├── README
├── docs
├── changelog
├── credits
├── license
├── readme
└── todo
├── getGames
├── include
├── Simple.pm
├── config.ini
└── functions.plib
└── sql
└── steamcalculator-scripts.sql
/README:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | SteamCalculator Scripts
2 |
3 |
4 | Source: http://github.com/spezifanta/SteamCalculator-Scripts
5 | Projects: http://www.steamcalculator.com
6 | http://www.steamprices.com
7 |
8 |
9 | SteamCalculator Scripts is written in Perl and will parse Valve's Steam
10 | store to save all information to a MySQL database.
11 |
12 | If you are not a developer or planing to create a new project, that
13 | might want to use the data these scripts provide, this software might be
14 | no use for you.
15 |
16 | Otherwise, install Perl (5.8.0 or later) und MySQL (do not forget the
17 | DBI package), import steamclculator-scripts.sql, edit include/config.ini
18 | to your needs and run getGames.
19 |
20 | For any (serious) help, questions, suggestions, feedback or contributions
21 | please visit
22 |
23 | http://github.com/spezifanta/SteamCalculator-Scripts
24 |
25 | or write an email to
26 |
27 | alex@steamcalculator.com
28 |
29 | To contribute, start forking.
30 |
31 | Thank you.
32 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/docs/changelog:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | 2010-07-10: version 0.3.3
2 |
3 | * now requires Perl 5.8.0
4 | * renamed getGames.pl to getGames
5 | * added some comments
6 | * added usage and help messages
7 | * added options
8 | * added option --clear to clear database
9 | * added option --help to show usage
10 | * added option --quiet to supress output (*nix only)
11 | * added option --output-file to redirect output to a given file
12 | * removed colors
13 | * changed layout to max 80 char length
14 | * removed #ID column form layout
15 |
16 |
17 | 2010-07-08: version 0.3.2
18 |
19 | * fixed broken appIDs, caused by inconsistent HTML
20 | * fixed game titles containing HTML tags
21 | * updated layout
22 | * added error log
23 | * added new column "no" and "pl" to sc_steamprices
24 | * optimized sc_steamprices
25 |
26 |
27 | 2010-03-07: version 0.3.1
28 |
29 | * increased parsing speed by 50%(!) - Big thanks to nova (http://www.steamprices.com)
30 | * added new column "flags" to sc_steamgames
31 | * fixed dates bying displayed wrong when Valve's date was incomplete or not available
32 |
33 |
34 | 2010-03-01: version 0.3.0
35 |
36 | * release of 0.3.0
37 |
38 |
39 | ...
40 |
41 |
42 | summer 2008: version 0.0.1
43 |
44 | * initial release
45 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/docs/credits:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | http://www.hlportal.de
2 | http://www.thewall.de
3 | http://www.tfportal.de
4 | http://store.steampowered.com/forums
5 |
6 | trineas
7 | King2500
8 | Tacticer
9 | dp
10 | common
11 | han
12 | spezi|Cola
13 | lejean
14 | nova
15 | brian d foy
16 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/docs/license:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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521 | A patent license is "discriminatory" if it does not include within
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523 | conditioned on the non-exercise of one or more of the rights that are
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529 | parties who would receive the covered work from you, a discriminatory
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533 | contain the covered work, unless you entered into that arrangement,
534 | or that patent license was granted, prior to 28 March 2007.
535 |
536 | Nothing in this License shall be construed as excluding or limiting
537 | any implied license or other defenses to infringement that may
538 | otherwise be available to you under applicable patent law.
539 |
540 | 12. No Surrender of Others' Freedom.
541 |
542 | If conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or
543 | otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not
544 | excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot convey a
545 | covered work so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this
546 | License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may
547 | not convey it at all. For example, if you agree to terms that obligate you
548 | to collect a royalty for further conveying from those to whom you convey
549 | the Program, the only way you could satisfy both those terms and this
550 | License would be to refrain entirely from conveying the Program.
551 |
552 | 13. Use with the GNU Affero General Public License.
553 |
554 | Notwithstanding any other provision of this License, you have
555 | permission to link or combine any covered work with a work licensed
556 | under version 3 of the GNU Affero General Public License into a single
557 | combined work, and to convey the resulting work. The terms of this
558 | License will continue to apply to the part which is the covered work,
559 | but the special requirements of the GNU Affero General Public License,
560 | section 13, concerning interaction through a network will apply to the
561 | combination as such.
562 |
563 | 14. Revised Versions of this License.
564 |
565 | The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions of
566 | the GNU General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will
567 | be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to
568 | address new problems or concerns.
569 |
570 | Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the
571 | Program specifies that a certain numbered version of the GNU General
572 | Public License "or any later version" applies to it, you have the
573 | option of following the terms and conditions either of that numbered
574 | version or of any later version published by the Free Software
575 | Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of the
576 | GNU General Public License, you may choose any version ever published
577 | by the Free Software Foundation.
578 |
579 | If the Program specifies that a proxy can decide which future
580 | versions of the GNU General Public License can be used, that proxy's
581 | public statement of acceptance of a version permanently authorizes you
582 | to choose that version for the Program.
583 |
584 | Later license versions may give you additional or different
585 | permissions. However, no additional obligations are imposed on any
586 | author or copyright holder as a result of your choosing to follow a
587 | later version.
588 |
589 | 15. Disclaimer of Warranty.
590 |
591 | THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY
592 | APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT
593 | HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY
594 | OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
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597 | IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF
598 | ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
599 |
600 | 16. Limitation of Liability.
601 |
602 | IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
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609 | EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
610 | SUCH DAMAGES.
611 |
612 | 17. Interpretation of Sections 15 and 16.
613 |
614 | If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided
615 | above cannot be given local legal effect according to their terms,
616 | reviewing courts shall apply local law that most closely approximates
617 | an absolute waiver of all civil liability in connection with the
618 | Program, unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies a
619 | copy of the Program in return for a fee.
620 |
621 | END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
622 |
623 | How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
624 |
625 | If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
626 | possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
627 | free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
628 |
629 | To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
630 | to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
631 | state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
632 | the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
633 |
634 |
635 | Copyright (C)
636 |
637 | This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
638 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
639 | the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
640 | (at your option) any later version.
