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1 | =head1 NAME |
2 | |
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3 | perlfaq5 - Files and Formats ($Revision: 1.24 $, $Date: 1998/07/05 15:07:20 $) |
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4 | |
5 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
6 | |
7 | This section deals with I/O and the "f" issues: filehandles, flushing, |
8 | formats, and footers. |
9 | |
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10 | =head2 How do I flush/unbuffer an output filehandle? Why must I do this? |
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11 | |
12 | The C standard I/O library (stdio) normally buffers characters sent to |
13 | devices. This is done for efficiency reasons, so that there isn't a |
14 | system call for each byte. Any time you use print() or write() in |
15 | Perl, you go though this buffering. syswrite() circumvents stdio and |
16 | buffering. |
17 | |
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18 | In most stdio implementations, the type of output buffering and the size of |
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19 | the buffer varies according to the type of device. Disk files are block |
20 | buffered, often with a buffer size of more than 2k. Pipes and sockets |
21 | are often buffered with a buffer size between 1/2 and 2k. Serial devices |
22 | (e.g. modems, terminals) are normally line-buffered, and stdio sends |
23 | the entire line when it gets the newline. |
24 | |
25 | Perl does not support truly unbuffered output (except insofar as you can |
26 | C<syswrite(OUT, $char, 1)>). What it does instead support is "command |
27 | buffering", in which a physical write is performed after every output |
28 | command. This isn't as hard on your system as unbuffering, but does |
29 | get the output where you want it when you want it. |
30 | |
31 | If you expect characters to get to your device when you print them there, |
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32 | you'll want to autoflush its handle. |
33 | Use select() and the C<$|> variable to control autoflushing |
34 | (see L<perlvar/$|> and L<perlfunc/select>): |
35 | |
36 | $old_fh = select(OUTPUT_HANDLE); |
37 | $| = 1; |
38 | select($old_fh); |
39 | |
40 | Or using the traditional idiom: |
41 | |
42 | select((select(OUTPUT_HANDLE), $| = 1)[0]); |
43 | |
44 | Or if don't mind slowly loading several thousand lines of module code |
45 | just because you're afraid of the C<$|> variable: |
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46 | |
47 | use FileHandle; |
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48 | open(DEV, "+</dev/tty"); # ceci n'est pas une pipe |
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49 | DEV->autoflush(1); |
50 | |
51 | or the newer IO::* modules: |
52 | |
53 | use IO::Handle; |
54 | open(DEV, ">/dev/printer"); # but is this? |
55 | DEV->autoflush(1); |
56 | |
57 | or even this: |
58 | |
59 | use IO::Socket; # this one is kinda a pipe? |
60 | $sock = IO::Socket::INET->new(PeerAddr => 'www.perl.com', |
61 | PeerPort => 'http(80)', |
62 | Proto => 'tcp'); |
63 | die "$!" unless $sock; |
64 | |
65 | $sock->autoflush(); |
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66 | print $sock "GET / HTTP/1.0" . "\015\012" x 2; |
67 | $document = join('', <$sock>); |
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68 | print "DOC IS: $document\n"; |
69 | |
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70 | Note the bizarrely hardcoded carriage return and newline in their octal |
71 | equivalents. This is the ONLY way (currently) to assure a proper flush |
72 | on all platforms, including Macintosh. That the way things work in |
73 | network programming: you really should specify the exact bit pattern |
74 | on the network line terminator. In practice, C<"\n\n"> often works, |
75 | but this is not portable. |
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76 | |
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77 | See L<perlfaq9> for other examples of fetching URLs over the web. |
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78 | |
79 | =head2 How do I change one line in a file/delete a line in a file/insert a line in the middle of a file/append to the beginning of a file? |
80 | |
81 | Although humans have an easy time thinking of a text file as being a |
82 | sequence of lines that operates much like a stack of playing cards -- |
83 | or punch cards -- computers usually see the text file as a sequence of |
84 | bytes. In general, there's no direct way for Perl to seek to a |
85 | particular line of a file, insert text into a file, or remove text |
86 | from a file. |
87 | |
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88 | (There are exceptions in special circumstances. You can add or remove at |
89 | the very end of the file. Another is replacing a sequence of bytes with |
90 | another sequence of the same length. Another is using the C<$DB_RECNO> |
91 | array bindings as documented in L<DB_File>. Yet another is manipulating |
92 | files with all lines the same length.) |
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93 | |
94 | The general solution is to create a temporary copy of the text file with |
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95 | the changes you want, then copy that over the original. This assumes |
96 | no locking. |
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97 | |
98 | $old = $file; |
99 | $new = "$file.tmp.$$"; |
100 | $bak = "$file.bak"; |
101 | |
102 | open(OLD, "< $old") or die "can't open $old: $!"; |
103 | open(NEW, "> $new") or die "can't open $new: $!"; |
104 | |
105 | # Correct typos, preserving case |
106 | while (<OLD>) { |
107 | s/\b(p)earl\b/${1}erl/i; |
108 | (print NEW $_) or die "can't write to $new: $!"; |
109 | } |
110 | |
111 | close(OLD) or die "can't close $old: $!"; |
112 | close(NEW) or die "can't close $new: $!"; |
113 | |
114 | rename($old, $bak) or die "can't rename $old to $bak: $!"; |
115 | rename($new, $old) or die "can't rename $new to $old: $!"; |
116 | |
117 | Perl can do this sort of thing for you automatically with the C<-i> |
