Re: How can I translate it back to @ sign.
- From: romdav@xxxxxxxxx (David Romero)
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 2008 14:04:25 -0500
use a regular expression
my $email = 'user!dominio.com';
$email =~ s/!/@/g;
###Result user@xxxxxxxxxxx
http://www.troubleshooters.com/codecorn/littperl/perlreg.htm
On Thu, Jun 26, 2008 at 1:35 PM, Aruna Goke <myklass@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
hi,
i have the this log from my sms gateway, however, the inverted exclamation
mark was sent from the smsc as @.
2008-06-26 17:22:35 SMS request sender:+2342019122 request:
'maruna¡ontng.com,test,Love my test message' file answer: ''
2008-06-26 17:27:17 Receive SMS [SMSC:caxt] [SVC:] [ACT:] [BINF:]
[from:+2342019122] [to:+2349191] [flags:-1:0:-1:0:-1]
[msg:43:maruna!ontng.com,test,Love my test message] [udh:0:]
2008-06-26 17:27:17 SMS request sender:+23422019122 request:
'maruna!ontng.com,test,'Love my test message'file answer: ''
2008-06-26 17:34:15 Receive SMS [SMSC:caxt] [SVC:] [ACT:] [BINF:]
[from:+2342019122] [to:+2349191] [flags:-1:0:-1:0:-1]
[msg:43:maruna¡ontng.com,test,Love my test message] [udh:0:]
I have my script that parse the file and extract as below
To: maruna¡ontng.com Subject: test Message: Love my test message sender :
2342010012@xxxxxxxxx
What i want to achieve is to translate the to address back to
maruna@xxxxxxxxx instaed of maruna¡ontng.com.
when i checked through, i discover that it is inverted exclamation mark with
character code 00A1 from unicode(hex) of latin-1 subset. I need this
translated to @, any help will be appreciated
my script is as below
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use File::Tail;
use Mail::Sender;
# the access.log is read and the following, recepient is extracted.
my $name = "/var/log/bulksms/sms_access.log";
my ($mailreci, $mailsubj, @sms, $mailmsg, $mailsend, $sendee, $sender, $msg,
$domain);
$domain = 'ontng.com';
open my $file, '<', $name or die "could not open $name: $!";
$file=File::Tail->new(name=>$name, maxinterval=>3, adjustafter=>5);
while (defined($_=$file->read))
{
@sms = split/\[/;
next unless $sms[6]=~/to:\+2349191\]/;
$sendee = $sms[5];
$sendee =~ s/from:\+(\d+)\]/$1/;
$sendee = "$sendee\@$domain";
$msg = $sms[8];
$msg = (split/:/, $msg)[-1];
$msg =~ s/(\w+)\s?\]/$1/;
# i need only sender and $msg
($mailreci, $mailsubj, $mailmsg) = (split/,/, $msg, 3)[0..2];
print "To: $mailreci Subject: $mailsubj Message: $mailmsg sender :
$sendee\n";
}
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David Romero
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