641 |
642 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
643 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
644 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
645 | GNU General Public License for more details.
646 |
647 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
648 | along with this program. If not, see .
649 |
650 | Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
651 |
652 | If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short
653 | notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode:
654 |
655 | Copyright (C)
656 | This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
657 | This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
658 | under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
659 |
660 | The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
661 | parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands
662 | might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box".
663 |
664 | You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school,
665 | if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary.
666 | For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see
667 | .
668 |
669 | The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program
670 | into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you
671 | may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with
672 | the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General
673 | Public License instead of this License. But first, please read
674 | .
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/docs/readme:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | Moved here: ../README
2 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/docs/todo:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | * comment code ;)
2 | * add options
3 | - no output
4 | - clear database
5 | - specific log file name
6 | * log errors
7 | * fix date showing 0 when only the release DAY (month and year given) is missing
8 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/getGames:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | #!/usr/bin/perl -w
2 | #
3 | # $Id: getGames 3 2010-03-02 16:56:48Z alex@steamcalculator.com $
4 | #
5 | # SteamCalculator Scripts - http://www.steamcalculator.com
6 | # Copyright (C) 2010 Alexander Kuhrt (alex@steamcalculator.com)
7 | #
8 | # This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
9 | # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
10 | # the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
11 | # (at your option) any later version.
12 | #
13 | # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14 | # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15 | # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
16 | # GNU General Public License for more details.
17 | #
18 | # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19 | # along with this program. If not, see .
20 | #
21 |
22 | require 5.8.0;
23 |
24 | use strict;
25 | use DBI;
26 | use LWP::Simple;
27 | use POSIX qw(ceil strftime);
28 | use Time::HiRes;
29 | use IO::Handle;
30 | use Getopt::Long;
31 | binmode(STDOUT, ":utf8");
32 |
33 | # Print usage of getGames
34 | sub printUsage()
35 | {
36 | printf STDOUT ("Usage: getGames [OPTIONS]\n");
37 | printf STDOUT ("Grabs all games form Valve's Steam store\n\n");
38 | printf STDOUT ("Options:\n");
39 | printf STDOUT (" \t--clear\t\tClear database\n");
40 | printf STDOUT (" -d\t--debug\t\tCreate debug.log\n");
41 | printf STDOUT (" -h\t--help\t\tShow this help\n");
42 | printf STDOUT (" -o\t--output-file Redirect output to file\n");
43 | printf STDOUT (" -q\t--quiet\t\tSuppress output\n");
44 | printf STDOUT (" \t--version\tShow current version\n");
45 | exit(1);
46 | }
47 |
48 | # Print information about getGames
49 | sub printVersion()
50 | {
51 | printf STDOUT ("getGames 0.3.3\n");
52 | printf STDOUT ("Copyright (C) 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.\n");
53 | printf STDOUT ("License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later .\n");
54 | printf STDOUT ("This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.\n");
55 | printf STDOUT ("There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.\n\n");
56 | printf STDOUT ("Written by Alexander Kuhrt.\n");
57 | exit(1);
58 | }
59 |
60 | # Suppress output
61 | sub printQuiet($)
62 | {
63 | my $outputFile = shift;
64 |
65 | if($outputFile ne 0)
66 | {
67 | # redirect STDOUT to $outputFile
68 | open(OUTPUTFILE, ">", $outputFile) or die $!;
69 | STDOUT->fdopen(\*OUTPUTFILE, "w") or die $!;
70 | }
71 | else
72 | {
73 | # Linux, Mac
74 | if($^O !~ m/Win32/i)
75 | {
76 | # redirect STDOUT to /dev/null
77 | open(DEVNULL, ">", "/dev/null") or die $!;
78 | STDOUT->fdopen(\*DEVNULL, 'w') or die $!;
79 | }
80 | # Windows
81 | else
82 | {
83 | # TOOD: anyone?
84 | }
85 | }
86 | }
87 |
88 | # Declare options
89 | my $clear = 0;
90 | my $debug = 0;
91 | my $help = 0;
92 | my $outputFile = 0;
93 | my $quiet = 0;
94 | my $version = 0;
95 |
96 | my @options = (
97 | "clear" => \$clear,
98 | "d|debug" => \$debug,
99 | "h|help|?" => \$help,
100 | "o|output-file=s" => \$outputFile,
101 | "q|quiet" => \$quiet,
102 | "version" => \$version
103 | );
104 |
105 | # Grab options
106 | GetOptions(@options) or exit(1);
107 |
108 | # Test options
109 | printUsage() if $help;
110 | printVersion() if $version;
111 | printQuiet($outputFile) if $quiet || $outputFile;
112 |
113 | open ERROR, '>', "error.txt" or die $!;
114 | STDERR->fdopen( \*ERROR, 'w' ) or die $!;
115 |
116 | # Include stuff
117 | require "./include/Simple.pm";
118 | do "./include/functions.plib";
119 |
120 | my $configFile = "./include/config.ini";
121 |
122 |
123 | my @countries = ('at', 'au', 'de', 'no', 'pl', 'uk', 'us');
124 | my $start = [Time::HiRes::gettimeofday()];
125 | my $db_host;
126 | my $db_user;
127 | my $db_pass;
128 | my $db_name;
129 |
130 | logging("Staring SteamCalculator's 'getGames' Script...\n");
131 | logging("Reading config file... ");
132 |
133 | # read config file
134 | if($configFile && -r $configFile)
135 | {
136 | printf("[OK]\n");
137 |
138 | my $conf = ConfigReader::Simple->new($configFile);
139 | $conf->parse();
140 |
141 | $db_host = $conf->get("DBHostname");
142 | $db_user = $conf->get("DBUsername");
143 | $db_pass = $conf->get("DBPassword");
144 | $db_name = $conf->get("DBName");
145 | }
146 | else
147 | {
148 | printf("[FAILED]");
149 | die("-- Warning: unable to open configuration file '$configFile'\n");
150 | }
151 |
152 | logging("Connecting to MySQL database '$db_name' on '$db_host' as user '$db_user'... ");
153 |
154 | my $db = DBI->connect("DBI:mysql:$db_name:$db_host", $db_user, $db_pass) or die("\nCan't connect to MySQL database '$db_name' on '$db_host'\nServer error: $DBI::errstr\n");
155 |
156 | printf("connected [OK]\n");
157 |
158 | # Clear database befor fillig it again
159 | if($clear)
160 | {
161 | logging("Cleaning MySQL database\n");
162 |
163 | my $query = "TRUNCATE TABLE `sc_steamgames`";
164 | my $stmt = $db->prepare($query);
165 | $stmt->execute() or die $!;
166 |
167 | $query = "TRUNCATE TABLE `sc_steamgameprices";
168 | $stmt = $db->prepare($query);
169 | $stmt->execute();
170 | }
171 |
172 | for(my $c = 0; $c < @countries; $c++)
173 | {
174 | my $country = $countries[$c];
175 |
176 | logging("Connecting to '$country' Steam Store... "); # TODO: add timeout!
