dbroweval - evaluate code for each row of a fsdb file¶
NOTE: this page was directly converted from the perl FSDB manual pages from FSDB version 3.1
SYNOPSIS¶
dbroweval [-f CodeFile] code [code…]
DESCRIPTION¶
Evaluate code for each row of the data.
Typical actions are things like reformatting and other data transformations.
Code can include embedded column names preceded by underscores; these result in the value of that column for the current row.
The values of the last row’s columns are retrieved with _last_foo where foo is the column name.
Even more perverse, _columname(N) is the value of the Nth column after columnname [so _columnname (0) is the also the column’s value.
OPTIONS¶
- -b CODE
Run CODE before reading any data (like awk BEGIN blocks).
- -e CODE
Run CODE at the end of all data (like awk END blocks).
- -f FILE
Read code from the FILE.
- -n or –no-output
no output except for comments and what is in the provided code
- -N or –no-output-even-comments
no output at all, except for what is in the provided code
- -m or –manual-output
The user must setup output, allowing arbitrary comments. See example 2 below for details.
- -w or –warnings
Enable warnings in user supplied code.
- –saveoutput $OUT_REF
Save output writer (for integration with other fsdb filters).
This module also supports the standard fsdb options:
- -d
Enable debugging output.
- -i or –input InputSource
Read from InputSource, typically a file name, or
-for standard input, or (if in Perl) a IO::Handle, Fsdb::IO or Fsdb::BoundedQueue objects.- -o or –output OutputDestination
Write to OutputDestination, typically a file name, or
-for standard output, or (if in Perl) a IO::Handle, Fsdb::IO or Fsdb::BoundedQueue objects.- –autorun or –noautorun
By default, programs process automatically, but Fsdb::Filter objects in Perl do not run until you invoke the run() method. The
--(no)autorunoption controls that behavior within Perl.
- --header H
Use H as the full Fsdb header, rather than reading a header from then input.
- --help
Show help.
- --man
Show full manual.
ADVANCED USAGE¶
Typically dbroweval outputs a line in the same schema for each input line. For advanced usage, one can violate each of these assumptions.
Some fun:
- omitting a line
Add the code
next row if ($your condition);- outputting an extra line
Call
&$write_fastpath_sub($fref). You may find$fref, the input row, useful.- changing the schema
See the examples below in Command 2: Changing the Schema
SAMPLE USAGE¶
Input:¶
#fsdb size mean stddev pct_rsd 1024 1.4962e+06 2.8497e+05 19.047 10240 5.0286e+06 6.0103e+05 11.952 102400 4.9216e+06 3.0939e+05 6.2863 # | dbsetheader size bw # | /home/johnh/BIN/DB/dbmultistats size bw # | /home/johnh/BIN/DB/dbcol size mean stddev pct_rsd
Command:¶
cat data.fsdb | dbroweval _mean = sprintf(“%8.0f”, _mean); _stddev = sprintf(“%8.0f”, _stddev);
Output:¶
#fsdb size mean stddev pct_rsd 1024 1496200 284970 19.047 10240 5028600 601030 11.952 102400 4921600 309390 6.2863 # | dbsetheader size bw # | /home/johnh/BIN/DB/dbmultistats size bw # | /home/johnh/BIN/DB/dbcol size mean stddev pct_rsd # | /home/johnh/BIN/DB/dbroweval { _mean = sprintf(“%8.0f”, _mean); _stddev = sprintf(“%8.0f”, _stddev); }
Command 2: Changing the Schema¶
By default, dbroweval reads and writes the same format file. The recommended method of adding and removing columns is to do so before or after dbroweval. I.e.,
cat data.fsdb | dbcolcreate divisible_by_ten | dbroweval _divisible_by_ten = (_size % 10 == 0); | dbrow _divisible_by_ten == 1 | dbcol size mean divisible_by_ten
Another approach is to use the next row command to skip output of a
row. I.e., the equivalent:
cat data.fsdb | dbcolcreate divisible_by_ten | dbroweval _divisible_by_ten = (_size % 10 == 0); next row if (!_divisible_by_ten); | dbcol size mean divisible_by_ten
However, neither of these approachs work very well when the output is a completely different schema.
The recommended method for schema-changing commands is to write a full
filter, but a full filter is a bit heavy weight. As an alternative, one
can use the -m option to request manual configuration of the output,
then use @out_args to define the output schema (it specifies the
Fsdb::IO::Writer arguments), and $ofref is the output row. It
may also reference <$in>, the input Fsdb::IO::Reader argument, and
<$fref> as an aref to the current line. Note that newly created columns
do not have underscore-names
Thus a third equivalent is:
cat data.fsdb | \ dbroweval -m -b @out_args = ( -clone => $in, \ -cols => ($in->cols, divisible_by_ten); \ my $div_by_10 = (_size % 10 – 0); \ $ofref = [ @$fref, $div_by_10 ] if ($div_by_ten); | dbcol size mean divisible_by_ten
or
cat data.fsdb | \ dbroweval -m -b @out_args = ( -clone => $in, \ -cols => [qw(size mean divisible_by_ten)] ); \ my $div_by_10 = (_size % 10 == 0); \ $ofref = [ _mean, _size, $div_by_10 ] if ($div_by_ten);
Finally, one can write different a completely different schema, although it’s more work:
cat data.fsdb | \ dbroweval -m -b @out_args = (-cols => [qw(size n)]); \ $ofref = [ _size, 1 ];
writes different columns, and
cat data.fsdb | \ dbroweval -n -m -b @out_args = (-cols => [qw(n)]); \ my $count = 0; -e $ofref = [ $count ]; $count++;
Is a fancy way to count lines.
The begin code block should setup @out_args to be the arguments to a
Fsdb::IO::Writer::new call, and whatever is in $ofref (if
anything) is written for each input line, and once at the end.
Command 3: Fun With Suppressing Output¶
The -n option suppresses default output. Thus, a simple equivalent
to tail -1 is:
dbroweval -n -e $ofref = $lfref;
Where $ofref is the output fields, which are copied from $lfref,
the hereby documented internal representation of the last row. Yes, this
is a bit unappetizing, but, in for a penny with $ofref, in for a
pound.
Command 4: Extra Ouptut¶
Calling &$write_fastpath_sub($fref) will do extra output, so this
simple program will duplicate each line of input (one extra output, plus
one regular output for each line of input):
dbroweval &$write_fastpath_sub($fref)
BUGS¶
Handling of code in files isn’t very elegant.
SEE ALSO¶
Fsdb (3)