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Perl-Users Digest, Issue: 1522 Volume: 11

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)
Fri May 9 03:09:49 2008

Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 00:09:12 -0700 (PDT)
From: Perl-Users Digest <Perl-Users-Request@ruby.OCE.ORST.EDU>
To: Perl-Users@ruby.OCE.ORST.EDU (Perl-Users Digest)

Perl-Users Digest           Fri, 9 May 2008     Volume: 11 Number: 1522

Today's topics:
        A question on next <cdalten@gmail.com>
    Re: A question on next <1usa@llenroc.ude.invalid>
    Re: A question on next <cdalten@gmail.com>
    Re: Identification of which line causing regex problem <hjp-usenet2@hjp.at>
    Re: Identification of which line causing regex problem <hjp-usenet2@hjp.at>
    Re: Is this expected in a foreach()? (Ben Bullock)
    Re: Net::SMTP fails <hjp-usenet2@hjp.at>
        new CPAN modules on Fri May  9 2008 (Randal Schwartz)
    Re: Perl SOAP Server - Returns Strings Arrays with WSDL (Ben Bullock)
        Posting Guidelines for comp.lang.perl.misc ($Revision:  tadmc@seesig.invalid
    Re: Selected cipher type not supported by server <lovecreatesbeauty@gmail.com>
        Digest Administrivia (Last modified: 6 Apr 01) (Perl-Users-Digest Admin)

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 17:19:31 -0700 (PDT)
From: grocery_stocker <cdalten@gmail.com>
Subject: A question on next
Message-Id: <42fca2ed-bc46-4c54-bafa-a43e87726a2d@x19g2000prg.googlegroups.com>

At work, one of the engineers did something like the following to
parse a 100MB apache log file.

while (<LOG>) {
    next unless (/^\w+\s([a-zA-Z\.]+)\s\w+\s\w+\s\w+\s(\d+)$/);
    $locationhash{$1} += $2;

}


He told me this loop wouldn't check every single in the log file. I
don't see how this is possible. Can someone clarity this? Thank you.


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 09 May 2008 00:26:51 GMT
From: "A. Sinan Unur" <1usa@llenroc.ude.invalid>
Subject: Re: A question on next
Message-Id: <Xns9A98D0013ACDEasu1cornelledu@127.0.0.1>

grocery_stocker <cdalten@gmail.com> wrote in news:42fca2ed-bc46-4c54-
bafa-a43e87726a2d@x19g2000prg.googlegroups.com:

> At work, one of the engineers did something like the following to
> parse a 100MB apache log file.
> 
> while (<LOG>) {
>     next unless (/^\w+\s([a-zA-Z\.]+)\s\w+\s\w+\s\w+\s(\d+)$/);
>     $locationhash{$1} += $2;
> 
> }
> 
> 
> He told me this loop wouldn't check every single in the log file. I
> don't see how this is possible. Can someone clarity this? Thank you.

Of course it would check every line in the file. However, it would not 
store anything in %locationhash if the match failed.

If you want to parse all of the log file line by line, there is no way 
of avoiding loading every line (and most likely, checking every line).

Sinan

-- 
A. Sinan Unur <1usa@llenroc.ude.invalid>
(remove .invalid and reverse each component for email address)

comp.lang.perl.misc guidelines on the WWW:
http://www.rehabitation.com/clpmisc/


------------------------------

Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 17:36:09 -0700 (PDT)
From: grocery_stocker <cdalten@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: A question on next
Message-Id: <b53d33f2-8494-4840-b61a-b0f63efb1c21@k10g2000prm.googlegroups.com>