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118 | command-line switch or the closely-related C<$^I> variable (see |
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119 | L<perlrun> for more details). Note that |
120 | C<-i> may require a suffix on some non-Unix systems; see the |
121 | platform-specific documentation that came with your port. |
122 | |
123 | # Renumber a series of tests from the command line |
124 | perl -pi -e 's/(^\s+test\s+)\d+/ $1 . ++$count /e' t/op/taint.t |
125 | |
126 | # form a script |
127 | local($^I, @ARGV) = ('.bak', glob("*.c")); |
128 | while (<>) { |
129 | if ($. == 1) { |
130 | print "This line should appear at the top of each file\n"; |
131 | } |
132 | s/\b(p)earl\b/${1}erl/i; # Correct typos, preserving case |
133 | print; |
134 | close ARGV if eof; # Reset $. |
135 | } |
136 | |
137 | If you need to seek to an arbitrary line of a file that changes |
138 | infrequently, you could build up an index of byte positions of where |
139 | the line ends are in the file. If the file is large, an index of |
140 | every tenth or hundredth line end would allow you to seek and read |
141 | fairly efficiently. If the file is sorted, try the look.pl library |
142 | (part of the standard perl distribution). |
143 | |
144 | In the unique case of deleting lines at the end of a file, you |
145 | can use tell() and truncate(). The following code snippet deletes |
146 | the last line of a file without making a copy or reading the |
147 | whole file into memory: |
148 | |
149 | open (FH, "+< $file"); |
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150 | while ( <FH> ) { $addr = tell(FH) unless eof(FH) } |
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151 | truncate(FH, $addr); |
152 | |
153 | Error checking is left as an exercise for the reader. |
154 | |
155 | =head2 How do I count the number of lines in a file? |
156 | |
157 | One fairly efficient way is to count newlines in the file. The |
158 | following program uses a feature of tr///, as documented in L<perlop>. |
159 | If your text file doesn't end with a newline, then it's not really a |
160 | proper text file, so this may report one fewer line than you expect. |
161 | |
162 | $lines = 0; |
163 | open(FILE, $filename) or die "Can't open `$filename': $!"; |
164 | while (sysread FILE, $buffer, 4096) { |
165 | $lines += ($buffer =~ tr/\n//); |
166 | } |
167 | close FILE; |
168 | |
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169 | This assumes no funny games with newline translations. |
170 | |
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171 | =head2 How do I make a temporary file name? |
172 | |
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173 | Use the C<new_tmpfile> class method from the IO::File module to get a |
174 | filehandle opened for reading and writing. Use this if you don't |
175 | need to know the file's name. |
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176 | |
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177 | use IO::File; |
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178 | $fh = IO::File->new_tmpfile() |
179 | or die "Unable to make new temporary file: $!"; |
180 | |
181 | Or you can use the C<tmpnam> function from the POSIX module to get a |
182 | filename that you then open yourself. Use this if you do need to know |
183 | the file's name. |
184 | |
185 | use Fcntl; |
186 | use POSIX qw(tmpnam); |
187 | |
188 | # try new temporary filenames until we get one that didn't already |
189 | # exist; the check should be unnecessary, but you can't be too careful |
190 | do { $name = tmpnam() } |
191 | until sysopen(FH, $name, O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_EXCL); |
192 | |
193 | # install atexit-style handler so that when we exit or die, |
194 | # we automatically delete this temporary file |
195 | END { unlink($name) or die "Couldn't unlink $name : $!" } |
196 | |
197 | # now go on to use the file ... |
198 | |
199 | If you're committed to doing this by hand, use the process ID and/or |
200 | the current time-value. If you need to have many temporary files in |
201 | one process, use a counter: |
202 | |
203 | BEGIN { |
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204 | use Fcntl; |
205 | my $temp_dir = -d '/tmp' ? '/tmp' : $ENV{TMP} || $ENV{TEMP}; |
206 | my $base_name = sprintf("%s/%d-%d-0000", $temp_dir, $$, time()); |
207 | sub temp_file { |
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208 | local *FH; |
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209 | my $count = 0; |
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210 | until (defined(fileno(FH)) || $count++ > 100) { |
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211 | $base_name =~ s/-(\d+)$/"-" . (1 + $1)/e; |
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212 | sysopen(FH, $base_name, O_WRONLY|O_EXCL|O_CREAT); |
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213 | } |
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214 | if (defined(fileno(FH)) |
215 | return (*FH, $base_name); |
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216 | } else { |
217 | return (); |
218 | } |
219 | } |
220 | } |
221 | |
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222 | =head2 How can I manipulate fixed-record-length files? |
223 | |
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224 | The most efficient way is using pack() and unpack(). This is faster than |
225 | using substr() when take many, many strings. It is slower for just a few. |
226 | |
227 | Here is a sample chunk of code to break up and put back together again |
228 | some fixed-format input lines, in this case from the output of a normal, |
229 | Berkeley-style ps: |
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230 | |
231 | # sample input line: |
232 | # 15158 p5 T 0:00 perl /home/tchrist/scripts/now-what |
233 | $PS_T = 'A6 A4 A7 A5 A*'; |
234 | open(PS, "ps|"); |
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235 | print scalar <PS>; |
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236 | while (<PS>) { |
237 | ($pid, $tt, $stat, $time, $command) = unpack($PS_T, $_); |
238 | for $var (qw!pid tt stat time command!) { |
