Reading ping output using readtable

I'm creating a text file with ping results (on Linux) that looks like this (timestamp at start).
PING 172.17.102.60 (172.17.102.60) 56(84) bytes of data.
[1707403470.450935] 64 bytes from 172.17.102.60: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.378 ms
[1707403471.452695] 64 bytes from 172.17.102.60: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.248 ms
[1707403472.482987] 64 bytes from 172.17.102.60: icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=0.337 ms
I can read it using readtable:
511×9 table
Var1 Var2 Var3 Var4 Var5 Var6 Var7 Var8 Var9
_______________________ ____ _________ ________ __________________ ________________ __________ ______________ ______
{'[1707403470.450935]'} 64 {'bytes'} {'from'} {'172.17.102.60:'} {'icmp_seq=1' } {'ttl=64'} {'time=0.378'} {'ms'}
{'[1707403471.452695]'} 64 {'bytes'} {'from'} {'172.17.102.60:'} {'icmp_seq=2' } {'ttl=64'} {'time=0.248'} {'ms'}
{'[1707403472.482987]'} 64 {'bytes'} {'from'} {'172.17.102.60:'} {'icmp_seq=3' } {'ttl=64'} {'time=0.337'} {'ms'}
How can I extract the timestamps from Var1 and the times from Var8? I think I should be using cellfun, but I don't know how to.

4 Comments

Dyuman Joshi
Dyuman Joshi on 8 Feb 2024
Edited: Dyuman Joshi on 8 Feb 2024
If the format of the data is as shown throughout the file, you can use textscan or fscanf
Any updates, @dormant?
Did you check the answers submitted below?
Thanks. I was late back to check. Sometimes my work gets me distracted.
ping sometimes produces results such as
Request timeout for icmp_seq 2
In theory your code has to handle these as well.

Sign in to comment.

 Accepted Answer

Here's one way to get the timestamps and times directly out of the file (without using readtable):
format longg
filename = 'test_file.txt';
% show the file's contents, for reference
type(filename)
PING 172.17.102.60 (172.17.102.60) 56(84) bytes of data. [1707403470.450935] 64 bytes from 172.17.102.60: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.378 ms [1707403471.452695] 64 bytes from 172.17.102.60: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.248 ms [1707403472.482987] 64 bytes from 172.17.102.60: icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=0.337 ms
% read and parse the file
C = regexp(fileread(filename),'\[([\d\.?]+)\].*?time=([\d\.?]+)','tokens');
data = str2double(vertcat(C{:}))
data = 3×2
1.0e+00 * 1707403470.45093 0.378 1707403471.45269 0.248 1707403472.48299 0.337
timestamps = datetime(data(:,1),'ConvertFrom','posix')
timestamps = 3×1 datetime array
08-Feb-2024 14:44:30 08-Feb-2024 14:44:31 08-Feb-2024 14:44:32
times = data(:,2)
times = 3×1
0.378 0.248 0.337

More Answers (1)

Here is an easy way to import all numeric data as numeric, and with minimal post-processing for the datestamp:
T = readtable("testping.txt", 'Delimiter',[" ","=","]","["], "LeadingDelimitersRule","ignore", "MultipleDelimsAsOne",true)
T = 3×12 table
Var1 Var2 Var3 Var4 Var5 Var6 Var7 Var8 Var9 Var10 Var11 Var12 __________ ____ _________ ________ __________________ ____________ ____ _______ ____ ________ _____ ______ 1.7074e+09 64 {'bytes'} {'from'} {'172.17.102.60:'} {'icmp_seq'} 1 {'ttl'} 64 {'time'} 0.378 {'ms'} 1.7074e+09 64 {'bytes'} {'from'} {'172.17.102.60:'} {'icmp_seq'} 2 {'ttl'} 64 {'time'} 0.248 {'ms'} 1.7074e+09 64 {'bytes'} {'from'} {'172.17.102.60:'} {'icmp_seq'} 3 {'ttl'} 64 {'time'} 0.337 {'ms'}
T.Var1 = datetime(T.Var1, "ConvertFrom","posixtime")
T = 3×12 table
Var1 Var2 Var3 Var4 Var5 Var6 Var7 Var8 Var9 Var10 Var11 Var12 ____________________ ____ _________ ________ __________________ ____________ ____ _______ ____ ________ _____ ______ 08-Feb-2024 14:44:30 64 {'bytes'} {'from'} {'172.17.102.60:'} {'icmp_seq'} 1 {'ttl'} 64 {'time'} 0.378 {'ms'} 08-Feb-2024 14:44:31 64 {'bytes'} {'from'} {'172.17.102.60:'} {'icmp_seq'} 2 {'ttl'} 64 {'time'} 0.248 {'ms'} 08-Feb-2024 14:44:32 64 {'bytes'} {'from'} {'172.17.102.60:'} {'icmp_seq'} 3 {'ttl'} 64 {'time'} 0.337 {'ms'}

Categories

Products

Release

R2023b

Asked:

on 8 Feb 2024

Commented:

on 29 Feb 2024

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!