scan text files and do non binary file actions. That's easy since I can do a line by line search. But binary seems different.
If I want to search for zeropoint@ (no domain because I've used dozens of ISPs over the years and that's why I am trying to figure this out.) inside the entire 3TB file, what's the best way to do that? I can dump the results to a file and then clean it up but the search part has me stuck
Thank you
submitted by /u/zeropointlabs
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PTS 2024: Lisbon
Almost exactly a year since the last Perl Toolchain Summit, it was time for the next one, this time in Lisbon. Last year, I wrote:Ricardo Signes (rjbs forgot what he was saying)
Benchmark::DKbench Perl benchmark suite now supports custom benchmarks.
submitted by /u/perlancar [link] [comments] |
List of new CPAN distributions – Apr 2024
dist author abstract date AI-Ollama-Client CORION Client for AI::Ollama 2024-04-05T09:15:33 Acme-CPANModules-BPOM-FoodRegistration PERLANCAR List of modules and utilities related to Food Registrati…perlancar's blog
PTS 2024 - Day 4 - here comes the sun... it's all right!
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(cdxciii) 15 great CPAN modules released last week
Updates for great CPAN modules released last week. A module is considered great if its favorites count is greater or equal than 12. App...niceperl.blogspot.com
Although Benchmark::DKbench is a good overall indicator for generic CPU performance for comparing different systems (especially when it comes to Perl software), the best benchmark is always your own code. Hence, the module now lets you incorporate your own custom benchmarks. You can either have them run together with the default benchmarks, or run only your own set, just taking advantage of the framework (reports, multi-threading, monotonic precision timing, configurable repeats with averages/stdev, calculation of thread scaling etc). Here's an example where I run a couple of custom benchmarks on their own with Benchmark::DKbench:
``` use Benchmark::DKbench;
A simplistic benchmark sub:
sub str_bench { for (1..1000) { my $str = join("", map { chr(97 + rand(26)) } 1..rand(15000)); $str =~ s/a/bd/g; $str =~ tr/b/c/; } }
my %stats = suiterun({ include => 'custom', # Run only my custom benchmarks iter => 5, # Iterations to get an average extra_bench => { custom_bench1 => [&str_bench], # Add one more, just inline this time: custom_bench2 => [sub {my @a=split(//, 'x'x$) for 1..5000}], } }); ``` This will produce a report in STDOUT and also return the results in a hash for a single-thread run. You can also run the benchmarks multi-treaded and then calculate & print the multi/single-thread scalability:
```
If you want to get a count of logical cores:
my $cores = system_identity(1);
my %statsmulti = suite_run({ include => 'custom', threads => $cores, iter => 5, extra_bench => { custom_bench1 => [&str_bench], custom_bench2 => [sub {my @a=split(//, 'x'x$) for 1..5000}], } });
my %scal = calc_scalability(\%stats, \%stats_multi); ```
The report prints results per iteration and also aggregates:
``` Aggregates (5 iterations): Benchmark Avg Time (sec) Min Time (sec) Max Time (sec) custom_bench1: 1.092 1.079 1.107 custom_bench2: 0.972 0.961 0.983 Overall Avg Time (sec): 2.065 2.048 2.080
Aggregates (5 iterations, 10 threads): Benchmark Avg Time (sec) Min Time (sec) Max Time (sec) custom_bench1: 1.534 1.464 1.651 custom_bench2: 1.278 1.225 1.345 Overall Avg Time (sec): 2.812 2.689 2.965 The scalability report summarizes as well:
Multi thread Scalability: Benchmark Multi perf xSingle Multi scalability % custom_bench1: 7.12 71
custom_bench2: 7.61 76
DKbench summary (2 benchmarks, 5 iterations, 10 threads): Single: 2.065s Multi: 2.812s Multi/Single perf: 7.36x (7.12 - 7.61) Multi scalability: 73.6% (71% - 76%) ```
The suite normally uses a scoring system which works better than times, so you can set that up by adding reference times to each benchmark, and you can also make the benchmarks return something (checksum etc) to verify results etc, see POD for more.
submitted by /u/dkech
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From the tprc-general Slack channel, Todd Rinaldo wrote yesterday that "Talk Accept, Decline, Waitlist emails have been sent out." See tprc.us for more information about this year's Perl and Raku Conference in Las Vegas, NV.
submitted by /u/talexbatreddit
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Mo utilities for email.
