From 1b4fe9dd6ba8cbc553a1dd650fc8428ba87d63b6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Philip Hazel Date: Wed, 24 Nov 2004 14:43:57 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Installed eximstats 1.33 --- src/src/eximstats.src | 704 ++++++++++++++++++++---------------------- 1 file changed, 339 insertions(+), 365 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/src/eximstats.src b/src/src/eximstats.src index 223c7a7b2..200f9d524 100644 --- a/src/src/eximstats.src +++ b/src/src/eximstats.src @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ #!PERL_COMMAND -w -# $Cambridge: exim/src/src/eximstats.src,v 1.1 2004/10/07 10:39:01 ph10 Exp $ +# $Cambridge: exim/src/src/eximstats.src,v 1.2 2004/11/24 14:43:57 ph10 Exp $ # Copyright (c) 2001 University of Cambridge. # See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. @@ -178,9 +178,15 @@ # Added warnings if required GD::Graph modules are not available or # insufficient -chart* options are specified. # -# 2004-02-20 V1.31 Andrea Balzi +# 2004-02-20 V1.31 Andrea Balzi # Only show the Local Sender/Destination links if the tables exist. # +# 2004-07-05 V1.32 Steve Campbell +# Fix '-merge -h0' divide by zero error. +# +# 2004-07-15 V1.33 Steve Campbell +# Documentation update - I've converted the subroutine +# documentation from POD to comments. =head1 NAME @@ -190,6 +196,7 @@ eximstats - generates statistics from Exim mainlog files. =head1 SYNOPSIS eximstats [Options] mainlog1 mainlog2 ... > report.txt + eximstats -html [Options] mainlog1 mainlog2 ... > report.html eximstats -merge [Options] report.1.txt report.2.txt ... > weekly_report.txt Options: @@ -371,11 +378,6 @@ and delivered log lines are in different files, which can happen when you have multiple mail servers and a message cannot be immeadiately delivered. Fixing this could be tricky... -=head1 SUBROUTINES - -The following section will only be of interest to the -program maintainers: - =cut use integer; @@ -411,7 +413,7 @@ use vars qw($COLUMN_WIDTHS); @days_per_month = (0, 31, 59, 90, 120, 151, 181, 212, 243, 273, 304, 334); $gig = 1024 * 1024 * 1024; -$VERSION = '1.31'; +$VERSION = '1.33'; # How much space do we allow for the Hosts/Domains/Emails/Edomains column headers? $COLUMN_WIDTHS = 8; @@ -465,21 +467,20 @@ use vars qw(%report_totals); ################################################## -=head2 volume_rounded(); - - $rounded_volume = volume_rounded($bytes,$gigabytes); - -Given a data size in bytes, round it to KB, MB, or GB -as appropriate. - -Eg 12000 => 12KB, 15000000 => 14GB, etc. - -Note: I've experimented with Math::BigInt and it results in a 33% -performance degredation as opposed to storing numbers split into -bytes and gigabytes. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# volume_rounded(); +# +# $rounded_volume = volume_rounded($bytes,$gigabytes); +# +# Given a data size in bytes, round it to KB, MB, or GB +# as appropriate. +# +# Eg 12000 => 12KB, 15000000 => 14GB, etc. +# +# Note: I've experimented with Math::BigInt and it results in a 33% +# performance degredation as opposed to storing numbers split into +# bytes and gigabytes. +####################################################################### sub volume_rounded { my($x,$g) = @_; $x = 0 unless $x; @@ -522,21 +523,20 @@ sub volume_rounded { } -=head2 un_round(); - - un_round($rounded_volume,\$bytes,\$gigabytes); - -Given a volume in KB, MB or GB, as generated by volume_rounded(), -do the reverse transformation and convert it back into Bytes and Gigabytes. -These are added to the $bytes and $gigabytes parameters. - -Given a data size in bytes, round it to KB, MB, or GB -as appropriate. - -EG: 500 => (500,0), 14GB => (0,14), etc. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# un_round(); +# +# un_round($rounded_volume,\$bytes,\$gigabytes); +# +# Given a volume in KB, MB or GB, as generated by volume_rounded(), +# do the reverse transformation and convert it back into Bytes and Gigabytes. +# These are added to the $bytes and $gigabytes parameters. +# +# Given a data size in bytes, round it to KB, MB, or GB +# as appropriate. +# +# EG: 500 => (500,0), 14GB => (0,14), etc. +####################################################################### sub un_round { my($rounded,$bytes_sref,$gigabytes_sref) = @_; @@ -561,40 +561,37 @@ sub un_round { } -=head2 add_volume(); - - add_volume(\$bytes,\$gigs,$size); - -Add $size to $bytes/$gigs where this is a number split into -bytes ($bytes) and gigabytes ($gigs). This is significantly -faster than using Math::BigInt. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# add_volume(); +# +# add_volume(\$bytes,\$gigs,$size); +# +# Add $size to $bytes/$gigs where this is a number split into +# bytes ($bytes) and gigabytes ($gigs). This is significantly +# faster than using Math::BigInt. +####################################################################### sub add_volume { -my($bytes_ref,$gigs_ref,$size) = @_; -$$bytes_ref = 0 if ! defined $$bytes_ref; -$$gigs_ref = 0 if ! defined $$gigs_ref; -$$bytes_ref += $size; -while ($$bytes_ref > $gig) - { - $$gigs_ref++; - $$bytes_ref -= $gig; + my($bytes_ref,$gigs_ref,$size) = @_; + $$bytes_ref = 0 if ! defined $$bytes_ref; + $$gigs_ref = 0 if ! defined $$gigs_ref; + $$bytes_ref += $size; + while ($$bytes_ref > $gig) { + $$gigs_ref++; + $$bytes_ref -= $gig; } } -=head2 format_time(); - - $formatted_time = format_time($seconds); - -Given a time in seconds, break it down into -weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds. - -Eg 12005 => 3h20m5s - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# format_time(); +# +# $formatted_time = format_time($seconds); +# +# Given a time in seconds, break it down into +# weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds. +# +# Eg 12005 => 3h20m5s +####################################################################### sub format_time { my($t) = pop @_; my($s) = $t % 60; @@ -615,16 +612,15 @@ $p; } -=head2 unformat_time(); - - $seconds = unformat_time($formatted_time); - -Given a time in weeks, days, hours, minutes, or seconds, convert it to seconds. - -Eg 3h20m5s => 12005 - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# unformat_time(); +# +# $seconds = unformat_time($formatted_time); +# +# Given a time in weeks, days, hours, minutes, or seconds, convert it to seconds. +# +# Eg 3h20m5s => 12005 +####################################################################### sub unformat_time { my($formated_time) = pop @_; my $time = 0; @@ -640,33 +636,32 @@ sub unformat_time { } -=head2 seconds(); - - $time = seconds($timestamp); - -Given a time-of-day timestamp, convert it into a time() value using -POSIX::mktime. We expect the timestamp to be of the form -"$year-$mon-$day $hour:$min:$sec", with month going from 1 to 12, -and the year to be absolute (we do the necessary conversions). The -timestamp may be followed with an offset from UTC like "+$hh$mm"; if the -offset is not present, and we have not been told that the log is in UTC -(with the -utc option), then we adjust the time by the current local -time offset so that it can be compared with the time recorded in message -IDs, which is UTC. - -To improve performance, we only use mktime on the date ($year-$mon-$day), -and only calculate it if the date is different to the previous time we -came here. We then add on seconds for the '$hour:$min:$sec'. - -We also store the results of the last conversion done, and only -recalculate if the date is different. - -We used to have the '-cache' flag which would store the results of the -mktime() call. However, the current way of just using mktime() on the -date obsoletes this. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# seconds(); +# +# $time = seconds($timestamp); +# +# Given a time-of-day timestamp, convert it into a time() value using +# POSIX::mktime. We expect the timestamp to be of the form +# "$year-$mon-$day $hour:$min:$sec", with month going from 1 to 12, +# and the year to be absolute (we do the necessary conversions). The +# timestamp may be followed with an offset from UTC like "+$hh$mm"; if the +# offset is not present, and we have not been told that the log is in UTC +# (with the -utc option), then we adjust the time by the current local +# time offset so that it can be compared with the time recorded in message +# IDs, which is UTC. +# +# To improve performance, we only use mktime on the date ($year-$mon-$day), +# and only calculate it if the date is different to the previous time we +# came here. We then add on seconds for the '$hour:$min:$sec'. +# +# We also store the results of the last conversion done, and only +# recalculate if the date is different. +# +# We used to have the '-cache' flag which would store the results of the +# mktime() call. However, the current way of just using mktime() on the +# date obsoletes this. +####################################################################### sub seconds { my($timestamp) = @_; @@ -708,14 +703,13 @@ sub seconds { } -=head2 id_seconds(); - - $time = id_seconds($message_id); - -Given a message ID, convert it into a time() value. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# id_seconds(); +# +# $time = id_seconds($message_id); +# +# Given a message ID, convert it into a time() value. +####################################################################### sub id_seconds { my($sub_id) = substr((pop @_), 0, 6); my($s) = 0; @@ -726,18 +720,18 @@ $s; -=head2 calculate_localtime_offset(); - - $localtime_offset = calculate_localtime_offset(); - -Calculate the the localtime offset from gmtime in seconds. - - $localtime = time() + $localtime_offset. - -These are the same semantics as ISO 8601 and RFC 2822 timezone offsets. -(West is negative, East is positive.) - -=cut +####################################################################### +# calculate_localtime_offset(); +# +# $localtime_offset = calculate_localtime_offset(); +# +# Calculate the the localtime offset from gmtime in seconds. +# +# $localtime = time() + $localtime_offset. +# +# These are the same semantics as ISO 8601 and RFC 2822 timezone offsets. +# (West is negative, East is positive.) +####################################################################### # $localtime = gmtime() + $localtime_offset. OLD COMMENT # This subroutine commented out as it's not currently in use. @@ -762,16 +756,15 @@ sub calculate_localtime_offset { } -=head2 print_queue_times(); - - $time = print_queue_times($message_type,\@queue_times,$queue_more_than); - -Given the type of messages being output, the array of message queue times, -and the number of messages which exceeded the queue times, print out -a table. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# print_queue_times(); +# +# $time = print_queue_times($message_type,\@queue_times,$queue_more_than); +# +# Given the type of messages being output, the array of message queue times, +# and the number of messages which exceeded the queue times, print out +# a table. +####################################################################### sub print_queue_times { no integer; my($string,$array,$queue_more_than) = @_; @@ -866,15 +859,14 @@ print "\n"; -=head2 print_histogram(); - - print_histogram('Deliverieds|Messages received',@interval_count); - -Print a histogram of the messages delivered/received per time slot -(hour by default). - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# print_histogram(); +# +# print_histogram('Deliverieds|Messages received',@interval_count); +# +# Print a histogram of the messages delivered/received per time slot +# (hour by default). +####################################################################### sub print_histogram { my($text) = shift; my(@interval_count) = @_; @@ -982,16 +974,15 @@ if ($html) -=head2 print_league_table(); - - print_league_table($league_table_type,\%message_count,\%message_data,\%message_data_gigs); - -Given hashes of message count and message data, which are keyed by -the table type (eg by the sending host), print a league table -showing the top $topcount (defaults to 50). - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# print_league_table(); +# +# print_league_table($league_table_type,\%message_count,\%message_data,\%message_data_gigs); +# +# Given hashes of message count and message data, which are keyed by +# the table type (eg by the sending host), print a league table +# showing the top $topcount (defaults to 50). +####################################################################### sub print_league_table { my($text,$m_count,$m_data,$m_data_gigs) = @_; my($name) = ($topcount == 1)? "$text" : "$topcount ${text}s"; @@ -1148,27 +1139,26 @@ print "\n"; } -=head2 top_n_sort(); - - @sorted_keys = top_n_sort($n,$href1,$href2,$href3); - -Given a hash which has numerical values, return the sorted $n keys which -point to the top values. The second and third hashes are used as -tiebreakers. They all must have the same keys. - -The idea behind this routine is that when you only want to see the -top n members of a set, rather than sorting the entire set and then -plucking off the top n, sort through the stack as you go, discarding -any member which is lower than your current n'th highest member. - -This proves to be an order of magnitude faster for large hashes. -On 200,000 lines of mainlog it benchmarked 9 times faster. -On 700,000 lines of mainlog it benchmarked 13.8 times faster. - -We assume the values are > 0. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# top_n_sort(); +# +# @sorted_keys = top_n_sort($n,$href1,$href2,$href3); +# +# Given a hash which has numerical values, return the sorted $n keys which +# point to the top values. The second and third hashes are used as +# tiebreakers. They all must have the same keys. +# +# The idea behind this routine is that when you only want to see the +# top n members of a set, rather than sorting the entire set and then +# plucking off the top n, sort through the stack as you go, discarding +# any member which is lower than your current n'th highest member. +# +# This proves to be an order of magnitude faster for large hashes. +# On 200,000 lines of mainlog it benchmarked 9 times faster. +# On 700,000 lines of mainlog it