177 |
178 | my $steamStoreURL = "http://store.steampowered.com/search/results?sort_by=Name&sort_order=ASC&category1=998&cc=$country&v5=1&page=1";
179 | my $pageContent = get($steamStoreURL);
180 |
181 | my @entries = (cutter($pageContent, "") =~ m/^showing\s\d+\s-\s(\d+)\sof\s(\d+)$/);
182 | my $gamesPerPage = $entries[0];
183 | my $totalEntries = $entries[1];
184 | my $totalPages = ceil($totalEntries / $gamesPerPage);
185 |
186 | my %game;
187 |
188 | printf("found $totalEntries Game Entries on $totalPages Pages [OK]\n\n");
189 |
190 | for (my $page = 1; $page < $totalPages + 1; $page++)
191 | #for(my $page = 1; $page < 2; $page++) # use for debugging
192 | {
193 | printf("\x{2554}%s\x{2557}\n", "\x{2550}" x 78);
194 | printf("\x{2551} \x{2551}\n");
195 | printf("\x{2551} Loading '$country', page %02d of %02d \x{2551}\n", $page, $totalPages);
196 | printf("\x{2551} Entries % 4d - % 4d of %d \x{2551}\n", (($page - 1) * $gamesPerPage + 1), ($page * $gamesPerPage), $totalEntries);
197 | printf("\x{2551} \x{2551}\n");
198 | printf("\x{255A}%s\x{255D}\n", "\x{2550}" x 78);
199 | printf("+---------+---------+-------------+--------------------------------------------+\n");
200 | printf("| AppID | Price | Release | Game Title |\n");
201 | printf("+---------+---------+-------------+--------------------------------------------+\n");
202 |
203 | my $gameCount = ($page - 1) * $gamesPerPage + 1;
204 | my $tempCursorPos = 0;
205 | my $pageContent = get("http://store.steampowered.com/search/results?sort_by=Name&sort_order=ASC&category1=998&cc=$country&v5=1&page=$page");
206 | my $tempContent = cutter($pageContent, '', '');
207 |
208 | for(my $i = $gameCount; $i < ($gameCount + $gamesPerPage); $i++)
209 | {
210 | # jump to next game
211 | $tempContent = substr($tempContent, $tempCursorPos);
212 |
213 | # grab game info
214 | $game{"appID"}[$i] = ($tempContent =~ /store\.steampowered\.com\/app\/(\d+)/)[0];
215 | $game{"price"}[$i] = formPrice(cutter($tempContent, "", "
"));
216 | $game{"release"}[$i] = formDate(cutter($tempContent, "", "
"), $country);
217 | $game{"title"}[$i] = formTitle(cutter($tempContent, "", "
"));
218 |
219 | # set new cursor position
220 | $tempCursorPos = index($tempContent, "") + length("");
221 |
222 | # print result
223 | printf("|% 8s |", $game{"appID"}[$i]);
224 | printf("% 8.2f |", $game{"price"}[$i] / 100);
225 | printf("% 12s |", date("%Y-%b-%d", $game{"release"}[$i]));
226 | printf(" %s%".(43 - length(substr($game{"title"}[$i], 0, 43)))."s|\n", substr($game{"title"}[$i], 0, 42), " ");
227 |
228 | if($i == $totalEntries)
229 | {
230 | goto BREAK;
231 | }
232 | }
233 |
234 | BREAK:
235 | printf("+---------+---------+-------------+--------------------------------------------+\n\n");
236 | }
237 |
238 | # add games to database
239 | for(my $i = 1; $i < scalar(@{$game{"appID"}}); $i++)
240 | {
241 | my $query = qq{
242 | INSERT INTO sc_steamgames
243 | (
244 | `appid`,
245 | `title`,
246 | `releasedate`,
247 | `lastupdate`,
248 | `flags`
249 | )
250 | VALUES
251 | (
252 | ?,
253 | ?,
254 | ?,
255 | UNIX_TIMESTAMP(),
256 | 1
257 | )
258 | ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE lastupdate = UNIX_TIMESTAMP(), flags = flags | 1 & ~ 2
259 | };
260 |
261 | my $stmt = $db->prepare($query);
262 | my $res = $stmt->execute($game{"appID"}[$i], $game{"title"}[$i], $game{"release"}[$i]);
263 | $stmt->finish;
264 |
265 | $query = qq|
266 | INSERT INTO sc_steamgameprices
267 | (
268 | `appid`,
269 | $country
270 | )
271 | VALUES
272 | (
273 | ?,
274 | ?
275 | )
276 | ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE $country = ?