On May 8, 5:26 pm, "A. Sinan Unur" <1...@llenroc.ude.invalid> wrote:
> grocery_stocker <cdal...@gmail.com> wrote in news:42fca2ed-bc46-4c54-
> bafa-a43e87726...@x19g2000prg.googlegroups.com:
>
> > At work, one of the engineers did something like the following to
> > parse a 100MB apache log file.
>
> > while (<LOG>) {
> >     next unless (/^\w+\s([a-zA-Z\.]+)\s\w+\s\w+\s\w+\s(\d+)$/);
> >     $locationhash{$1} += $2;
>
> > }
>
> > He told me this loop wouldn't check every single in the log file. I
> > don't see how this is possible. Can someone clarity this? Thank you.
>
> Of course it would check every line in the file. However, it would not
> store anything in %locationhash if the match failed.
>
> If you want to parse all of the log file line by line, there is no way
> of avoiding loading every line (and most likely, checking every line).
>
> Sinan
>
> --

Okay, I probably just misunderstood him. Thanks.



------------------------------

Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 08:25:08 +0200
From: "Peter J. Holzer" <hjp-usenet2@hjp.at>
Subject: Re: Identification of which line causing regex problem
Message-Id: <slrng27ri4.egq.hjp-usenet2@hrunkner.hjp.at>

On 2008-05-07 14:32, Dr.Ruud <rvtol+news@isolution.nl> wrote:
> Ela schreef:
>> I'm modifying a system (totally more than 100000-lines for tens of
>> files) written by others and would like to identify which line leads
>> to the following problem.
>>
>> Invalid [] range "l-c" in regex; marked by <-- HERE in
>> m/^3-oxoacyl-[acyl-c <-- HERE arrier protein] reductase fabg1$/
>>
>> Unfortunately the error message does not tell me which line of which
>> file leads to the problem. Could anybody advise?
>
> This is not a runnable and minimal source.

What would "runnable and minimal source" be in this case?

> Go and read the Posting Guidelines again.

Go and read the question before answering.

	hp



------------------------------

Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 08:28:24 +0200
From: "Peter J. Holzer" <hjp-usenet2@hjp.at>
Subject: Re: Identification of which line causing regex problem
Message-Id: <slrng27ro8.egq.hjp-usenet2@hrunkner.hjp.at>

On 2008-05-07 14:39, Frank Seitz <devnull4711@web.de> wrote:
> Ben Bullock wrote:
>> Note that, as I pointed out in the part of the message you didn't
>> quote, the original poster claimed he wasn't getting line numbers in
>> the error messages, which isn't the behaviour of Perl 5.8 or Perl
>> 5.10, or probably any other version of Perl you could find, so until
>> that is clarified there is not much else to say about it.
>> Realistically the most likely explanation is that he somehow missed
>> the line numbers in Perl's error message.
>
> The OP expected, strangely enough, the line number
> of the input file, not the line number of the source file.

Why do you think so?

	hp


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 00:33:24 +0000 (UTC)
From: benkasminbullock@gmail.com (Ben Bullock)
Subject: Re: Is this expected in a foreach()?
Message-Id: <g0064k$lj6$2@ml.accsnet.ne.jp>

Gowtham <gowthamgowtham@gmail.com> wrote:
> On May 8, 6:51 pm, Peter Makholm <pe...@makholm.net> wrote:
>> Gowtham <gowthamgowt...@gmail.com> writes:
>> > Is this expected? I feel changes to $b shouldn't change the array
>> > @a ...
>>
>> Yes it is expected and well documented.

It's also "better" that way - if you have to backtrack into the array
and then alter the value in the array, it's much less convenient. As
usual, Perl is optimized for maximum programmer convenience at the
expense of understandability.

> Ok. How is an lvalue defined? Is it something to which we can assign
> something?

lvalue means "left value". Look at 

$x = $y

Here $x is on the left of the equals sign, so it's an "lvalue".

$x = "baby"  # OK
$x = $y      # OK
"baby" = $y  # Not OK, "baby" is not an lvalue.

> Something which can be the part of the left hand side of an assignment
> expression right?

No, not right, left.
 
> But, here the list @a contains literal strings and not references to
> other variables.
> I know I am wrong but would like to understand how an lvalue is
> defined in general and
> how particularly in perl. It will also be helpful if somebody can give
> examples for non-lvalues...