239 | print "$var: <$$var>\n"; |
240 | } |
241 | print 'line=', pack($PS_T, $pid, $tt, $stat, $time, $command), |
242 | "\n"; |
243 | } |
244 | |
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245 | We've used C<$$var> in a way that forbidden by C<use strict 'refs'>. |
246 | That is, we've promoted a string to a scalar variable reference using |
247 | symbolic references. This is ok in small programs, but doesn't scale |
248 | well. It also only works on global variables, not lexicals. |
249 | |
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250 | =head2 How can I make a filehandle local to a subroutine? How do I pass filehandles between subroutines? How do I make an array of filehandles? |
251 | |
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252 | The fastest, simplest, and most direct way is to localize the typeglob |
253 | of the filehandle in question: |
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254 | |
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255 | local *TmpHandle; |
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256 | |
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257 | Typeglobs are fast (especially compared with the alternatives) and |
258 | reasonably easy to use, but they also have one subtle drawback. If you |
259 | had, for example, a function named TmpHandle(), or a variable named |
260 | %TmpHandle, you just hid it from yourself. |
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261 | |
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262 | sub findme { |
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263 | local *HostFile; |
264 | open(HostFile, "</etc/hosts") or die "no /etc/hosts: $!"; |
265 | local $_; # <- VERY IMPORTANT |
266 | while (<HostFile>) { |
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267 | print if /\b127\.(0\.0\.)?1\b/; |
268 | } |
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269 | # *HostFile automatically closes/disappears here |
270 | } |
271 | |
272 | Here's how to use this in a loop to open and store a bunch of |
273 | filehandles. We'll use as values of the hash an ordered |
274 | pair to make it easy to sort the hash in insertion order. |
275 | |
276 | @names = qw(motd termcap passwd hosts); |
277 | my $i = 0; |
278 | foreach $filename (@names) { |
279 | local *FH; |
280 | open(FH, "/etc/$filename") || die "$filename: $!"; |
281 | $file{$filename} = [ $i++, *FH ]; |
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282 | } |
283 | |
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284 | # Using the filehandles in the array |
285 | foreach $name (sort { $file{$a}[0] <=> $file{$b}[0] } keys %file) { |
286 | my $fh = $file{$name}[1]; |
287 | my $line = <$fh>; |
288 | print "$name $. $line"; |
289 | } |
290 | |
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291 | For passing filehandles to functions, the easiest way is to |
292 | prefer them with a star, as in func(*STDIN). See L<perlfaq7/"Passing |
293 | Filehandles"> for details. |
294 | |
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295 | If you want to create many, anonymous handles, you should check out the |
296 | Symbol, FileHandle, or IO::Handle (etc.) modules. Here's the equivalent |
297 | code with Symbol::gensym, which is reasonably light-weight: |
298 | |
299 | foreach $filename (@names) { |
300 | use Symbol; |
301 | my $fh = gensym(); |
302 | open($fh, "/etc/$filename") || die "open /etc/$filename: $!"; |
303 | $file{$filename} = [ $i++, $fh ]; |
304 | } |
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305 | |
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306 | Or here using the semi-object-oriented FileHandle, which certainly isn't |
307 | light-weight: |
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308 | |
309 | use FileHandle; |
310 | |
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311 | foreach $filename (@names) { |
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312 | my $fh = FileHandle->new("/etc/$filename") or die "$filename: $!"; |
313 | $file{$filename} = [ $i++, $fh ]; |
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314 | } |
315 | |
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316 | Please understand that whether the filehandle happens to be a (probably |
317 | localized) typeglob or an anonymous handle from one of the modules, |
318 | in no way affects the bizarre rules for managing indirect handles. |
319 | See the next question. |
320 | |
321 | =head2 How can I use a filehandle indirectly? |
322 | |
323 | An indirect filehandle is using something other than a symbol |
324 | in a place that a filehandle is expected. Here are ways |
325 | to get those: |
326 | |
327 | $fh = SOME_FH; # bareword is strict-subs hostile |
328 | $fh = "SOME_FH"; # strict-refs hostile; same package only |
329 | $fh = *SOME_FH; # typeglob |
330 | $fh = \*SOME_FH; # ref to typeglob (bless-able) |
331 | $fh = *SOME_FH{IO}; # blessed IO::Handle from *SOME_FH typeglob |
332 | |
333 | Or to use the C<new> method from the FileHandle or IO modules to |
334 | create an anonymous filehandle, store that in a scalar variable, |
335 | and use it as though it were a normal filehandle. |
336 | |
337 | use FileHandle; |
338 | $fh = FileHandle->new(); |
339 | |
340 | use IO::Handle; # 5.004 or higher |
341 | $fh = IO::Handle->new(); |
342 | |
343 | Then use any of those as you would a normal filehandle. Anywhere that |
344 | Perl is expecting a filehandle, an indirect filehandle may be used |
345 | instead. An indirect filehandle is just a scalar variable that contains |
346 | a filehandle. Functions like C<print>, C<open>, C<seek>, or the functions or |
347 | the C<E<lt>FHE<gt>> diamond operator will accept either a read filehandle |
348 | or a scalar variable containing one: |
349 | |
350 | ($ifh, $ofh, $efh) = (*STDIN, *STDOUT, *STDERR); |
351 | print $ofh "Type it: "; |
352 | $got = <$ifh> |
353 | print $efh "What was that: $got"; |
354 | |
355 | Of you're passing a filehandle to a function, you can write |
356 | the function in two ways: |
357 | |
358 | sub accept_fh { |
359 | my $fh = shift; |
360 | print $fh "Sending to indirect filehandle\n"; |