277 | |;
278 |
279 | $stmt = $db->prepare($query);
280 | $res = $stmt->execute($game{"appID"}[$i], $game{"price"}[$i], $game{"price"}[$i]);
281 | $stmt->finish;
282 | }
283 | }
284 |
285 | # set new flag for outdated games
286 | my $query = qq|UPDATE sc_steamgames SET flags = 0 WHERE `lastupdate` < (UNIX_TIMESTAMP() - 360*24) |;
287 | my $stmt = $db->prepare($query);
288 | $stmt->execute();
289 |
290 | $db->disconnect;
291 |
292 | printf("Elapsed time: ".Time::HiRes::tv_interval($start)."seconds\n");
293 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/include/Simple.pm:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | package ConfigReader::Simple;
2 | use strict;
3 | use warnings;
4 | no warnings;
5 |
6 | use subs qw(_init_errors);
7 | use vars qw($VERSION $AUTOLOAD %ERROR $ERROR $Warn $Die);
8 |
9 | use Carp qw(croak carp);
10 | use UNIVERSAL qw(isa);
11 |
12 | $Die = '';
13 | $ERROR = '';
14 | $VERSION = '1.28';
15 | $Warn = 0;
16 |
17 | our $DEBUG = 0;
18 | my $Error = '';
19 |
20 | sub SUCCESS() { 1 };
21 | sub FAILURE() { 0 };
22 |
23 | =head1 NAME
24 |
25 | ConfigReader::Simple - Simple configuration file parser
26 |
27 | =head1 SYNOPSIS
28 |
29 | use ConfigReader::Simple;
30 |
31 | # parse one file
32 | $config = ConfigReader::Simple->new("configrc", [qw(Foo Bar Baz Quux)]);
33 |
34 | # parse multiple files, in order
35 | $config = ConfigReader::Simple->new_multiple(
36 | Files => [ "global", "configrc" ],
37 | Keys => [qw(Foo Bar Baz Quux)]
38 | );
39 |
40 | my @directives = $config->directives;
41 |
42 | $config->get( "Foo" );
43 |
44 | if( $config->exists( "Bar" ) )
45 | {
46 | print "Bar was in the config file\n";
47 | }
48 |
49 | # copy an object to play with it separately
50 | my $clone = $config->clone;
51 |
52 | # only affects clone
53 | $clone->set( "Foo", "Buster" );
54 |
55 | # save the config to a single file
56 | $clone->save( "configrc" )
57 |
58 | # save the config to a single file, but only with
59 | # certain directives
60 | $clone->save( "configrc" => [qw(Foo Bar)] )
61 |
62 | # save to multiple configuration files
63 | $clone->save(
64 | "configrc" => [qw(Foo Bar)],
65 | "global" => [qw(Baz Quux)],
66 | );
67 |
68 | =head1 DESCRIPTION
69 |
70 | C reads and parses simple configuration files. It is
71 | designed to be smaller and simpler than the C module
72 | and is more suited to simple configuration files.
73 |
74 | =head2 The configuration file format
75 |
76 | The configuration file uses a line-oriented format, meaning
77 | that the directives do not have containers. The values can
78 | be split across lines with a continuation character, but for
79 | the most part everything ends up on the same line.
80 |
81 | The first group of non-whitespace characters is the
82 | "directive", or the name of the configuration item. The
83 | linear whitespace after that separates the directive from
84 | the "value", which is the rest of the line, including any
85 | other whitespace.
86 |
87 | In this example, the directive is "Camel" and the value is
88 | "Dromedary".
89 |
90 | Camel Dromedary
91 |
92 | Optionally, you can use a equal sign to separate the directive
93 | from the value.
94 |
95 | Camel=Dromedary
96 |
97 | The equal sign can also have whitespace on either or both
98 | sides.
99 |
100 | Camel = Dromedary
101 | Camel= Dromedary
102 |
103 | In the next example, the directive is "Llama" and the value
104 | is "Live from Peru"
105 |
106 | Llama Live from Peru
107 |
108 | This is the same, to C, as the following
109 | which has more whitespace between the directive and the value.
110 |
111 | Llama Live from Peru
112 |
113 | You can also enclose the value in single or double quotes.
114 |
115 | Llama "Live from Peru"
116 | Llama 'Live from Peru'
117 | Llama='Live from Peru'
118 |
119 | In some cases you may want to split the logical line across
120 | two lines, perhaps to see it better in a terminal window.
121 | For that, use a \ followed only by whitespace. To split the
122 | last entry across two lines, we use the \ at the end of the
123 | line. These three entries are the same:
124 |
125 | Llama Live from Peru
126 |
127 | Llama Live from \
128 | Peru
129 |
130 | Llama Live \
131 | from \
132 | Peru
133 |
134 | If a line is only whitespace, or the first whitespace character is
135 | a #, the Perl comment character, C ignores the
136 | line unless it is the continuation of the previous line.
137 |
138 | =head2 Methods
139 |
140 | =over 4
141 |
142 | =item new ( FILENAME, DIRECTIVES )
143 |
144 | Creates a C object.
145 |
146 | C tells the instance where to look for the
147 | configuration file. If FILENAME cannot be found, an error
148 | message for the file is added to the %ERROR hash with the
149 | FILENAME as a key, and a combined error message appears in
150 | $ERROR.
151 |
152 | C is an optional argument and is a reference to
153 | an array. Each member of the array should contain one valid
154 | directive. A directive is the name of a key that must occur
155 | in the configuration file. If it is not found, the method
156 | croaks. The directive list may contain all the keys in the
157 | configuration file, a sub set of keys or no keys at all.
158 |
159 | The C method is really a wrapper around C.
160 |
161 | =cut
162 |
163 | sub new
164 | {
165 | my $class = shift;
166 | my $filename = shift;
167 | my $keyref = shift;
168 |
169 | $keyref = [] unless defined $keyref;
170 |
171 | my $self = $class->new_multiple(
172 | Files => [ defined $filename ? $filename : () ],
173 | Keys => $keyref );
174 |
175 | return $self;
176 | }
177 |
178 | =item new_multiple( Files => ARRAY_REF, Keys => ARRAY_REF )
179 |
180 | Create a configuration object from several files listed
181 | in the anonymous array value for the C key. The
182 | module reads the files in the same order that they appear
183 | in the array. Later values override earlier ones. This
184 | allows you to specify global configurations which you
185 | may override with more specific ones:
186 |
187 | ConfigReader::Simple->new_multiple(
188 | Files => [ qw( /etc/config /usr/local/etc/config /home/usr/config ) ],
189 | );
190 |
191 | This function croaks if the values are not array references.