You shouldn't really ask for examples on a newsgroup like this, it's
not a teaching forum. You need to read up on this from web pages, or
books, or try running example programs.


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 08:12:12 +0200
From: "Peter J. Holzer" <hjp-usenet2@hjp.at>
Subject: Re: Net::SMTP fails
Message-Id: <slrng27qpt.egq.hjp-usenet2@hrunkner.hjp.at>

On 2008-05-07 20:10, smallpond <smallpond@juno.com> wrote:
> This line:
> 250-AUTH LOGIN PLAIN XYMCOOKIE
> says that you must authenticate with one of the types: LOGIN, PLAIN or XYMCOOKIE.

No, it says that you *can* authenticate using one of these methods. 

	hp


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 04:42:20 GMT
From: merlyn@stonehenge.com (Randal Schwartz)
Subject: new CPAN modules on Fri May  9 2008
Message-Id: <K0L3qK.qBG@zorch.sf-bay.org>

The following modules have recently been added to or updated in the
Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN).  You can install them using the
instructions in the 'perlmodinstall' page included with your Perl
distribution.

CGI-Session-YAML-0.3
http://search.cpan.org/~msoulier/CGI-Session-YAML-0.3/
A session-handling module that uses YAML for storage. 
----
CPAN-Site-0.21
http://search.cpan.org/~markov/CPAN-Site-0.21/
CPAN.pm subclass for adding site local modules 
----
Class-DBI-Loader-Multiplex-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~naokiurai/Class-DBI-Loader-Multiplex-0.01/
Bridge of Class::DBI::Loader and DBD::Multiplex. 
----
Class-Mixin-0.02
http://search.cpan.org/~davidrw/Class-Mixin-0.02/
API for aliasing methods to/from other classes 
----
Clutter-0.620
http://search.cpan.org/~ebassi/Clutter-0.620/
Simple GL-based canvas library 
----
Clutter-0.621
http://search.cpan.org/~ebassi/Clutter-0.621/
Simple GL-based canvas library 
----
DashProfiler-1.13
http://search.cpan.org/~timb/DashProfiler-1.13/
efficiently collect call count and timing data aggregated by context 
----
Data-NDS-1.02
http://search.cpan.org/~sbeck/Data-NDS-1.02/
routines to work with a perl nested data structure 
----
Date-Manip-5.52
http://search.cpan.org/~sbeck/Date-Manip-5.52/
date manipulation routines 
----
Exception-Base-0.16
http://search.cpan.org/~dexter/Exception-Base-0.16/
Lightweight exceptions 
----
Exception-Died-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~dexter/Exception-Died-0.01/
Convert simple die into real exception object 
----
Exception-System-0.09
http://search.cpan.org/~dexter/Exception-System-0.09/
The exception class for system or library calls 
----
Exception-System-0.0901
http://search.cpan.org/~dexter/Exception-System-0.0901/
The exception class for system or library calls 
----
Exception-Warning-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~dexter/Exception-Warning-0.01/
Convert simple warn into real exception object 
----
Fatal-Exception-0.0204
http://search.cpan.org/~dexter/Fatal-Exception-0.0204/
succeed or throw exception 
----
File-Path-2.06
http://search.cpan.org/~dland/File-Path-2.06/
Create or remove directory trees 
----
File-Stat-Moose-0.02
http://search.cpan.org/~dexter/File-Stat-Moose-0.02/
Status info for a file - Moose-based 
----
JavaScript-1.08
http://search.cpan.org/~claesjac/JavaScript-1.08/
Perl extension for executing embedded JavaScript 
----
List-Parseable-1.03
http://search.cpan.org/~sbeck/List-Parseable-1.03/
routines to work with lists containing a simple language 
----
Mac-iTunes-Library-0.1
http://search.cpan.org/~dinomite/Mac-iTunes-Library-0.1/
Perl extension for representing an iTunes library 
----
MasonX-Resolver-WidgetFactory-0.003
http://search.cpan.org/~hdp/MasonX-Resolver-WidgetFactory-0.003/
resolve paths to HTML::Widget::Factory plugins 
----
MasonX-Resolver-WidgetFactory-0.004
http://search.cpan.org/~hdp/MasonX-Resolver-WidgetFactory-0.004/
resolve paths to HTML::Widget::Factory plugins 
----
Math-SigFigs-1.07
http://search.cpan.org/~sbeck/Math-SigFigs-1.07/
do math with correct handling of significant figures 
----
