I've got a batch script that does some processing and calls some perl scripts.
My question is if there was a way to put the perl code directly into the batch script and have it run both types of scripts.
I've got a batch script that does some processing and calls some perl scripts.
My question is if there was a way to put the perl code directly into the batch script and have it run both types of scripts.
Yes you can.
In fact this is exactly what the
pl2bat
tool does: it transforms a perl program into a batch file which embeds the perl program. Have a look to pl2bat.bat itself.So you can take the
.pl
, convert it withpl2bat
, and then tweak the batch part as you need. The biggest part of the batch code must be put at the end of the file (near the:end_of_perl
label) because in the code at the top you are limited to not using single quotes.However:
So I suggest instead to write the whole process in one Perl program.
Update: if you have one script and some Perl modules that you want to combine in a single batch file, you can combine the Perl file using
fatpack
, and then applypl2bat
on the result.Active Perl has been doing this for years!
Below is a skeleton. You can only call perl once though. Because passing it the
-x
switch says that you'll find the perl code embedded in this file, and perl reads down the file until it finds a perl shebang (#!...perl
) and starts executing there. Perl will ignore everything past the__END__
and because you told DOS togoto endofperl
it won't bother with anything until it gets to the label.There is a way to do this, but it wont be pretty. You can echo your perl code into a temp
.pl
file and then run that file from within your.bat
.