Changes for 0.02 - 2024-04-26T23:02:53+02:00
- Add tests for error parameters.
- Rewrite the tests so that the functional tests are first and then the errors.
Perl CPU Benchmark
Changes for 2.6 - 2024-04-25
- Custom benchmark improvements.
- Fix BSD tar xattr.
Code coverage metrics for Perl
Changes for 1.41
- Spelling, linting and formatting changes
load Data::Dumper output, including self-references
Changes for 0.01 - 2024-04-25
Experimental features made easy
Changes for 0.032 - 2024-04-25T22:30:41+01:00
- Add the newly-stable features to stable.pm - extra_paired_delimiters, const_attr, for_list
Hi! Asking for a wisdom here...
We have a module that modifies signal handler $SIG{__DIE__} to log information and to die afterwards. Hundreds of scripts relied on this module which worked fine in perl 5.10.1.
Recently we had the opportunity to install several Perl versions but unfortunately a large number of scripts that used to work with Perl 5.10.1 now behave differently:
- Failed in 5.14.4:
/home/dev/perl-5.14.4/bin/perl -wc
test.pl
RECEIVED SIGNAL - S_IFFIFO is not a valid Fcntl macro at /home/dev/perl-5.14.4/lib/5.14.4/File/stat.pm line 41
- Worked without changes in 5.26.3:
/home/dev/perl-5.26.3/bin/perl -wc
test.pl
test.pl
syntax OK
- Worked without changes in 5.38.2:
/home/dev/perl-5.38.2/bin/perl -wc test.pl
test.pl syntax OK
Many of the scripts can only be updated to 5.14.4 due to the huge jumps between 5.10 and 3.58; But we are stuck on that failures.
Was there an internal Perl change in 5.14 which cause the failures but works on other recent versions without any update on the scripts?
Cheerio!
submitted by /u/Longjumping_Army_525
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Sanity-check calling context
Changes for 0.04
- (no code changes)
- Switched to MIT license.
- Switched README from POD to Markdown.
- Removed Travis CI.
Sort lines of text by a SortKey module
Changes for 0.001 - 2024-03-07
- First release.
Sort lines of text by a Comparer module
Changes for 0.002 - 2024-03-07
- No functional changes.
- [doc] Mention some related links.
An assortment of date-/time-related CLI utilities
Changes for 0.128 - 2024-03-07
- [clis strftime, strftimeq] Use localtime() instead of gmtime(). We can still show UTC using "TZ=UTC strftime ...".
Read Perl’s symbol table programmatically
Changes for 0.11
- (No code changes.)
- Remove Travis CI.
- Change README to Markdown.
- Re-license under the MIT License.
Perl implementation for the Prague Markup Language (PML).
Changes for 2.25 - 2024-04-23T15:11:42Z
- Fix saving relative paths to resource files.
Create a DateTime object from a Genealogy Date
Changes for 0.06 - 2024-04-23T08:28:40Z
- Handle entries which have the French 'Mai' instead of the English 'May' Some messages were printed even in quiet mode Handle '1517-05-04' as '04/05/1517'
Show context around syntax errors and exceptions
Changes for v0.4.0 - 2024-04-23
- fixes
- new features
- improvements
- other
I understand that many disagree with this statement, but it really makes it easier to build distributions for people who not monks. Wish the documentation was more detailed
submitted by /u/ReplacementSlight413
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Sah schemas related to BCA (Bank Central Asia) bank
Changes for 0.002 - 2024-04-03
- Rename module/dist Sah-Schema{s,Bundle}-* following rename of Sah-Schema{s,Bundle} (for visual clarity and consistency with naming of other bundles).
search nested hashref/arrayref structures using JSONPath
Changes for 1.0.5 - 2024-04-22T16:10:46-05:00
simulating paper and pencil techniques for basic arithmetic operations
Changes for 0.01 - 2024-04
- First version, with the four basic operations, plus square-root, GCD and radix conversion. And HTML rendering
Use a type to validate values in a deep comparison.
Changes for 1.0.1 - 2024-04-22
- Add Test2::Tools::Type