Net-Sieve-Script-0.07
http://search.cpan.org/~yvesago/Net-Sieve-Script-0.07/
Parse and write sieve scripts 
----
Net-UCP-0.38
http://search.cpan.org/~nemux/Net-UCP-0.38/
Perl extension for EMI - UCP Protocol. 
----
Net-UCP-Common-0.05
http://search.cpan.org/~nemux/Net-UCP-Common-0.05/
Common Stuff for Net::UCP Module 
----
Number-Ops-1.02
http://search.cpan.org/~sbeck/Number-Ops-1.02/
Simple operations on numbers. 
----
POE-Component-AI-MegaHAL-1.14
http://search.cpan.org/~bingos/POE-Component-AI-MegaHAL-1.14/
A non-blocking wrapper around AI::MegaHAL. 
----
POE-Component-Client-CouchDB-0.02
http://search.cpan.org/~frodwith/POE-Component-Client-CouchDB-0.02/
Asynchronous CouchDB server interaction 
----
POE-Component-Client-CouchDB-0.03
http://search.cpan.org/~frodwith/POE-Component-Client-CouchDB-0.03/
Asynchronous CouchDB server interaction 
----
POE-Filter-LOLCAT-1.04
http://search.cpan.org/~bingos/POE-Filter-LOLCAT-1.04/
POE FILTR T SPEKK LIEK LOLCATZ. KTHNX! 
----
PPIx-Grep-v0.0.4
http://search.cpan.org/~elliotjs/PPIx-Grep-v0.0.4/
Search PPI documents (not Perl code). 
----
Parse-Marpa-0.211_006
http://search.cpan.org/~jkegl/Parse-Marpa-0.211_006/
Earley's algorithm with LR(0) precomputation 
----
PerlIO-Util-0.08
http://search.cpan.org/~gfuji/PerlIO-Util-0.08/
A selection of general PerlIO utilities 
----
PerlIO-locale-0.05
http://search.cpan.org/~rgarcia/PerlIO-locale-0.05/
PerlIO layer to use the encoding of the current locale 
----
Pod-Perldoc-3.14_07
http://search.cpan.org/~ferreira/Pod-Perldoc-3.14_07/
Look up Perl documentation in Pod format. 
----
SVN-Deploy-0.1
http://search.cpan.org/~tomk/SVN-Deploy-0.1/
audit conform building/deploying releases to/from an SVN deploy repository 
----
SVN-Notify-Filter-Watchers-0.07
http://search.cpan.org/~larrysh/SVN-Notify-Filter-Watchers-0.07/
Subscribe to SVN::Notify commits with a Subversion property. 
----
SVN-Notify-Filter-Watchers-0.08
http://search.cpan.org/~larrysh/SVN-Notify-Filter-Watchers-0.08/
Subscribe to SVN::Notify commits with a Subversion property. 
----
Scalar-Vec-Util-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~vpit/Scalar-Vec-Util-0.01/
Utility routines for vec strings. 
----
Scriptalicious-1.15
http://search.cpan.org/~samv/Scriptalicious-1.15/
Make scripts more delicious to SysAdmins 
----
Set-Files-1.03
http://search.cpan.org/~sbeck/Set-Files-1.03/
routines to work with files, each definining a single set 
----
Sort-DataTypes-2.02
http://search.cpan.org/~sbeck/Sort-DataTypes-2.02/
Sort a list of data using methods relevant to the type of data 
----
String-TT-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~jrockway/String-TT-0.01/
use TT to interpolate lexical variables 
----
String-TT-0.02
http://search.cpan.org/~jrockway/String-TT-0.02/
use TT to interpolate lexical variables 
----
Sys-Statistics-Linux-0.35_01
http://search.cpan.org/~bloonix/Sys-Statistics-Linux-0.35_01/
Front-end module to collect system statistics 
----
TM-1.39
http://search.cpan.org/~drrho/TM-1.39/
Topic Maps, Base Class 
----
Template-Plugin-ListOps-1.03
http://search.cpan.org/~sbeck/Template-Plugin-ListOps-1.03/
Plugin interface to list operations 
----
TemplateM-2.22
http://search.cpan.org/~abalama/TemplateM-2.22/
*ML templates processing module 
----
Term-TUI-1.22
http://search.cpan.org/~sbeck/Term-TUI-1.22/
simple tool for building text-based user interfaces 
----
Unix-SavedIDs-0.3.1
http://search.cpan.org/~dmartin/Unix-SavedIDs-0.3.1/
interface to unix saved id commands: getresuid(), getresgid(), setresuid() and setresgid() 
----
WWW-TarPipe-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~andya/WWW-TarPipe-0.01/
An interface to tarpipe.com's REST based web service. 
----
YAML-Tiny-1.31
http://search.cpan.org/~adamk/YAML-Tiny-1.31/
Read/Write YAML files with as little code as possible 
----
autobox-2.30
http://search.cpan.org/~chocolate/autobox-2.30/
call methods on builtin types 
----
with-0.01
http://search.cpan.org/~vpit/with-0.01/
Lexically call methods with a default object. 