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361 | } |
362 | |
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363 | Or it can localize a typeglob and use the filehandle directly: |
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364 | |
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365 | sub accept_fh { |
366 | local *FH = shift; |
367 | print FH "Sending to localized filehandle\n"; |
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368 | } |
369 | |
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370 | Both styles work with either objects or typeglobs of real filehandles. |
371 | (They might also work with strings under some circumstances, but this |
372 | is risky.) |
373 | |
374 | accept_fh(*STDOUT); |
375 | accept_fh($handle); |
376 | |
377 | In the examples above, we assigned the filehandle to a scalar variable |
378 | before using it. That is because only simple scalar variables, |
379 | not expressions or subscripts into hashes or arrays, can be used with |
380 | built-ins like C<print>, C<printf>, or the diamond operator. These are |
381 | illegal and won't even compile: |
382 | |
383 | @fd = (*STDIN, *STDOUT, *STDERR); |
384 | print $fd[1] "Type it: "; # WRONG |
385 | $got = <$fd[0]> # WRONG |
386 | print $fd[2] "What was that: $got"; # WRONG |
387 | |
388 | With C<print> and C<printf>, you get around this by using a block and |
389 | an expression where you would place the filehandle: |
390 | |
391 | print { $fd[1] } "funny stuff\n"; |
392 | printf { $fd[1] } "Pity the poor %x.\n", 3_735_928_559; |
393 | # Pity the poor deadbeef. |
394 | |
395 | That block is a proper block like any other, so you can put more |
396 | complicated code there. This sends the message out to one of two places: |
397 | |
398 | $ok = -x "/bin/cat"; |
399 | print { $ok ? $fd[1] : $fd[2] } "cat stat $ok\n"; |
400 | print { $fd[ 1+ ($ok || 0) ] } "cat stat $ok\n"; |
401 | |
402 | This approach of treating C<print> and C<printf> like object methods |
403 | calls doesn't work for the diamond operator. That's because it's a |
404 | real operator, not just a function with a comma-less argument. Assuming |
405 | you've been storing typeglobs in your structure as we did above, you |
406 | can use the built-in function named C<readline> to reads a record just |
407 | as C<E<lt>E<gt>> does. Given the initialization shown above for @fd, this |
408 | would work, but only because readline() require a typeglob. It doesn't |
409 | work with objects or strings, which might be a bug we haven't fixed yet. |
410 | |
411 | $got = readline($fd[0]); |
412 | |
413 | Let it be noted that the flakiness of indirect filehandles is not |
414 | related to whether they're strings, typeglobs, objects, or anything else. |
415 | It's the syntax of the fundamental operators. Playing the object |
416 | game doesn't help you at all here. |
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417 | |
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418 | =head2 How can I set up a footer format to be used with write()? |
419 | |
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420 | There's no builtin way to do this, but L<perlform> has a couple of |
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421 | techniques to make it possible for the intrepid hacker. |
422 | |
423 | =head2 How can I write() into a string? |
424 | |
425 | See L<perlform> for an swrite() function. |
426 | |
427 | =head2 How can I output my numbers with commas added? |
428 | |
429 | This one will do it for you: |
430 | |
431 | sub commify { |
432 | local $_ = shift; |
433 | 1 while s/^(-?\d+)(\d{3})/$1,$2/; |
434 | return $_; |
435 | } |
436 | |
437 | $n = 23659019423.2331; |
438 | print "GOT: ", commify($n), "\n"; |
439 | |
440 | GOT: 23,659,019,423.2331 |
441 | |
442 | You can't just: |
443 | |
444 | s/^(-?\d+)(\d{3})/$1,$2/g; |
445 | |
446 | because you have to put the comma in and then recalculate your |
447 | position. |
448 | |
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449 | Alternatively, this commifies all numbers in a line regardless of |
450 | whether they have decimal portions, are preceded by + or -, or |
451 | whatever: |
452 | |
453 | # from Andrew Johnson <ajohnson@gpu.srv.ualberta.ca> |
454 | sub commify { |
455 | my $input = shift; |
456 | $input = reverse $input; |
457 | $input =~ s<(\d\d\d)(?=\d)(?!\d*\.)><$1,>g; |
458 | return reverse $input; |
459 | } |
460 | |
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461 | =head2 How can I translate tildes (~) in a filename? |
462 | |
463 | Use the E<lt>E<gt> (glob()) operator, documented in L<perlfunc>. This |
464 | requires that you have a shell installed that groks tildes, meaning |
465 | csh or tcsh or (some versions of) ksh, and thus may have portability |
466 | problems. The Glob::KGlob module (available from CPAN) gives more |
467 | portable glob functionality. |
468 | |
469 | Within Perl, you may use this directly: |
470 | |
471 | $filename =~ s{ |
472 | ^ ~ # find a leading tilde |
473 | ( # save this in $1 |
474 | [^/] # a non-slash character |
475 | * # repeated 0 or more times (0 means me) |
476 | ) |
477 | }{ |
478 | $1 |
479 | ? (getpwnam($1))[7] |
480 | : ( $ENV{HOME} || $ENV{LOGDIR} ) |
481 | }ex; |
482 | |
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483 | =head2 How come when I open a file read-write it wipes it out? |
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484 | |
485 | Because you're using something like this, which truncates the file and |
486 | I<then> gives you read-write access: |
487 | |
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488 | open(FH, "+> /path/name"); # WRONG (almost always) |
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489 | |
490 | Whoops. You should instead use this, which will fail if the file |
5a964f20 |
491 | doesn't exist. Using "E<gt>" always clobbers or creates. |
492 | Using "E<lt>" never does either. The "+" doesn't change this. |
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493 | |
5a964f20 |
494 | Here are examples of many kinds of file opens. Those using sysopen() |
495 | all assume |
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496 | |