192 |
193 | If this method cannot read a file, an error message for that
194 | file is added to the C<%ERROR> hash with the filename as a key,
195 | and a combined error message appears in C<$ERROR>. Processing
196 | the list of filenames continues if a file cannot be found,
197 | which may produced undesired results. You can disable this
198 | feature by setting the C<$ConfigReader::Simple::Die> variable
199 | to a true value.
200 |
201 | =cut
202 |
203 | sub new_multiple
204 | {
205 | _init_errors();
206 |
207 | my $class = shift;
208 | my %args = @_;
209 |
210 | my $self = {};
211 |
212 | $args{'Keys'} = [] unless defined $args{'Keys'};
213 |
214 | croak( __PACKAGE__ . ': Files argument must be an array reference')
215 | unless isa( $args{'Files'}, ref [] );
216 | croak( __PACKAGE__ . ': Keys argument must be an array reference')
217 | unless isa( $args{'Keys'}, ref [] );
218 |
219 | $self->{"filenames"} = $args{'Files'};
220 | $self->{"validkeys"} = $args{'Keys'};
221 |
222 | bless $self, $class;
223 |
224 | foreach my $file ( @{ $self->{"filenames"} } )
225 | {
226 | my $result = $self->parse( $file );
227 | croak $Error if( not $result and $Die );
228 |
229 | $ERROR{$file} = $Error unless $result;
230 | }
231 |
232 | $ERROR = join "\n", map { $ERROR{$_} } keys %ERROR;
233 |
234 | return $self;
235 | }
236 |
237 | =item new_string( Strings => ARRAY_REF, Keys => ARRAY_REF )
238 |
239 | Create a configuration object from several strings listed
240 | in the anonymous array value for the C key. The
241 | module reads the strings in the same order that they appear
242 | in the array. Later values override earlier ones. This
243 | allows you to specify global configurations which you
244 | may override with more specific ones:
245 |
246 | ConfigReader::Simple->new_strings(
247 | Strings => [ \$global, \$local ],
248 | );
249 |
250 | This function croaks if the values are not array references.
251 |
252 | =cut
253 |
254 | sub new_string
255 | {
256 | _init_errors;
257 |
258 | my $class = shift;
259 | my %args = @_;
260 |
261 | my $self = {};
262 |
263 | $args{'Keys'} = [] unless defined $args{'Keys'};
264 |
265 | croak( __PACKAGE__ . ': Strings argument must be an array reference')
266 | unless isa( $args{'Strings'}, ref [] );
267 | croak( __PACKAGE__ . ': Keys argument must be an array reference')
268 | unless isa( $args{'Keys'}, ref [] );
269 |
270 | bless $self, $class;
271 |
272 | $self->{"strings"} = $args{'Strings'};
273 | $self->{"validkeys"} = $args{'Keys'};
274 |
275 | foreach my $string_ref ( @{ $self->{"strings"} } )
276 | {
277 | croak( __PACKAGE__ . ': Element of Strings is not a scalar reference' )
278 | unless isa( $string_ref, ref \ '' );
279 | $self->parse_string( $string_ref );
280 | }
281 |
282 | return $self;
283 | }
284 |
285 | =item add_config_file( FILENAME )
286 |
287 | Parse another configuration file and add its directives to the
288 | current configuration object. Any directives already defined
289 | will be replaced with the new values found in FILENAME.
290 |
291 | =cut
292 |
293 | sub add_config_file
294 | {
295 | _init_errors;
296 |
297 | my( $self, $filename ) = @_;
298 |
299 | return unless $self->parse( $filename );
300 |
301 | push @{ $self->{"filenames"} }, $filename;
302 |
303 | return 1;
304 | }
305 |
306 | =item files
307 |
308 | Return the list of configuration files associated with this
309 | object. The order of the return values is the order of parsing,
310 | so the first value is the first file parsed (and subsequent files may
311 | mask it).
312 |
313 | =cut
314 |
315 | sub files { @{ $_[0]->{"filenames"} } }
316 |
317 | =item new_from_prototype(
318 |
319 | Create a clone object. This is the same thing as calling
320 | clone().
321 |
322 | =cut
323 |
324 | sub new_from_prototype
325 | {
326 | _init_errors;
327 |
328 | my $self = shift;
329 |
330 | my $clone = $self->clone;
331 |
332 | return $clone;
333 | }
334 |
335 | sub AUTOLOAD
336 | {
337 | my $self = shift;
338 |
339 | my $method = $AUTOLOAD;
340 |
341 | $method =~ s/.*:://;
342 |
343 | $self->get( $method );
344 | }
345 |
346 | sub DESTROY
347 | {
348 | return 1;
349 | }
350 |
351 | =item parse( FILENAME )
352 |
353 | This does the actual work.
354 |
355 | This is automatically called from C, although you can reparse
356 | the configuration file by calling C again.
357 |
358 | =cut
359 |
360 | sub parse
361 | {
362 | my( $self, $file ) = @_;
363 |
364 | $Error = '';
365 |
366 | unless( open CONFIG, $file )
367 | {
368 | $Error = "Could not open configuration file [$file]: $!";
369 | carp $Error if $Warn;
370 | return;
371 | }
372 |
373 | $self->{"file_fields"}{$file} = [];
374 |
375 | while( )
376 | {
377 | if ( s/\\ \s* $//x )
378 | {
379 | $_ .= ;
380 | redo unless eof CONFIG;
381 | }
382 |
383 | chomp;
384 | next if /^\s*(#|$)/;
385 |
386 | my ($key, $value) = &parse_line($_);
387 | #carp "Key: '$key' Value: '$value'\n" if $DEBUG;
388 |
389 | $self->{"config_data"}{$key} = $value;
390 | push @{ $self->{"file_fields"}{$file} }, $key;
391 | }
392 |
393 | close(CONFIG);
394 |
395 | $self->_validate_keys;
396 |
397 | return 1;
398 | }
399 |
400 | =item parse_string( SCALAR_REF )
401 |
402 | Parses the string inside the reference SCALAR_REF just as if
403 | it found it in a file.