If you're an author of one of these modules, please submit a detailed
announcement to comp.lang.perl.announce, and we'll pass it along.

This message was generated by a Perl program described in my Linux
Magazine column, which can be found on-line (along with more than
200 other freely available past column articles) at
  http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/LinuxMag/col82.html

print "Just another Perl hacker," # the original

--
Randal L. Schwartz - Stonehenge Consulting Services, Inc. - +1 503 777 0095
<merlyn@stonehenge.com> <URL:http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/>
Smalltalk/Perl/Unix consulting, Technical writing, Comedy, etc. etc.
See http://methodsandmessages.vox.com/ for Smalltalk and Seaside discussion


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 00:25:16 +0000 (UTC)
From: benkasminbullock@gmail.com (Ben Bullock)
Subject: Re: Perl SOAP Server - Returns Strings Arrays with WSDL Compliant Names
Message-Id: <g005lb$lj6$1@ml.accsnet.ne.jp>

Philluminati <Phillip.Ross.Taylor@gmail.com> wrote:
> I have a SOAP Web Service which needs to return a string of Arrays but
> when it does, the SOAP Response is incorrect (or rather incompatible
> with .NET and my handwritten WSDL file). I have found some threads
> which claim to solve the problem, but with my poor knowldge of Perl, I
> don't know what the solution is. Can someone explain this post:

> sub GetActiveUserList
> {
>        my @usrLst = &StaticSession::getUsers;
>        push @usrLst, "test";
>        push @usrLst, "again";
>        `echo @usrLst >> output.txt`;
>        return @usrLst;
> }

There doesn't seem to be anything wrong with this, but the XML you
showed wasn't generated by this routine anyway.

> --- It gets "There is an Error in the XML document Exception". When I
> run a soap client with debugging on...this is the message I get in
> each direction:

The only thing I can say is that this is not a problem with the above
Perl routine, although it might be a problem with some other Perl
somewhere else which you didn't show, or it might be an XML problem or
a Visual Basic problem or something.