5a964f20 |
497 | use Fcntl; |
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498 | |
5a964f20 |
499 | To open file for reading: |
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500 | |
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501 | open(FH, "< $path") || die $!; |
502 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_RDONLY) || die $!; |
503 | |
504 | To open file for writing, create new file if needed or else truncate old file: |
505 | |
506 | open(FH, "> $path") || die $!; |
507 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_WRONLY|O_TRUNC|O_CREAT) || die $!; |
508 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_WRONLY|O_TRUNC|O_CREAT, 0666) || die $!; |
509 | |
510 | To open file for writing, create new file, file must not exist: |
511 | |
512 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_WRONLY|O_EXCL|O_CREAT) || die $!; |
513 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_WRONLY|O_EXCL|O_CREAT, 0666) || die $!; |
514 | |
515 | To open file for appending, create if necessary: |
516 | |
517 | open(FH, ">> $path") || die $!; |
518 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_WRONLY|O_APPEND|O_CREAT) || die $!; |
519 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_WRONLY|O_APPEND|O_CREAT, 0666) || die $!; |
520 | |
521 | To open file for appending, file must exist: |
522 | |
523 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_WRONLY|O_APPEND) || die $!; |
524 | |
525 | To open file for update, file must exist: |
526 | |
527 | open(FH, "+< $path") || die $!; |
528 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_RDWR) || die $!; |
529 | |
530 | To open file for update, create file if necessary: |
531 | |
532 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_RDWR|O_CREAT) || die $!; |
533 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_RDWR|O_CREAT, 0666) || die $!; |
534 | |
535 | To open file for update, file must not exist: |
536 | |
537 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_RDWR|O_EXCL|O_CREAT) || die $!; |
538 | sysopen(FH, $path, O_RDWR|O_EXCL|O_CREAT, 0666) || die $!; |
539 | |
540 | To open a file without blocking, creating if necessary: |
541 | |
542 | sysopen(FH, "/tmp/somefile", O_WRONLY|O_NDELAY|O_CREAT) |
543 | or die "can't open /tmp/somefile: $!": |
544 | |
545 | Be warned that neither creation nor deletion of files is guaranteed to |
546 | be an atomic operation over NFS. That is, two processes might both |
547 | successful create or unlink the same file! Therefore O_EXCL |
548 | isn't so exclusive as you might wish. |
68dc0745 |
549 | |
550 | =head2 Why do I sometimes get an "Argument list too long" when I use <*>? |
551 | |
552 | The C<E<lt>E<gt>> operator performs a globbing operation (see above). |
553 | By default glob() forks csh(1) to do the actual glob expansion, but |
554 | csh can't handle more than 127 items and so gives the error message |
555 | C<Argument list too long>. People who installed tcsh as csh won't |
556 | have this problem, but their users may be surprised by it. |
557 | |
558 | To get around this, either do the glob yourself with C<Dirhandle>s and |
559 | patterns, or use a module like Glob::KGlob, one that doesn't use the |
560 | shell to do globbing. |
561 | |
562 | =head2 Is there a leak/bug in glob()? |
563 | |
564 | Due to the current implementation on some operating systems, when you |
565 | use the glob() function or its angle-bracket alias in a scalar |
566 | context, you may cause a leak and/or unpredictable behavior. It's |
567 | best therefore to use glob() only in list context. |
568 | |
569 | =head2 How can I open a file with a leading "E<gt>" or trailing blanks? |
570 | |
571 | Normally perl ignores trailing blanks in filenames, and interprets |
572 | certain leading characters (or a trailing "|") to mean something |
573 | special. To avoid this, you might want to use a routine like this. |
574 | It makes incomplete pathnames into explicit relative ones, and tacks a |
575 | trailing null byte on the name to make perl leave it alone: |
576 | |
577 | sub safe_filename { |
578 | local $_ = shift; |
579 | return m#^/# |
580 | ? "$_\0" |
581 | : "./$_\0"; |
582 | } |
583 | |
584 | $fn = safe_filename("<<<something really wicked "); |
585 | open(FH, "> $fn") or "couldn't open $fn: $!"; |
586 | |
587 | You could also use the sysopen() function (see L<perlfunc/sysopen>). |
588 | |
589 | =head2 How can I reliably rename a file? |
590 | |
591 | Well, usually you just use Perl's rename() function. But that may |
592 | not work everywhere, in particular, renaming files across file systems. |
593 | If your operating system supports a mv(1) program or its moral equivalent, |
594 | this works: |
595 | |
596 | rename($old, $new) or system("mv", $old, $new); |
597 | |
598 | It may be more compelling to use the File::Copy module instead. You |
599 | just copy to the new file to the new name (checking return values), |
600 | then delete the old one. This isn't really the same semantics as a |
601 | real rename(), though, which preserves metainformation like |
602 | permissions, timestamps, inode info, etc. |
603 | |
5a964f20 |
604 | The newer version of File::Copy export a move() function. |
605 | |
68dc0745 |
606 | =head2 How can I lock a file? |
607 | |
54310121 |
608 | Perl's builtin flock() function (see L<perlfunc> for details) will call |
68dc0745 |
609 | flock(2) if that exists, fcntl(2) if it doesn't (on perl version 5.004 and |
610 | later), and lockf(3) if neither of the two previous system calls exists. |
611 | On some systems, it may even use a different form of native locking. |
612 | Here are some gotchas with Perl's flock(): |
613 | |
614 | =over 4 |
615 | |
616 | =item 1 |
617 | |
618 | Produces a fatal error if none of the three system calls (or their |
619 | close equivalent) exists. |
620 | |
621 | =item 2 |
622 | |
623 | lockf(3) does not provide shared locking, and requires that the |
624 | filehandle be open for writing (or appending, or read/writing). |
625 | |
626 | =item 3 |
627 | |
628 | Some versions of flock() can't lock files over a network (e.g. on NFS |
629 | file systems), so you'd need to force the use of fcntl(2) when you |