404 |
405 | =cut
406 |
407 | sub parse_string
408 | {
409 | my $self = shift;
410 | my $string = shift;
411 |
412 | my @lines = split /\r?\n/, $$string;
413 | chomp( @lines );
414 | # carp "A: Found " . @lines . " lines" if $DEBUG;
415 |
416 | while( my $line = shift @lines )
417 | {
418 | # carp "1: Line is $line" if $DEBUG;
419 |
420 | CONT: {
421 | if ( $line =~ s/\\ \s* $//x )
422 | {
423 | # carp "a: reading continuation line $lines[0]" if $DEBUG;
424 | $line .= shift @lines;
425 | # carp "b: Line is $line" if $DEBUG;
426 | redo CONT unless @lines == 0;
427 | }
428 | }
429 |
430 | # carp "2: Line is $line" if $DEBUG;
431 |
432 | chomp $line;
433 | next if $line =~ /^\s*(#|$)/;
434 |
435 | # carp "3: Line is $line" if $DEBUG;
436 |
437 | my ($key, $value) = &parse_line( $line );
438 | # carp "Key: '$key' Value: '$value'" if $DEBUG;
439 |
440 | $self->{"config_data"}{$key} = $value;
441 | }
442 |
443 | $self->_validate_keys;
444 |
445 | return 1;
446 | }
447 |
448 | =item get( DIRECTIVE )
449 |
450 | Returns the parsed value for that directive. For directives
451 | which did not have a value in the configuration file, C
452 | returns the empty string.
453 |
454 | =cut
455 |
456 | sub get { $_[0]->{"config_data"}{$_[1]} }
457 |
458 | =item set( DIRECTIVE, VALUE )
459 |
460 | Sets the value for DIRECTIVE to VALUE. The DIRECTIVE
461 | need not already exist. This overwrites previous
462 | values.
463 |
464 | The VALUE must be a simple scalar. It cannot be a reference.
465 | If the VALUE is a reference, the function prints a warning
466 | and returns false.
467 |
468 | =cut
469 |
470 | sub set
471 | {
472 | my $self = shift;
473 | my( $key, $value ) = @_;
474 |
475 | if( ref $value )
476 | {
477 | $ERROR = "Second argument to set must be a simple scalar";
478 | if( $Warn )
479 | {
480 | carp $ERROR;
481 | return;
482 | }
483 | elsif( $Die )
484 | {
485 | croak $ERROR;
486 | }
487 |
488 | return;
489 | }
490 |
491 | $self->{"config_data"}{$key} = $value;
492 | }
493 |
494 | =item unset( DIRECTIVE )
495 |
496 | Remove the value from DIRECTIVE, which will still exist. It's
497 | value is undef. If the DIRECTIVE does not exist, it will not
498 | be created. Returns FALSE if the DIRECTIVE does not already
499 | exist, and TRUE otherwise.
500 |
501 | =cut
502 |
503 | sub unset
504 | {
505 | my $self = shift;
506 | my $key = shift;
507 |
508 | return unless $self->exists( $key );
509 |
510 | $self->{"config_data"}{$key} = undef;
511 |
512 | return 1;
513 | }
514 |
515 | =item remove( DIRECTIVE )
516 |
517 | Remove the DIRECTIVE. Returns TRUE is DIRECTIVE existed
518 | and FALSE otherwise.
519 |
520 | =cut
521 |
522 | sub remove
523 | {
524 | my $self = shift;
525 | my $key = shift;
526 |
527 | return unless $self->exists( $key );
528 |
529 | delete $self->{"config_data"}{$key};
530 |
531 | return 1;
532 | }
533 |
534 | =item directives()
535 |
536 | Returns a list of all of the directive names found in the configuration
537 | file. The keys are sorted ASCII-betically.
538 |
539 | =cut
540 |
541 | sub directives
542 | {
543 | my $self = shift;
544 |
545 | my @keys = sort keys %{ $self->{"config_data"} };
546 |
547 | return @keys;
548 | }
549 |
550 | =item exists( DIRECTIVE )
551 |
552 | Return TRUE if the specified directive exists, and FALSE
553 | otherwise.
554 |
555 | =cut
556 |
557 | sub exists
558 | {
559 | my $self = shift;
560 | my $name = shift;
561 |
562 | return CORE::exists $self->{"config_data"}{ $name };
563 | }
564 |
565 | =item clone
566 |
567 | Return a copy of the object. The new object is distinct
568 | from the original so you can make changes to the new object
569 | without affecting the old one.
570 |
571 | =cut
572 |
573 | # this is only the first stab at this -- from 35,000
574 | # feet in coach class
575 | #
576 | # I expect that the hash will be very simple. Some keys
577 | # might have a reference value, but that reference value
578 | # will be "flat", so it won't have references in it.
579 |
580 | sub clone
581 | {
582 | my $self = shift;
583 |
584 | my $clone = bless {}, ref $self;
585 |
586 | $clone->{"filenames"} = [ @{ $self->{"filenames"} } ];
587 | $clone->{"validkeys"} = [ @{ $self->{"validkeys"} } ];
588 |
589 | foreach my $file ( keys %{ $self->{"file_fields"} } )
590 | {
591 | $clone->{"file_fields"}{ $file }
592 | = [ @{ $self->{"file_fields"}{ $file } } ];
593 | }
594 |
595 | foreach my $key ( $self->directives )
596 | {
597 | $clone->set( $key, $self->get( $key ) );
598 | }
599 |
600 | return $clone;
601 | }
602 |
603 | =item save( FILENAME [ => ARRAY_REF [, FILENAME => ARRAY_REF ] ] );
604 |
605 | The save method works in three ways, depending on the argument list.
606 |
607 | With a single argument, the save function attempts to save all of the
608 | field-value pairs of the object to the file named by the argument.
609 |
610 | $clone->save( "configrc" );
611 |
612 | With two arguments, the method expects the second argument to be an
613 | array reference which lists the directives to save in the file.
614 |
615 | $clone->save( "configrc" => [qw(Foo Bar)] );
616 |
617 | With more than two arguments, the method expects filename-list pairs.
618 | The method will save in each file the values in their respective
619 | array references.
620 |
621 | $clone->save(
622 | "configrc" => [qw(Foo Bar)],
623 | "global" => [qw(Baz Quux)],
624 | );
625 |
626 | In the last two cases, the method checks that the value for each pair
627 | is an array reference before it affects any files. It croaks if
628 | any value is not an array reference.