benchmarked 13.8 times faster. +# +# We assume the values are > 0. +####################################################################### sub top_n_sort { my($n,$href1,$href2,$href3) = @_; @@ -1192,15 +1182,15 @@ sub top_n_sort { my $n_minus_1 = $n - 1; my $n_minus_2 = $n - 2; - # Pick out the top $n keys. + # Pick out the top $n keys. my($key,$value1,$value2,$value3,$i,$comparison,$insert_position); while (($key,$value1) = each %$href1) { #print STDERR "key $key ($value1,",$href2->{$key},",",$href3->{$key},") <=> ($minimum_value1,$minimum_value2,$minimum_value3)\n"; - + # Check to see that the new value is bigger than the lowest of the # top n keys that we're keeping. - $comparison = $value1 <=> $minimum_value1 || + $comparison = $value1 <=> $minimum_value1 || $href2->{$key} <=> $minimum_value2 || $href3->{$key} <=> $minimum_value3 || $top_n_key cmp $key; @@ -1227,7 +1217,7 @@ sub top_n_sort { for ($i = 0; $i < $n_minus_1; $i++) { $top_n_key = $top_n_keys[$i]; if ( ($top_n_key eq '_') || - ( ($value1 <=> $href1->{$top_n_key} || + ( ($value1 <=> $href1->{$top_n_key} || $value2 <=> $href2->{$top_n_key} || $value3 <=> $href3->{$top_n_key} || $top_n_key cmp $key) == 1 @@ -1257,14 +1247,13 @@ sub top_n_sort { } -=head2 html_header(); - - $header = html_header($title); - -Print our HTML header and start the block. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# html_header(); +# +# $header = html_header($title); +# +# Print our HTML header and start the block. +####################################################################### sub html_header { my($title) = @_; my $text = << "EoText"; @@ -1282,14 +1271,13 @@ EoText -=head2 help(); - - help(); - -Display usage instructions and exit. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# help(); +# +# help(); +# +# Display usage instructions and exit. +####################################################################### sub help { print << "EoText"; @@ -1348,22 +1336,21 @@ EoText -=head2 generate_parser(); - - $parser = generate_parser(); - -This subroutine generates the parsing routine which will be -used to parse the mainlog. We take the base operation, and remove bits not in use. -This improves performance depending on what bits you take out or add. - -I've tested using study(), but this does not improve performance. - -We store our parsing routing in a variable, and process it looking for #IFDEF (Expression) -or #IFNDEF (Expression) statements and corresponding #ENDIF (Expression) statements. If -the expression evaluates to true, then it is included/excluded accordingly. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# generate_parser(); +# +# $parser = generate_parser(); +# +# This subroutine generates the parsing routine which will be +# used to parse the mainlog. We take the base operation, and remove bits not in use. +# This improves performance depending on what bits you take out or add. +# +# I've tested using study(), but this does not improve performance. +# +# We store our parsing routing in a variable, and process it looking for #IFDEF (Expression) +# or #IFNDEF (Expression) statements and corresponding #ENDIF (Expression) statements. If +# the expression evaluates to true, then it is included/excluded accordingly. +####################################################################### sub generate_parser { my $parser = ' my($ip,$host,$email,$edomain,$domain,$thissize,$size,$old,$new); @@ -1693,15 +1680,14 @@ sub generate_parser { -=head2 parse(); - - parse($parser,\*FILEHANDLE); - -This subroutine accepts a parser and a filehandle from main and parses each -line. We store the results into global variables. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# parse(); +# +# parse($parser,\*FILEHANDLE); +# +# This subroutine accepts a parser and a filehandle from main and parses each +# line. We store the results into global variables. +####################################################################### sub parse { my($parser,$fh) = @_; @@ -1717,14 +1703,13 @@ sub parse { -=head2 print_header(); - - print_header(); - -Print our headers and contents. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# print_header(); +# +# print_header(); +# +# Print our headers and contents. +####################################################################### sub print_header { my $title = "Exim statistics from $begin to $end"; @@ -1774,14 +1759,13 @@ sub print_header { } -=head2 print_grandtotals(); - - print_grandtotals(); - -Print the grand totals. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# print_grandtotals(); +# +# print_grandtotals(); +# +# Print the grand totals. +####################################################################### sub print_grandtotals { # Get the sender by headings and results. This is complicated as we can have @@ -1862,14 +1846,13 @@ EoText } -=head2 print_user_patterns() - - print_user_patterns(); - -Print the counts of user specified patterns. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# print_user_patterns() +# +# print_user_patterns(); +# +# Print the counts of user specified patterns. +####################################################################### sub print_user_patterns { my($format1); @@ -1911,14 +1894,13 @@ sub print_user_patterns { } -=head2 print_transport(); - - print_transport(); - -Print totals by transport. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# print_transport(); +# +# print_transport(); +# +# Print totals by transport. +####################################################################### sub print_transport { my($format1); my(@chartdatanames); @@ -2017,14 +1999,13 @@ sub print_transport { -=head2 print_relay(); - - print_relay(); - -Print our totals by relay. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# print_relay(); +# +# print_relay(); +# +# Print our totals by relay. +####################################################################### sub print_relay { my $temp = "Relayed messages"; print "

$temp

\n" if $html; @@ -2064,15 +2045,14 @@ sub print_relay { -=head2 print_errors(); - - print_errors(); - -Print our errors. In HTML, we display them as a list rather than a table - -Netscape doesn't like large tables! - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# print_errors(); +# +# print_errors(); +# +# Print our errors. In HTML, we display them as a list rather than a table - +# Netscape doesn't like large tables! +####################################################################### sub print_errors { my $total_errors = 0; @@ -2095,7 +2075,7 @@ sub print_errors { $text =~ s/\s\s+/ /g; #Convert multiple spaces to a single space. $total_errors += $errors_count{$key}; if ($html) { - + #Translate HTML tag characters. Sergey Sholokh. $text =~ s/\/\>\;/g; @@ -2123,42 +2103,41 @@ sub print_errors { } -=head2 parse_old_eximstat_reports(); - - parse_old_eximstat_reports($fh); - -Parse old eximstat output so we can merge daily stats to weekly stats and weekly to monthly etc. - -To test that the merging still works after changes, do something like the following. -All the diffs should produce no output. - - options='-bydomain -byemail -byhost -byedomain' - options="$options -pattern 'Completed Messages' /Completed/" - options="$options -pattern 'Received Messages' /<=/" - - ./eximstats $options mainlog > mainlog.txt - ./eximstats $options -merge mainlog.txt > mainlog.2.txt - diff mainlog.txt mainlog.2.txt - - ./eximstats $options -html mainlog > mainlog.html - ./eximstats $options -merge -html mainlog.txt > mainlog.2.html - diff mainlog.html mainlog.2.html - - ./eximstats $options -merge mainlog.html > mainlog.3.txt - diff mainlog.txt mainlog.3.txt - - ./eximstats $options -merge -html mainlog.html > mainlog.3.html - diff mainlog.html mainlog.3.html - - ./eximstats $options -nvr mainlog > mainlog.nvr.txt - ./eximstats $options -merge mainlog.nvr.txt > mainlog.4.txt - diff mainlog.txt mainlog.4.txt - - # double_mainlog.txt should have twice the values that mainlog.txt has. - ./eximstats $options mainlog mainlog > double_mainlog.txt - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# parse_old_eximstat_reports(); +# +# parse_old_eximstat_reports($fh); +# +# Parse old eximstat output so we can merge daily stats to weekly stats and weekly to monthly etc. +# +# To test that the merging still works after changes, do something like the following. +# All the diffs should produce no output. +# +# options='-bydomain -byemail -byhost -byedomain' +# options="$options -pattern 'Completed Messages' /Completed/" +# options="$options -pattern 'Received Messages' /<=/" +# +# ./eximstats $options mainlog > mainlog.txt +# ./eximstats $options -merge mainlog.txt > mainlog.2.txt +# diff mainlog.txt mainlog.2.txt +# +# ./eximstats $options -html mainlog > mainlog.html +# ./eximstats $options -merge -html mainlog.txt > mainlog.2.html +# diff mainlog.html mainlog.2.html +# +# ./eximstats $options -merge mainlog.html > mainlog.3.txt +# diff mainlog.txt mainlog.3.txt +# +# ./eximstats $options -merge -html mainlog.html > mainlog.3.html +# diff mainlog.html mainlog.3.html +# +# ./eximstats $options -nvr mainlog > mainlog.nvr.txt +# ./eximstats $options -merge mainlog.nvr.txt > mainlog.4.txt +# diff mainlog.txt mainlog.4.txt +# +# # double_mainlog.txt should have twice the values that mainlog.txt has. +# ./eximstats $options mainlog mainlog > double_mainlog.txt +####################################################################### sub parse_old_eximstat_reports { my($fh) = @_; @@ -2245,10 +2224,10 @@ sub parse_old_eximstat_reports { next unless $reached_table; print STDERR "Parsing $_" if $debug; if (/^(\d+):(\d+)\s+(\d+)/) { #hh:mm start time format ? - $$interval_aref[($1*60 + $2)/$hist_interval] += $3; + $$interval_aref[($1*60 + $2)/$hist_interval] += $3 if $hist_opt; } elsif (/^(\d+)-(\d+)\s+(\d+)/) { #hh-hh start-end time format ? - $$interval_aref[($1*60)/$hist_interval] += $3; + $$interval_aref[($1*60)/$hist_interval] += $3 if $hist_opt; } else { #Finished the table ? last; @@ -2483,15 +2462,14 @@ sub parse_old_eximstat_reports { -=head2 update_relayed(); - - update_relayed($count,$sender,$recipient); - -Adds an entry into the %relayed hash. Currently only used when -merging reports. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# update_relayed(); +# +# update_relayed($count,$sender,$recipient); +# +# Adds an entry into the %relayed hash. Currently only used when +# merging reports. +####################################################################### sub update_relayed { my($count,$sender,$recipient) = @_; @@ -2509,18 +2487,17 @@ sub update_relayed { } -=head2 add_to_totals(); - - add_to_totals(\%totals,\@keys,$values); - -Given a line of space seperated values, add them into the provided hash using @keys -as the hash keys. - -If the value contains a '%', then the value is set rather than added. Otherwise, we -convert the value to bytes and gigs. The gigs get added to I-gigs. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# add_to_totals(); +# +# add_to_totals(\%totals,\@keys,$values); +# +# Given a line of space seperated values, add them into the provided hash using @keys +# as the hash keys. +# +# If the value contains a '%', then the value is set rather than added. Otherwise, we +# convert the value to bytes and gigs. The gigs get added to I-gigs. +####################################################################### sub add_to_totals { my($totals_href,$keys_aref,$values) = @_; my(@values) = split(/\s+/,$values); @@ -2540,16 +2517,15 @@ sub add_to_totals { } } -=head2 get_report_total(); - - $total = get_report_total(\%hash,$key); - -If %hash contains values split into Units and Gigs, we calculate and return - - $hash{$key} + 1024*1024*1024 * $hash{"${key}-gigs"} - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# get_report_total(); +# +# $total = get_report_total(\%hash,$key); +# +# If %hash contains values split into Units and Gigs, we calculate and return +# +# $hash{$key} + 1024*1024*1024 * $hash{"${key}-gigs"} +####################################################################### sub get_report_total { no integer; my($hash_ref,$key) = @_; @@ -2559,15 +2535,14 @@ sub get_report_total { return $$hash_ref{$key} || 0; } -=head2 html2txt(); - - $text_line = html2txt($html_line); - -Convert a line from html to text. Currently we just convert HTML tags to spaces -and convert >, <, and   tags back. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# html2txt(); +# +# $text_line = html2txt($html_line); +# +# Convert a line from html to text. Currently we just convert HTML tags to spaces +# and convert >, <, and   tags back. +####################################################################### sub html2txt { ($_) = @_; @@ -2583,24 +2558,23 @@ sub html2txt { return($_); } -=head2 get_next_arg(); - - $arg = get_next_arg(); - -Because eximstats arguments are often passed as variables, -we can't rely on shell parsing to deal with quotes. This -subroutine returns $ARGV[1] and does a shift. If $ARGV[1] -starts with a quote (' or "), and doesn't end in one, then -we append the next argument to it and shift again. We repeat -until we've got all of the argument. - -This isn't perfect as all white space gets reduced to one space, -but it's as good as we can get! If it's esential that spacing -be preserved precisely, then you get that by not using shell -variables. - -=cut - +####################################################################### +# get_next_arg(); +# +# $arg = get_next_arg(); +# +# Because eximstats arguments are often passed as variables, +# we can't rely on shell parsing to deal with quotes. This +# subroutine returns $ARGV[1] and does a shift. If $ARGV[1] +# starts with a quote (' or "), and doesn't end in one, then +# we append the next argument to it and shift again. We repeat +# until we've got all of the argument. +# +# This isn't perfect as all white space gets reduced to one space, +# but it's as good as we can get! If it's esential that spacing +# be preserved precisely, then you get that by not using shell +# variables. +####################################################################### sub get_next_arg { my $arg = ''; my $matched_pattern = 0; -- 2.30.2