630 | build Perl. See the flock entry of L<perlfunc>, and the F<INSTALL> |
631 | file in the source distribution for information on building Perl to do |
632 | this. |
633 | |
634 | =back |
635 | |
68dc0745 |
636 | =head2 What can't I just open(FH, ">file.lock")? |
637 | |
638 | A common bit of code B<NOT TO USE> is this: |
639 | |
640 | sleep(3) while -e "file.lock"; # PLEASE DO NOT USE |
641 | open(LCK, "> file.lock"); # THIS BROKEN CODE |
642 | |
643 | This is a classic race condition: you take two steps to do something |
644 | which must be done in one. That's why computer hardware provides an |
645 | atomic test-and-set instruction. In theory, this "ought" to work: |
646 | |
5a964f20 |
647 | sysopen(FH, "file.lock", O_WRONLY|O_EXCL|O_CREAT) |
68dc0745 |
648 | or die "can't open file.lock: $!": |
649 | |
650 | except that lamentably, file creation (and deletion) is not atomic |
651 | over NFS, so this won't work (at least, not every time) over the net. |
46fc3d4c |
652 | Various schemes involving involving link() have been suggested, but |
653 | these tend to involve busy-wait, which is also subdesirable. |
68dc0745 |
654 | |
fc36a67e |
655 | =head2 I still don't get locking. I just want to increment the number in the file. How can I do this? |
68dc0745 |
656 | |
46fc3d4c |
657 | Didn't anyone ever tell you web-page hit counters were useless? |
5a964f20 |
658 | They don't count number of hits, they're a waste of time, and they serve |
659 | only to stroke the writer's vanity. Better to pick a random number. |
660 | It's more realistic. |
68dc0745 |
661 | |
5a964f20 |
662 | Anyway, this is what you can do if you can't help yourself. |
68dc0745 |
663 | |
664 | use Fcntl; |
5a964f20 |
665 | sysopen(FH, "numfile", O_RDWR|O_CREAT) or die "can't open numfile: $!"; |
68dc0745 |
666 | flock(FH, 2) or die "can't flock numfile: $!"; |
667 | $num = <FH> || 0; |
668 | seek(FH, 0, 0) or die "can't rewind numfile: $!"; |
669 | truncate(FH, 0) or die "can't truncate numfile: $!"; |
670 | (print FH $num+1, "\n") or die "can't write numfile: $!"; |
671 | # DO NOT UNLOCK THIS UNTIL YOU CLOSE |
672 | close FH or die "can't close numfile: $!"; |
673 | |
46fc3d4c |
674 | Here's a much better web-page hit counter: |
68dc0745 |
675 | |
676 | $hits = int( (time() - 850_000_000) / rand(1_000) ); |
677 | |
678 | If the count doesn't impress your friends, then the code might. :-) |
679 | |
680 | =head2 How do I randomly update a binary file? |
681 | |
682 | If you're just trying to patch a binary, in many cases something as |
683 | simple as this works: |
684 | |
685 | perl -i -pe 's{window manager}{window mangler}g' /usr/bin/emacs |
686 | |
687 | However, if you have fixed sized records, then you might do something more |
688 | like this: |
689 | |
690 | $RECSIZE = 220; # size of record, in bytes |
691 | $recno = 37; # which record to update |
692 | open(FH, "+<somewhere") || die "can't update somewhere: $!"; |
693 | seek(FH, $recno * $RECSIZE, 0); |
694 | read(FH, $record, $RECSIZE) == $RECSIZE || die "can't read record $recno: $!"; |
695 | # munge the record |
696 | seek(FH, $recno * $RECSIZE, 0); |
697 | print FH $record; |
698 | close FH; |
699 | |
700 | Locking and error checking are left as an exercise for the reader. |
701 | Don't forget them, or you'll be quite sorry. |
702 | |
68dc0745 |
703 | =head2 How do I get a file's timestamp in perl? |
704 | |
705 | If you want to retrieve the time at which the file was last read, |
46fc3d4c |
706 | written, or had its meta-data (owner, etc) changed, you use the B<-M>, |
68dc0745 |
707 | B<-A>, or B<-C> filetest operations as documented in L<perlfunc>. These |
708 | retrieve the age of the file (measured against the start-time of your |
709 | program) in days as a floating point number. To retrieve the "raw" |
710 | time in seconds since the epoch, you would call the stat function, |
711 | then use localtime(), gmtime(), or POSIX::strftime() to convert this |
712 | into human-readable form. |
713 | |
714 | Here's an example: |
715 | |
716 | $write_secs = (stat($file))[9]; |
c8db1d39 |
717 | printf "file %s updated at %s\n", $file, |
718 | scalar localtime($write_secs); |
68dc0745 |
719 | |
720 | If you prefer something more legible, use the File::stat module |
721 | (part of the standard distribution in version 5.004 and later): |
722 | |
723 | use File::stat; |
724 | use Time::localtime; |
725 | $date_string = ctime(stat($file)->mtime); |
726 | print "file $file updated at $date_string\n"; |
727 | |
728 | Error checking is left as an exercise for the reader. |
729 | |
730 | =head2 How do I set a file's timestamp in perl? |
731 | |
732 | You use the utime() function documented in L<perlfunc/utime>. |
733 | By way of example, here's a little program that copies the |
734 | read and write times from its first argument to all the rest |
735 | of them. |
736 | |
737 | if (@ARGV < 2) { |
738 | die "usage: cptimes timestamp_file other_files ...\n"; |
739 | } |
740 | $timestamp = shift; |
741 | ($atime, $mtime) = (stat($timestamp))[8,9]; |
742 | utime $atime, $mtime, @ARGV; |
743 | |
744 | Error checking is left as an exercise for the reader. |
745 | |
746 | Note that utime() currently doesn't work correctly with Win95/NT |
747 | ports. A bug has been reported. Check it carefully before using |
748 | it on those platforms. |
749 | |
750 | =head2 How do I print to more than one file at once? |
751 | |
752 | If you only have to do this once, you can do this: |
753 | |
754 | for $fh (FH1, FH2, FH3) { print $fh "whatever\n" } |
755 | |
756 | To connect up to one filehandle to several output filehandles, it's |
757 | easiest to use the tee(1) program if you have it, and let it take care |
758 | of the multiplexing: |
759 | |
760 | open (FH, "| tee file1 file2 file3"); |
761 | |
5a964f20 |
762 | Or even: |
763 | |
764 | # make STDOUT go to three files, plus original STDOUT |
765 | open (STDOUT, "| tee file1 file2 file3") or die "Teeing off: $!\n"; |
766 | print "whatever\n" or die "Writing: $!\n"; |
767 | close(STDOUT) or die "Closing: $!\n"; |
68dc0745 |
768 | |
5a964f20 |
769 | Otherwise you'll have to write your own multiplexing print |