629 |
630 | Once the method starts writing files, it tries to write all of the
631 | specified files. Even if it has a problem with one of them, it continues
632 | onto the next one. The method does not necessarily write the files
633 | in the order they appear in the argument list, and it does not check
634 | if you specified the same file twice.
635 |
636 | =cut
637 |
638 | sub save
639 | {
640 | my $self = shift;
641 | my @args = @_;
642 |
643 | if( @args == 0 ) # no args!
644 | {
645 | carp "No arguments to method!";
646 | return;
647 | }
648 |
649 | if( @args == 1 ) # this is a single file
650 | {
651 | push @args, [ $self->directives ];
652 | }
653 |
654 | unless( @args % 2 == 0 ) { croak "Odd number of arguments" };
655 |
656 | my %hash = @args;
657 |
658 | foreach my $value ( values %hash )
659 | {
660 | croak "Argument is not an array reference"
661 | unless isa( $value, 'ARRAY' );
662 | }
663 |
664 | foreach my $file ( keys %hash )
665 | {
666 | carp $ERROR unless $self->_save( $file, $hash{$file} );
667 | }
668 |
669 | 1;
670 | }
671 |
672 | sub _save
673 | {
674 | my( $self, $file, $directives ) = @_;
675 |
676 | unless( isa( $directives, ref [] ) )
677 | {
678 | $ERROR = 'Argument is not an array reference';
679 | return;
680 | }
681 |
682 | my $fh;
683 | unless( open $fh, ">", $file )
684 | {
685 | $ERROR = $!;
686 | return;
687 | }
688 |
689 | foreach my $directive ( @$directives )
690 | {
691 | print $fh (
692 | join( "\t", $directive, $self->get( $directive ) ),
693 | "\n"
694 | );
695 | }
696 |
697 | return SUCCESS;
698 | }
699 |
700 | =begin private
701 |
702 | =item parse_line( STRING )
703 |
704 | Internal method. Don't call this directly.
705 |
706 | Takes a line of text and turns it into the directive and value.
707 |
708 | =end private
709 |
710 | =cut
711 |
712 |
713 | sub parse_line
714 | {
715 | return ( $1, $3 ) if $_[0] =~ /
716 | ^\s*
717 |
718 | (
719 | [^\s=]+
720 | )
721 |
722 | \s*
723 | [=]?
724 | \s*
725 |
726 | (['"]?)
727 | (.*?)
728 | \2
729 |
730 | \s*
731 |
732 | $/x;
733 |
734 | croak "Config: Can't parse line: $_[0]\n";
735 | }
736 |
737 | sub _init_errors
738 | {
739 | %ERROR = ();
740 | $Error = undef;
741 | $ERROR = undef;
742 | }
743 |
744 | =begin private
745 |
746 | =item _validate_keys
747 |
748 | If any keys were declared when the object was constructed,
749 | check that those keys actually occur in the configuration file.
750 | This function croaks if a declared key does not exist.
751 |
752 | =end private
753 |
754 | =cut
755 |
756 | sub _validate_keys
757 | {
758 | my $self = shift;
759 |
760 | return SUCCESS unless exists $self->{"validkeys"};
761 |
762 | croak "validkeys was not an array reference!"
763 | unless isa( $self->{"validkeys"}, ref [] );
764 | my @keys = eval { @{ $self->{"validkeys"} } };
765 |
766 | my @missing = grep { ! exists $self->{"config_data"}{$_} }@keys;
767 |
768 | croak "Config: required keys [@missing] do not occur in config"
769 | if @missing;
770 |
771 | return SUCCESS;
772 | }
773 |
774 | =back
775 |
776 | =head2 Package variables
777 |
778 | =over 4
779 |
780 | =item $Die - DEPRECATED
781 |
782 | If set to a true value, all errors are fatal.
783 |
784 | =item $ERROR
785 |
786 | The last error message.
787 |
788 | =item %ERROR
789 |
790 | The error messages from unreadable files. The key is
791 | the filename and the value is the error message.
792 |
793 | =item $Warn - DEPRECATED
794 |
795 | If set to a true value, methods may output warnings.
796 |
797 | =back
798 |
799 | =head1 LIMITATIONS/BUGS
800 |
801 | Directives are case-sensitive.
802 |
803 | If a directive is repeated, the first instance will silently be
804 | ignored.
805 |
806 | =head1 CREDITS
807 |
808 | Bek Oberin C<< >> wote the original module
809 |
810 | Kim Ryan C<< >> adapted the module to make
811 | declaring keys optional. Thanks Kim.
812 |
813 | Alan W. Jurgensen C<< >> added a change to allow
814 | the NAME=VALUE format in the configuration file.
815 |
816 | Andy Lester, C<< >>, for maintaining the module
817 | while brian was on active duty.
818 |
819 | Adam Trickett, C<< >>, added multi-line support.
820 | You might want to see his C module.
821 |
822 | Greg White has been a very patient user and tester.
823 |
824 | =head1 SOURCE AVAILABILITY
825 |
826 | The source is in Github:
827 |
828 | http://github.com/briandfoy/ConfigReader-Simple/tree/master
829 |
830 | =head1 AUTHORS
831 |
832 | brian d foy, C<< >>
833 |
834 | =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
835 |
836 | Copyright (c) 2002-2009 brian d foy. All rights reserved.
837 |
838 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
839 | it under the same terms as Perl itself.
840 |
841 | =cut
842 |
843 | 1;
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/include/config.ini:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | DBHostname = "localhost"
2 | DBUsername = ""
3 | DBPassword = ""
4 | DBName = ""
5 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/include/functions.plib:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | #!/usr/bin/perl -w
2 | #
3 | # $Id: functions.plib 3 2010-03-02 16:56:48Z alex@steamcalculator.com $
4 | #
5 | # SteamCalculator Scripts - http://www.steamcalculator.com
6 | # Copyright (C) 2010 Alexander Kuhrt (alex@steamcalculator.com)
7 | #
8 | # This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
9 | # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
10 | # the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
11 | # (at your option) any later version.
12 | #
13 | # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14 | # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15 | # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
16 | # GNU General Public License for more details.
