Someone please correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think your example will pull the entire file into memory. I think it will read lines from $fh one at a time, passing them to grep, which will return matching lines to @a.
However, you're reading from /dev/urandom, which is an endless stream of random bytes, not a file which has an end. So eventually @a is going to get very large, yes. Also, depending on what your end-of-line delimiter is set to, <$fh> may return some very long lines for grep to deal with.
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