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 09 May 2008 06:10:31 GMT
From: tadmc@seesig.invalid
Subject: Posting Guidelines for comp.lang.perl.misc ($Revision: 1.8 $)
Message-Id: <rVRUj.13974$GE1.10015@nlpi061.nbdc.sbc.com>

Outline
   Before posting to comp.lang.perl.misc
      Must
       - Check the Perl Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
       - Check the other standard Perl docs (*.pod)
      Really Really Should
       - Lurk for a while before posting
       - Search a Usenet archive
      If You Like
       - Check Other Resources
   Posting to comp.lang.perl.misc
      Is there a better place to ask your question?
       - Question should be about Perl, not about the application area
      How to participate (post) in the clpmisc community
       - Carefully choose the contents of your Subject header
       - Use an effective followup style
       - Speak Perl rather than English, when possible
       - Ask perl to help you
       - Do not re-type Perl code
       - Provide enough information
       - Do not provide too much information
       - Do not post binaries, HTML, or MIME
      Social faux pas to avoid
       - Asking a Frequently Asked Question
       - Asking a question easily answered by a cursory doc search
       - Asking for emailed answers
       - Beware of saying "doesn't work"
       - Sending a "stealth" Cc copy
      Be extra cautious when you get upset
       - Count to ten before composing a followup when you are upset
       - Count to ten after composing and before posting when you are upset
-----------------------------------------------------------------

Posting Guidelines for comp.lang.perl.misc ($Revision: 1.8 $)
    This newsgroup, commonly called clpmisc, is a technical newsgroup
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     http://www.rehabitation.com/clpmisc.shtml

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Before posting to comp.lang.perl.misc
  Must
    This section describes things that you *must* do before posting to
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    The perl distribution includes documentation that is copied to your hard
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        Checking the FAQ before posting is required in Big 8 newsgroups in
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        The perl distribution comes with much more documentation than is
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    Try doing a word-search in the standard docs for some words/phrases
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  Really Really Should
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    Lurk for a while before posting
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    Search a Usenet archive
        There are tens of thousands of Perl programmers. It is very likely
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         http://groups.google.com/advanced_group_search

  If You Like
    This section describes things that you *can* do before posting to
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    Check Other Resources
        You may want to check in books or on web sites to see if you can
        find the answer to your question.

        But you need to consider the source of such information: there are a
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Posting to comp.lang.perl.misc
    There can be 200 messages in clpmisc in a single day. Nobody is going to
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    going to read, and which they will skip.

    Your post is in competition with 199 other posts. You need to "win"
    before a person who can help you will even read your question.

    These sections describe how you can help keep your article from being
    one of the "skipped" ones.

  Is there a better place to ask your question?
    Question should be about Perl, not about the application area
        It can be difficult to separate out where your problem really is,
        but you should make a conscious effort to post to the most
        applicable newsgroup. That is, after all, where you are the most
        likely to find the people who know how to answer your question.

        Being able to "partition" a problem is an essential skill for
        effectively troubleshooting programming problems. If you don't get
        that right, you end up looking for answers in the wrong places.

        It should be understood that you may not know that the root of your
        problem is not Perl-related (the two most frequent ones are CGI and
        Operating System related), so off-topic postings will happen from
        time to time. Be gracious when someone helps you find a better place
        to ask your question by pointing you to a more applicable newsgroup.

  How to participate (post) in the clpmisc community
    Carefully choose the contents of your Subject header
        You have 40 precious characters of Subject to win out and be one of
        the posts that gets read. Don't waste them. Take care while
        composing them, they are the key that opens the door to getting an
        answer.

        Spend them indicating what aspect of Perl others will find if they
        should decide to read your article.

        Do not spend them indicating "experience level" (guru, newbie...).

        Do not spend them pleading (please read, urgent, help!...).

        Do not spend them on non-Subjects (Perl question, one-word
        Subject...)

        For more information on choosing a Subject see "Choosing Good
        Subject Lines":

         http://www.cpan.org/authors/id/D/DM/DMR/subjects.post

        Part of the beauty of newsgroup dynamics, is that you can contribute
        to the community with your very first post! If your choice of
        Subject leads a fellow Perler to find the thread you are starting,
        then even asking a question helps us all.

    Use an effective followup style
        When composing a followup, quote only enough text to establish the
        context for the comments that you will add. Always indicate who
        wrote the quoted material. Never quote an entire article. Never
        quote a .signature (unless that is what you are commenting on).

