Apparently I'm still doing something wrong and regex is kicking my butt. Sample message body: ----------------------------------------- * Stopping Asterisk PBX: asterisk ...done. * Starting Asterisk PBX: asterisk ...done. -----------------------------------------
Patterns I've tried: ----------------------------------------- 1: (($self->TicketObj->Subject =~ /Cron \<root\@pbx\> \/etc\/init\.d\/asterisk restart/) && # Successful cron jobs. ($self->TicketObj->Body =~ /\* Starting Asterisk PBX\: asterisk\n\.\.\.done\./m) 2: (($self->TicketObj->Subject =~ /Cron \<root\@pbx\> \/etc\/init\.d\/asterisk restart/) && # Successful cron jobs. ($self->TicketObj->Body =~ /\* Starting Asterisk PBX\: asterisk.*\.\.\.done\./ms)) 3: (($self->TicketObj->Subject =~ /Cron \<root\@pbx\> \/etc\/init\.d\/asterisk restart/) && # Successful cron jobs. ($self->TicketObj->Body =~ /^\* Starting Asterisk PBX\: asterisk.*\.\.\.done\.$/ms)) || ----------------------------------------- Any ideas? Thanks, Peter On Mon, Feb 27, 2017 at 10:57 AM, Matt Zagrabelny <mzagr...@d.umn.edu> wrote: > On Mon, Feb 27, 2017 at 9:48 AM, Peter Nikolaidis <pet...@paradigmcc.com> > wrote: > > Hi all, > > > > I'm trying to automatically resolve tickets that don't require any > action. > > In this example, I receive a backup notification. I know it's a backup > > script result email based on the subject, and I know the backup was > > successful (and therefore I can auto-resolve the ticket) if another regex > > matches the body. When I match against the subject line alone, it works. > > However, when I try to match against the mutli-line body, it never > matches > > (even though when I run the regex against the string in a test, it > matches > > as expected). > > > > Are multi-line matches not an option, or do I need to test in another > way? > > From: > > http://perldoc.perl.org/perlre.html > > """ > Modifier m > > Treat the string as multiple lines. That is, change "^" and "$" from > matching the start of the string's first line and the end of its last > line to matching the start and end of each line within the string. > """ > I almost always use /xms for my REs. This allows for significant > readability - at the cost of significant number of lines. Check out > Damian Conway's "Perl Best Practices" Regular Expression chapter. > > -m >
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