Peter Hansen wrote:
rbt wrote:

Output from 'netstat -b' on a win2003 server will show what binary is responsible for the connection. For example, it may list something like this along with other connection specific data:

[lsass.exe]
[System]
[firefox.exe]
[iexplorer.exe]

How might I process the output so that anything within brackets is recorded to a log file of my own making? I know how to parse and record things to a file, I don't know how to look make '[' and ']' appear as special characters so that I can record what's between them.


Does this help?

 >>> import re
 >>>
 >>> s = '''stuff   [lsass.exe]
... [System]  more stuff
... xxxxx [firefox.exe] ......
... '''
 >>>
 >>> re.findall(r'\[([^]]*)\]', s)
['lsass.exe', 'System', 'firefox.exe']

-Peter

Yes, it does... may take me a few minutes to get my head around it though. Why do re's have to be so arcane and complicated... especially in Python?


It's hard to preach 'ease of use' with stuff such as this in the language. Perhaps one day it can be rolled up into something that *really* is easy to understand:

import string

fp = file('filename')
data = fp.read()
fp.close()

string.between(data,[,])
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