        Intersperse your comments *following* each section of quoted text to
        which they relate. Unappreciated followup styles are referred to as
        "top-posting", "Jeopardy" (because the answer comes before the
        question), or "TOFU" (Text Over, Fullquote Under).

        Reversing the chronology of the dialog makes it much harder to
        understand (some folks won't even read it if written in that style).
        For more information on quoting style, see:

         http://web.presby.edu/~nnqadmin/nnq/nquote.html

    Speak Perl rather than English, when possible
        Perl is much more precise than natural language. Saying it in Perl
        instead will avoid misunderstanding your question or problem.

        Do not say: I have variable with "foo\tbar" in it.

        Instead say: I have $var = "foo\tbar", or I have $var = 'foo\tbar',
        or I have $var = <DATA> (and show the data line).

    Ask perl to help you
        You can ask perl itself to help you find common programming mistakes
        by doing two things: enable warnings (perldoc warnings) and enable
        "strict"ures (perldoc strict).

        You should not bother the hundreds/thousands of readers of the
        newsgroup without first seeing if a machine can help you find your
        problem. It is demeaning to be asked to do the work of a machine. It
        will annoy the readers of your article.

        You can look up any of the messages that perl might issue to find
        out what the message means and how to resolve the potential mistake
        (perldoc perldiag). If you would like perl to look them up for you,
        you can put "use diagnostics;" near the top of your program.

    Do not re-type Perl code
        Use copy/paste or your editor's "import" function rather than
        attempting to type in your code. If you make a typo you will get
        followups about your typos instead of about the question you are
        trying to get answered.

    Provide enough information
        If you do the things in this item, you will have an Extremely Good
        chance of getting people to try and help you with your problem!
        These features are a really big bonus toward your question winning
        out over all of the other posts that you are competing with.

        First make a short (less than 20-30 lines) and *complete* program
        that illustrates the problem you are having. People should be able
        to run your program by copy/pasting the code from your article. (You
        will find that doing this step very often reveals your problem
        directly. Leading to an answer much more quickly and reliably than
        posting to Usenet.)

        Describe *precisely* the input to your program. Also provide example
        input data for your program. If you need to show file input, use the
        __DATA__ token (perldata.pod) to provide the file contents inside of
        your Perl program.

        Show the output (including the verbatim text of any messages) of
        your program.

        Describe how you want the output to be different from what you are
        getting.

        If you have no idea at all of how to code up your situation, be sure
        to at least describe the 2 things that you *do* know: input and
        desired output.

    Do not provide too much information
        Do not just post your entire program for debugging. Most especially
        do not post someone *else's* entire program.

    Do not post binaries, HTML, or MIME
        clpmisc is a text only newsgroup. If you have images or binaries
        that explain your question, put them in a publically accessible
        place (like a Web server) and provide a pointer to that location. If
        you include code, cut and paste it directly in the message body.
        Don't attach anything to the message. Don't post vcards or HTML.
        Many people (and even some Usenet servers) will automatically filter
        out such messages. Many people will not be able to easily read your
        post. Plain text is something everyone can read.

  Social faux pas to avoid
    The first two below are symptoms of lots of FAQ asking here in clpmisc.
    It happens so often that folks will assume that it is happening yet
    again. If you have looked but not found, or found but didn't understand
    the docs, say so in your article.

    Asking a Frequently Asked Question
        It should be understood that you may have missed the applicable FAQ
        when you checked, which is not a big deal. But if the Frequently
        Asked Question is worded similar to your question, folks will assume
        that you did not look at all. Don't become indignant at pointers to
        the FAQ, particularly if it solves your problem.

    Asking a question easily answered by a cursory doc search
        If folks think you have not even tried the obvious step of reading
        the docs applicable to your problem, they are likely to become
        annoyed.

        If you are flamed for not checking when you *did* check, then just
        shrug it off (and take the answer that you got).