770 | function -- or your own tee program -- or use Tom Christiansen's, |
771 | at http://www.perl.com/CPAN/authors/id/TOMC/scripts/tct.gz, which is |
772 | written in Perl and offers much greater functionality |
773 | than the stock version. |
68dc0745 |
774 | |
775 | =head2 How can I read in a file by paragraphs? |
776 | |
777 | Use the C<$\> variable (see L<perlvar> for details). You can either |
778 | set it to C<""> to eliminate empty paragraphs (C<"abc\n\n\n\ndef">, |
779 | for instance, gets treated as two paragraphs and not three), or |
780 | C<"\n\n"> to accept empty paragraphs. |
781 | |
782 | =head2 How can I read a single character from a file? From the keyboard? |
783 | |
784 | You can use the builtin C<getc()> function for most filehandles, but |
785 | it won't (easily) work on a terminal device. For STDIN, either use |
786 | the Term::ReadKey module from CPAN, or use the sample code in |
787 | L<perlfunc/getc>. |
788 | |
789 | If your system supports POSIX, you can use the following code, which |
790 | you'll note turns off echo processing as well. |
791 | |
792 | #!/usr/bin/perl -w |
793 | use strict; |
794 | $| = 1; |
795 | for (1..4) { |
796 | my $got; |
797 | print "gimme: "; |
798 | $got = getone(); |
799 | print "--> $got\n"; |
800 | } |
801 | exit; |
802 | |
803 | BEGIN { |
804 | use POSIX qw(:termios_h); |
805 | |
806 | my ($term, $oterm, $echo, $noecho, $fd_stdin); |
807 | |
808 | $fd_stdin = fileno(STDIN); |
809 | |
810 | $term = POSIX::Termios->new(); |
811 | $term->getattr($fd_stdin); |
812 | $oterm = $term->getlflag(); |
813 | |
814 | $echo = ECHO | ECHOK | ICANON; |
815 | $noecho = $oterm & ~$echo; |
816 | |
817 | sub cbreak { |
818 | $term->setlflag($noecho); |
819 | $term->setcc(VTIME, 1); |
820 | $term->setattr($fd_stdin, TCSANOW); |
821 | } |
822 | |
823 | sub cooked { |
824 | $term->setlflag($oterm); |
825 | $term->setcc(VTIME, 0); |
826 | $term->setattr($fd_stdin, TCSANOW); |
827 | } |
828 | |
829 | sub getone { |
830 | my $key = ''; |
831 | cbreak(); |
832 | sysread(STDIN, $key, 1); |
833 | cooked(); |
834 | return $key; |
835 | } |
836 | |
837 | } |
838 | |
839 | END { cooked() } |
840 | |
841 | The Term::ReadKey module from CPAN may be easier to use: |
842 | |
843 | use Term::ReadKey; |
844 | open(TTY, "</dev/tty"); |
845 | print "Gimme a char: "; |
846 | ReadMode "raw"; |
847 | $key = ReadKey 0, *TTY; |
848 | ReadMode "normal"; |
849 | printf "\nYou said %s, char number %03d\n", |
850 | $key, ord $key; |
851 | |
46fc3d4c |
852 | For DOS systems, Dan Carson <dbc@tc.fluke.COM> reports the following: |
68dc0745 |
853 | |
854 | To put the PC in "raw" mode, use ioctl with some magic numbers gleaned |
855 | from msdos.c (Perl source file) and Ralf Brown's interrupt list (comes |
856 | across the net every so often): |
857 | |
858 | $old_ioctl = ioctl(STDIN,0,0); # Gets device info |
859 | $old_ioctl &= 0xff; |
860 | ioctl(STDIN,1,$old_ioctl | 32); # Writes it back, setting bit 5 |
861 | |
862 | Then to read a single character: |
863 | |
864 | sysread(STDIN,$c,1); # Read a single character |
865 | |
866 | And to put the PC back to "cooked" mode: |
867 | |
868 | ioctl(STDIN,1,$old_ioctl); # Sets it back to cooked mode. |
869 | |
870 | So now you have $c. If C<ord($c) == 0>, you have a two byte code, which |
871 | means you hit a special key. Read another byte with C<sysread(STDIN,$c,1)>, |
872 | and that value tells you what combination it was according to this |
873 | table: |
874 | |
875 | # PC 2-byte keycodes = ^@ + the following: |
876 | |
877 | # HEX KEYS |
878 | # --- ---- |
879 | # 0F SHF TAB |
880 | # 10-19 ALT QWERTYUIOP |
881 | # 1E-26 ALT ASDFGHJKL |
882 | # 2C-32 ALT ZXCVBNM |
883 | # 3B-44 F1-F10 |
884 | # 47-49 HOME,UP,PgUp |
885 | # 4B LEFT |
886 | # 4D RIGHT |
887 | # 4F-53 END,DOWN,PgDn,Ins,Del |
888 | # 54-5D SHF F1-F10 |
889 | # 5E-67 CTR F1-F10 |
890 | # 68-71 ALT F1-F10 |
891 | # 73-77 CTR LEFT,RIGHT,END,PgDn,HOME |
892 | # 78-83 ALT 1234567890-= |
893 | # 84 CTR PgUp |
894 | |
895 | This is all trial and error I did a long time ago, I hope I'm reading the |
896 | file that worked. |
897 | |
898 | =head2 How can I tell if there's a character waiting on a filehandle? |
899 | |
5a964f20 |
900 | The very first thing you should do is look into getting the Term::ReadKey |
901 | extension from CPAN. It now even has limited support for closed, proprietary |
902 | (read: not open systems, not POSIX, not Unix, etc) systems. |
903 | |
904 | You should also check out the Frequently Asked Questions list in |
68dc0745 |
905 | comp.unix.* for things like this: the answer is essentially the same. |
906 | It's very system dependent. Here's one solution that works on BSD |
907 | systems: |
908 | |
909 | sub key_ready { |
910 | my($rin, $nfd); |
911 | vec($rin, fileno(STDIN), 1) = 1; |
912 | return $nfd = select($rin,undef,undef,0); |
913 | } |
914 | |
5a964f20 |
915 | If you want to find out how many characters are waiting, |
916 | there's also the FIONREAD ioctl call to be looked at. |
68dc0745 |
917 | |
5a964f20 |
918 | The I<h2ph> tool that comes with Perl tries to convert C include |
919 | files to Perl code, which can be C<require>d. FIONREAD ends |
920 | up defined as a function in the I<sys/ioctl.ph> file: |
68dc0745 |
921 | |
5a964f20 |
922 | require 'sys/ioctl.ph'; |
68dc0745 |
923 | |
5a964f20 |
924 | $size = pack("L", 0); |
925 | ioctl(FH, FIONREAD(), $size) or die "Couldn't call ioctl: $!\n"; |
926 | $size = unpack("L", $size); |
68dc0745 |
927 | |
5a964f20 |
928 | If I<h2ph> wasn't installed or doesn't work for you, you can |
929 | I<grep> the include files by hand: |
68dc0745 |
930 | |
5a964f20 |
931 | % grep FIONREAD /usr/include/*/* |
932 | /usr/include/asm/ioctls.h:#define FIONREAD 0x541B |
68dc0745 |
933 | |
5a964f20 |
934 | Or write a small C program using the editor of champions: |
68dc0745 |
935 | |
5a964f20 |
936 | % cat > fionread.c |
937 | #include <sys/ioctl.h> |
938 | main() { |
939 | printf("%#08x\n", FIONREAD); |
940 | } |
941 | ^D |
942 | % cc -o fionread fionread |
943 | % ./fionread |
944 | 0x4004667f |
945 | |
946 | And then hard-code it, leaving porting as an exercise to your successor. |
947 | |
948 | $FIONREAD = 0x4004667f; # XXX: opsys dependent |
