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Nik's avatar
Nik
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Jan 06, 2011

stream find/replace expression with an exclude

hey guys i'm stumped with a find/replace situation. let's say i have these three strings:

 

 

 

"this is a string"

 

"i am a string"

 

"this is not a string"

 

 

 

now.. i want to replace "a string" with "a banana" however i do not want to replace "this is not a string"

 

 

 

what i'm doing now is this:

 

 

 

STREAM::expression {@a string@a banana@}

 

STREAM::enable

 

 

 

 

however this replaces the string i don't want. is there any way to exclude something from the expression?

 

9 Replies

  • Hi Nik,

    You can check what the matched string was using STREAM::match in the STREAM_MATCHED event. However, if you set your STREAM::expression match to "a string" STREAM::match is only going to return 'a string' and you won't know the context of it. You could use a regex to match more of the string. Can you provide a more exact sample of what you do/don't want to match in the content?

    Here's an example of customizing the replacement in STREAM_MATCHED:

     From http://devcentral.f5.com/wiki/default.aspx/iRules/stream__expression
    when HTTP_REQUEST {
        Disable the stream filter for all requests
       STREAM::disable
    }
    when HTTP_RESPONSE {  
        Check if response type is text  
       if {[HTTP::header value Content-Type] contains "text"}{  
           Match an http://*example.com string and replace it with nothing yet
          STREAM::expression {&http://.*?example\.com&&}
           Enable the stream filter for this response only  
          STREAM::enable  
       }  
    }   
    when STREAM_MATCHED {  
        Check if the matched string meets some condition
       if {[STREAM::match] starts_with "host1"}{
           Replace http:// with https:// and do the replacement
          STREAM::replace "[string map {http:// https://} [STREAM::match]]"
          log local0. "[IP::client_addr]:[TCP::local_port]: matched: [STREAM::match], replaced with: [string map {http:// https://} [STREAM::match]]"  
       }
    }

    Aaron
  • the problem is i'm breaking internet explorer compatibility with a find/replace that i'm doing. here's a more specific example. again, three different strings:

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    now, if i do something like this, it replaces all three domain names with "/" however i only want to replace the second two, not the first since it breaks compatibility with internet explorer:

     

     

    STREAM::expression {@http://forexforums.dailyfx.com/@/@}

     

     

    using stream_matched might do the job, i was hoping there'd be something a little simpler though.

     

     

    thanks.
  • Your post got munged. Can you edit it/reply again with the strings in [ code ] [ code ] blocks?

     

     

    Thanks, Aaron
  • the problem is i'm breaking internet explorer compatibility with a find/replace that i'm doing. here's a more specific example. again, three different strings:

    now, if i do something like this, it replaces all three domain names with "/" however i only want to replace the second two, not the first since it breaks compatibility with internet explorer:

    STREAM::expression {@http://forexforums.dailyfx.com/@/@}

    using stream_matched might do the job, i was hoping there'd be something a little simpler though.

    thanks.
  • The examples were still stripped from your post. Can you add them as an attachment?

     

     

    Aaron
  • testing...

    
    the problem is i'm breaking internet explorer compatibility with a find/replace that i'm doing.  here's a more specific example.  again, three different strings:
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    now, if i do something like this, it replaces all three domain names with "/" however i only want to replace the second two, not the first since it breaks compatibility with internet explorer:
    
    STREAM::expression {@http://forexforums.dailyfx.com/@/@}
    
    using stream_matched might do the job, i was hoping there'd be something a little simpler though.
    
    thanks.
    

    Aaron
  • I think this might work, if you only want to rewrite a href's:

    
    when HTTP_REQUEST {
        Disable the stream filter for all requests
       STREAM::disable
    }
    when HTTP_RESPONSE {  
    
        Check if response type is text  
       if {[HTTP::header value Content-Type] contains "text"}{  
    
           Match a tags for http://www.domain.com/
          STREAM::expression {@