17 | #
18 | # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19 | # along with this program. If not, see .
20 | #
21 |
22 | use strict;
23 | use POSIX;
24 |
25 | sub theTime()
26 | {
27 | return strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", localtime);
28 | }
29 |
30 | sub logging($)
31 | {
32 | my $logMessage = shift;
33 | printf("[%s] %s", theTime(), $logMessage);
34 | }
35 |
36 | sub trim($)
37 | {
38 | my $string = shift;
39 |
40 | $string =~ s/^\s+//;
41 | $string =~ s/\s+$//;
42 |
43 | return $string;
44 | }
45 |
46 | sub cutter(@)
47 | {
48 | my ($content, $startTag, $endTag) = @_;
49 | my $startPos;
50 | my $endPos;
51 | my $temp;
52 |
53 | $content = trim($content);
54 | $startPos = index($content, $startTag) + length($startTag);
55 | $temp = substr($content, $startPos);
56 | $endPos = index($temp, $endTag);
57 |
58 | return trim(substr($content, $startPos, $endPos));
59 | }
60 |
61 | sub formPrice($)
62 | {
63 | my $price = shift;
64 |
65 | if($price =~ m/(\d+)(?:\.|,)(\d{2})/)
66 | {
67 | return $1.$2;
68 | }
69 | else
70 | {
71 | return 0;
72 | }
73 | }
74 |
75 | sub formTitle($)
76 | {
77 | my $title = shift;
78 | $title =~ s/<[^>]*>//gs;
79 | return $title;
80 | }
81 |
82 | sub formDate($;$)
83 | {
84 | my $date = shift;
85 | my $country = shift;
86 |
87 | if (length($date) < 1)
88 | {
89 | return 0;
90 | }
91 |
92 | my @pice = split(/\s/, $date);
93 | my $day = 0;
94 | my $month = 0;
95 | my $year = 0;
96 |
97 | if(@pice < 3)
98 | {
99 | return 0;
100 | }
101 |
102 | if($country eq "us")
103 | {
104 | $month = $pice[0];
105 | $day = substr($pice[1], 0, -1);
106 | $year = $pice[2];
107 | }
108 | else
109 | {
110 | $day = $pice[0];
111 | $month = $pice[1];
112 | $year = $pice[2];
113 | }
114 |
115 | # "\n\n======== $year - $month - $day \n";
116 |
117 | if($month eq "January" || $month eq "Jan")
118 | {
119 | $month = 0;
120 | }
121 | elsif($month eq "February" || $month eq "Feb")
122 | {
123 | $month = 1;
124 | }
125 | elsif($month eq "March" || $month eq "Mar")
126 | {
127 | $month = 2;
128 | }
129 | elsif ($month eq "April" || $month eq "Apr")
130 | {
131 | $month = 3;
132 | }
133 | elsif($month eq "May")
134 | {
135 | $month = 4;
136 | }
137 | elsif($month eq "June" || $month eq "Jun")
138 | {
139 | $month = 5;
140 | }
141 | elsif ($month eq "July" || $month eq "Jul")
142 | {
143 | $month = 6;
144 | }
145 | elsif($month eq "August" || $month eq "Aug")
146 | {
147 | $month = 7;
148 | }
149 | elsif($month eq "September" || $month eq "Sep")
150 | {
151 | $month = 8;
152 | }
153 | elsif($month eq "October" || $month eq "Oct")
154 | {
155 | $month = 9;
156 | }
157 | elsif($month eq "November" || $month eq "Nov")
158 | {
159 | $month = 10;
160 | }
161 | elsif($month eq "December" || $month eq "Dec")
162 | {
163 | $month = 11;
164 | }
165 |
166 | # fixing mktime
167 | # year 2001 would be 101 and January starts at 0 - google 'man mktime' for more details
168 | $year -= 1900;
169 |
170 | return mktime(0, 0, 0, $day, $month, $year);
171 | }
172 |
173 | sub date($$)
174 | {
175 | my $format = shift;
176 | my $time = shift;
177 |
178 | if(!$time)
179 | {
180 | return 0;
181 | }
182 |
183 | return strftime($format, gmtime($time + 60*60*24)); # TODO: fix this
184 | }
185 |
186 | sub regExDate($$)
187 | {
188 | my $date = shift;
189 | my $country = shift;
190 |
191 | if($country eq "us")
192 | {
193 | # format: Mar 1, 2010
194 | if($date =~ m/\s*((?:Jan|Feb|Mar|Apr|May|Jun|Jul|Aug|Sep|Oct|Nov|Dec)\s\d+,\s\d{4})\s*/)
195 | {
196 | return $1;
197 | }
198 | else
199 | {
200 | return 0;
201 | }
202 | }
203 | else
204 | {
205 | # format: 1 Mar 2010
206 | if($date =~ m/\s*(\d+\s(?:Jan|Feb|Mar|Apr|May|Jun|Jul|Aug|Sep|Oct|Nov|Dec)\s\d{4})\s*/)
207 | {
208 | return $1;
209 | }
210 | else
211 | {
212 | return 0;
213 | }
214 | }
215 | }
216 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/sql/steamcalculator-scripts.sql:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `sc_steamgameprices` (
2 | `appid` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL,
3 | `at` mediumint(6) unsigned NOT NULL,
4 | `au` mediumint(6) unsigned NOT NULL,
5 | `de` mediumint(6) unsigned NOT NULL,
6 | `no` mediumint(6) unsigned NOT NULL,
7 | `pl` mediumint(6) unsigned NOT NULL,
8 | `uk` mediumint(6) unsigned NOT NULL,
9 | `us` mediumint(6) unsigned NOT NULL,
10 | PRIMARY KEY (`appid`)
11 | ) ENGINE=MyISAM DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
12 |
13 | CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `sc_steamgames` (
14 | `appid` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL,
15 | `title` varchar(250) NOT NULL,
16 | `releasedate` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL,
17 | `lastupdate` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL,
18 | `flags` tinyint(4) unsigned NOT NULL,
19 | PRIMARY KEY (`appid`),
20 | KEY `title` (`title`)
21 | ) ENGINE=MyISAM DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
22 |
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