949 | |
950 | $size = pack("L", 0); |
951 | ioctl(FH, $FIONREAD, $size) or die "Couldn't call ioctl: $!\n"; |
952 | $size = unpack("L", $size); |
953 | |
954 | FIONREAD requires a filehandle connected to a stream, meaning sockets, |
955 | pipes, and tty devices work, but I<not> files. |
68dc0745 |
956 | |
957 | =head2 How do I do a C<tail -f> in perl? |
958 | |
959 | First try |
960 | |
961 | seek(GWFILE, 0, 1); |
962 | |
963 | The statement C<seek(GWFILE, 0, 1)> doesn't change the current position, |
964 | but it does clear the end-of-file condition on the handle, so that the |
965 | next <GWFILE> makes Perl try again to read something. |
966 | |
967 | If that doesn't work (it relies on features of your stdio implementation), |
968 | then you need something more like this: |
969 | |
970 | for (;;) { |
971 | for ($curpos = tell(GWFILE); <GWFILE>; $curpos = tell(GWFILE)) { |
972 | # search for some stuff and put it into files |
973 | } |
974 | # sleep for a while |
975 | seek(GWFILE, $curpos, 0); # seek to where we had been |
976 | } |
977 | |
978 | If this still doesn't work, look into the POSIX module. POSIX defines |
979 | the clearerr() method, which can remove the end of file condition on a |
980 | filehandle. The method: read until end of file, clearerr(), read some |
981 | more. Lather, rinse, repeat. |
982 | |
983 | =head2 How do I dup() a filehandle in Perl? |
984 | |
985 | If you check L<perlfunc/open>, you'll see that several of the ways |
986 | to call open() should do the trick. For example: |
987 | |
988 | open(LOG, ">>/tmp/logfile"); |
989 | open(STDERR, ">&LOG"); |
990 | |
991 | Or even with a literal numeric descriptor: |
992 | |
993 | $fd = $ENV{MHCONTEXTFD}; |
994 | open(MHCONTEXT, "<&=$fd"); # like fdopen(3S) |
995 | |
5a964f20 |
996 | Note that "E<lt>&STDIN" makes a copy, but "E<lt>&=STDIN" make |
997 | an alias. That means if you close an aliased handle, all |
998 | aliases become inaccessible. This is not true with |
999 | a copied one. |
1000 | |
1001 | Error checking, as always, has been left as an exercise for the reader. |
68dc0745 |
1002 | |
1003 | =head2 How do I close a file descriptor by number? |
1004 | |
1005 | This should rarely be necessary, as the Perl close() function is to be |
1006 | used for things that Perl opened itself, even if it was a dup of a |
1007 | numeric descriptor, as with MHCONTEXT above. But if you really have |
1008 | to, you may be able to do this: |
1009 | |
1010 | require 'sys/syscall.ph'; |
1011 | $rc = syscall(&SYS_close, $fd + 0); # must force numeric |
1012 | die "can't sysclose $fd: $!" unless $rc == -1; |
1013 | |
46fc3d4c |
1014 | =head2 Why can't I use "C:\temp\foo" in DOS paths? What doesn't `C:\temp\foo.exe` work? |
68dc0745 |
1015 | |
1016 | Whoops! You just put a tab and a formfeed into that filename! |
1017 | Remember that within double quoted strings ("like\this"), the |
1018 | backslash is an escape character. The full list of these is in |
1019 | L<perlop/Quote and Quote-like Operators>. Unsurprisingly, you don't |
1020 | have a file called "c:(tab)emp(formfeed)oo" or |
46fc3d4c |
1021 | "c:(tab)emp(formfeed)oo.exe" on your DOS filesystem. |
68dc0745 |
1022 | |
1023 | Either single-quote your strings, or (preferably) use forward slashes. |
46fc3d4c |
1024 | Since all DOS and Windows versions since something like MS-DOS 2.0 or so |
68dc0745 |
1025 | have treated C</> and C<\> the same in a path, you might as well use the |
1026 | one that doesn't clash with Perl -- or the POSIX shell, ANSI C and C++, |
1027 | awk, Tcl, Java, or Python, just to mention a few. |
1028 | |
1029 | =head2 Why doesn't glob("*.*") get all the files? |
1030 | |
1031 | Because even on non-Unix ports, Perl's glob function follows standard |
46fc3d4c |
1032 | Unix globbing semantics. You'll need C<glob("*")> to get all (non-hidden) |
5a964f20 |
1033 | files. This makes glob() portable. |
68dc0745 |
1034 | |
1035 | =head2 Why does Perl let me delete read-only files? Why does C<-i> clobber protected files? Isn't this a bug in Perl? |
1036 | |
1037 | This is elaborately and painstakingly described in the "Far More Than |
7b8d334a |
1038 | You Ever Wanted To Know" in |
68dc0745 |
1039 | http://www.perl.com/CPAN/doc/FMTEYEWTK/file-dir-perms . |
1040 | |
1041 | The executive summary: learn how your filesystem works. The |
1042 | permissions on a file say what can happen to the data in that file. |
1043 | The permissions on a directory say what can happen to the list of |
1044 | files in that directory. If you delete a file, you're removing its |
1045 | name from the directory (so the operation depends on the permissions |
1046 | of the directory, not of the file). If you try to write to the file, |
1047 | the permissions of the file govern whether you're allowed to. |
1048 | |
1049 | =head2 How do I select a random line from a file? |
1050 | |
1051 | Here's an algorithm from the Camel Book: |
1052 | |
1053 | srand; |
1054 | rand($.) < 1 && ($line = $_) while <>; |
1055 | |
1056 | This has a significant advantage in space over reading the whole |
5a964f20 |
1057 | file in. A simple proof by induction is available upon |
1058 | request if you doubt its correctness. |
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1059 | |
1060 | =head1 AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT |
1061 | |
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1062 | Copyright (c) 1997, 1998 Tom Christiansen and Nathan Torkington. |
1063 | All rights reserved. |
1064 | |
c8db1d39 |
1065 | When included as an integrated part of the Standard Distribution |
1066 | of Perl or of its documentation (printed or otherwise), this works is |
1067 | covered under Perl's Artistic Licence. For separate distributions of |
1068 | all or part of this FAQ outside of that, see L<perlfaq>. |
1069 | |
1070 | Irrespective of its distribution, all code examples here are public |
1071 | domain. You are permitted and encouraged to use this code and any |
1072 | derivatives thereof in your own programs for fun or for profit as you |
1073 | see fit. A simple comment in the code giving credit to the FAQ would |
1074 | be courteous but is not required. |