=over 4
-=item size
+=item fsize
Size_t fsize;
-Size of the function table. This is compared against the value PerlIO code "knows"
-as a compatibility check. Future versions I<may> be able to tolerate layers
-compiled against an old version of the headers.
+Size of the function table. This is compared against the value PerlIO
+code "knows" as a compatibility check. Future versions I<may> be able
+to tolerate layers compiled against an old version of the headers.
=item name
sizeof(PerlIOAPR)
-If this field is zero then C<PerlIO_pushed> does not malloc anything and assumes
-layer's Pushed function will do any required layer stack manipulation - used
-to avoid malloc/free overhead for dummy layers.
+If this field is zero then C<PerlIO_pushed> does not malloc anything
+and assumes layer's Pushed function will do any required layer stack
+manipulation - used to avoid malloc/free overhead for dummy layers.
If the field is non-zero it must be at least the size of C<PerlIOl>,
C<PerlIO_pushed> will allocate memory for the layer's data structures
and link new layer onto the stream's stack. (If the layer's Pushed
C<sysopen> and that I<imode> and I<perm> should be passed to
C<PerlLIO_open3>; C<'r'> means B<r>ead, C<'w'> means B<w>rite and
C<'a'> means B<a>ppend. The C<'+'> suffix means that both reading and
-writing/appending are permitted. The C<'b'> suffix means file should
-be binary, and C<'t'> means it is text. (Binary/Text should be ignored
-by almost all layers and binary IO done, with PerlIO. The C<:crlf>
-layer should be pushed to handle the distinction.)
+writing/appending are permitted. The C<'b'> suffix means file should
+be binary, and C<'t'> means it is text. (Almost all layers should do
+the IO in binary mode, and ignore the b/t bits. The C<:crlf> layer
+should be pushed to handle the distinction.)
If I<old> is not C<NULL> then this is a C<PerlIO_reopen>. Perl itself
does not use this (yet?) and semantics are a little vague.
C<PerlIOBase_fileno()> (which just asks next layer down) will suffice
for this.
-Returns -1 on error, which is considered to include the case where the layer cannot
-provide such a file descriptor.
+Returns -1 on error, which is considered to include the case where the
+layer cannot provide such a file descriptor.
=item Dup
XXX: Needs more docs.
-Used as part of the "clone" process when a thread is spawned (in which case
-param will be non-NULL) and when a stream is being duplicated via '&' in the C<open>.
+Used as part of the "clone" process when a thread is spawned (in which
+case param will be non-NULL) and when a stream is being duplicated via
+'&' in the C<open>.
Similar to C<Open>, returns PerlIO* on success, C<NULL> on failure.
find it. It is an example of a layer which takes an argument as it is
called thus:
- open($fh,"<:encoding(iso-8859-7)",$pathname)
+ open( $fh, "<:encoding(iso-8859-7)", $pathname );
-=item ":Scalar"
+=item ":scalar"
-Provides support for
+Provides support for reading data from and writing data to a scalar.
- open($fh,"...",\$scalar)
+ open( $fh, "+<:scalar", \$scalar );
When a handle is so opened, then reads get bytes from the string value
of I<$scalar>, and writes change the value. In both cases the position
in I<$scalar> starts as zero but can be altered via C<seek>, and
determined via C<tell>.
-=item ":Via"
+Please note that this layer is implied when calling open() thus:
+
+ open( $fh, "+<", \$scalar );
+
+=item ":via"
Provided to allow layers to be implemented as Perl code. For instance:
- use MIME::QuotedPrint;
- open(my $fh, ">Via(MIME::QuotedPrint)", "qp");
+ use PerlIO::via::StripHTML;
+ open( my $fh, "<:via(StripHTML)", "index.html" );
-See L<PerlIO::Via> for details.
+See L<PerlIO::via> for details.
=back
=back
=cut
-
-
-