    Asking for emailed answers
        Emailed answers benefit one person. Posted answers benefit the
        entire community. If folks can take the time to answer your
        question, then you can take the time to go get the answer in the
        same place where you asked the question.

        It is OK to ask for a *copy* of the answer to be emailed, but many
        will ignore such requests anyway. If you munge your address, you
        should never expect (or ask) to get email in response to a Usenet
        post.

        Ask the question here, get the answer here (maybe).

    Beware of saying "doesn't work"
        This is a "red flag" phrase. If you find yourself writing that,
        pause and see if you can't describe what is not working without
        saying "doesn't work". That is, describe how it is not what you
        want.

    Sending a "stealth" Cc copy
        A "stealth Cc" is when you both email and post a reply without
        indicating *in the body* that you are doing so.

  Be extra cautious when you get upset
    Count to ten before composing a followup when you are upset
        This is recommended in all Usenet newsgroups. Here in clpmisc, most
        flaming sub-threads are not about any feature of Perl at all! They
        are most often for what was seen as a breach of netiquette. If you
        have lurked for a bit, then you will know what is expected and won't
        make such posts in the first place.

        But if you get upset, wait a while before writing your followup. I
        recommend waiting at least 30 minutes.

    Count to ten after composing and before posting when you are upset
        After you have written your followup, wait *another* 30 minutes
        before committing yourself by posting it. You cannot take it back
        once it has been said.

AUTHOR
    Tad McClellan and many others on the comp.lang.perl.misc newsgroup.

-- 
Tad McClellan
email: perl -le "print scalar reverse qq/moc.noitatibaher\100cmdat/"


------------------------------

Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 20:42:22 -0700 (PDT)
From: "lovecreatesbea...@gmail.com" <lovecreatesbeauty@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Selected cipher type not supported by server
Message-Id: <d08ad1cc-4400-4cdd-b633-64b84dbd01e4@a9g2000prl.googlegroups.com>

On May 8, 11:09=A0pm, smallpond <smallp...@juno.com> wrote:
> lovecreatesbea...@gmail.com wrote:
> > Hi,
>
> > I'm getting "Selected cipher type =A0not supported by server" error on
> > this line
>
> > =A0 =A0 $cnn =3D Net::SSH::Perl->new($host);
>
> Are you tring to connect to an SSH-1 or SSH-2 host?
> If not sure, report the error(s) you get from trying each.

Hi, Thank you.

I tried the following ciphers one by one and got the same error
message: "Selected cipher type not supported by server Options ".

>> The error occurs even when I specify all IDEA, DES, DES3, Blowfish,
>> arcfour, blowfish-cbc, and 3des-cbc like this:

>>    $cnn =3D Net::SSH::Perl->new($host, cipher =3D> "IDEA");


I manually ssh login the host and check the version. Is OpenSSH_4.6p1
an SSH1 or SSH2 implementation, or both?

    root@bx1200:/etc/ssh# ssh -V
    OpenSSH_4.6p1, OpenSSL 0.9.8d 28 Sep 2006
    root@bx1200:/etc/ssh#

root user ssh login is enabled defaultly, right? So I don't su root,
do I?

The Cipher lines in ssh_config file are commented out as following.
How can know its cipher settings?

    root@bx1200:/etc/ssh# grep Cipher ssh_config
    #   Cipher 3des
    #   Ciphers aes128-cbc,3des-cbc,blowfish-cbc,cast128-
cbc,arcfour,aes192-cbc,aes256-cbc
    root@bx1200:/etc/ssh#

[ Do I need to in my perl script issue "ssh -c <cipher_spec>" command
before ...? Absolutely not! I am not ssh-connected with the host. What
can I do? ]


------------------------------

Date: 6 Apr 2001 21:33:47 GMT (Last modified)
From: Perl-Users-Request@ruby.oce.orst.edu (Perl-Users-Digest Admin) 
Subject: Digest Administrivia (Last modified: 6 Apr 01)
Message-Id: <null>


Administrivia:

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------------------------------
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