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1 =head1 NAME 2 3 perlapio - perl's IO abstraction interface. 4 5 =head1 SYNOPSIS 6 7 #define PERLIO_NOT_STDIO 0 /* For co-existence with stdio only */ 8 #include <perlio.h> /* Usually via #include <perl.h> */ 9 10 PerlIO *PerlIO_stdin(void); 11 PerlIO *PerlIO_stdout(void); 12 PerlIO *PerlIO_stderr(void); 13 14 PerlIO *PerlIO_open(const char *path,const char *mode); 15 PerlIO *PerlIO_fdopen(int fd, const char *mode); 16 PerlIO *PerlIO_reopen(const char *path, const char *mode, PerlIO *old); /* deprecated */ 17 int PerlIO_close(PerlIO *f); 18 19 int PerlIO_stdoutf(const char *fmt,...) 20 int PerlIO_puts(PerlIO *f,const char *string); 21 int PerlIO_putc(PerlIO *f,int ch); 22 int PerlIO_write(PerlIO *f,const void *buf,size_t numbytes); 23 int PerlIO_printf(PerlIO *f, const char *fmt,...); 24 int PerlIO_vprintf(PerlIO *f, const char *fmt, va_list args); 25 int PerlIO_flush(PerlIO *f); 26 27 int PerlIO_eof(PerlIO *f); 28 int PerlIO_error(PerlIO *f); 29 void PerlIO_clearerr(PerlIO *f); 30 31 int PerlIO_getc(PerlIO *d); 32 int PerlIO_ungetc(PerlIO *f,int ch); 33 int PerlIO_read(PerlIO *f, void *buf, size_t numbytes); 34 35 int PerlIO_fileno(PerlIO *f); 36 37 void PerlIO_setlinebuf(PerlIO *f); 38 39 Off_t PerlIO_tell(PerlIO *f); 40 int PerlIO_seek(PerlIO *f, Off_t offset, int whence); 41 void PerlIO_rewind(PerlIO *f); 42 43 int PerlIO_getpos(PerlIO *f, SV *save); /* prototype changed */ 44 int PerlIO_setpos(PerlIO *f, SV *saved); /* prototype changed */ 45 46 int PerlIO_fast_gets(PerlIO *f); 47 int PerlIO_has_cntptr(PerlIO *f); 48 int PerlIO_get_cnt(PerlIO *f); 49 char *PerlIO_get_ptr(PerlIO *f); 50 void PerlIO_set_ptrcnt(PerlIO *f, char *ptr, int count); 51 52 int PerlIO_canset_cnt(PerlIO *f); /* deprecated */ 53 void PerlIO_set_cnt(PerlIO *f, int count); /* deprecated */ 54 55 int PerlIO_has_base(PerlIO *f); 56 char *PerlIO_get_base(PerlIO *f); 57 int PerlIO_get_bufsiz(PerlIO *f); 58 59 PerlIO *PerlIO_importFILE(FILE *stdio, const char *mode); 60 FILE *PerlIO_exportFILE(PerlIO *f, int flags); 61 FILE *PerlIO_findFILE(PerlIO *f); 62 void PerlIO_releaseFILE(PerlIO *f,FILE *stdio); 63 64 int PerlIO_apply_layers(PerlIO *f, const char *mode, const char *layers); 65 int PerlIO_binmode(PerlIO *f, int ptype, int imode, const char *layers); 66 void PerlIO_debug(const char *fmt,...) 67 68 =head1 DESCRIPTION 69 70 Perl's source code, and extensions that want maximum portability, 71 should use the above functions instead of those defined in ANSI C's 72 I<stdio.h>. The perl headers (in particular "perlio.h") will 73 C<#define> them to the I/O mechanism selected at Configure time. 74 75 The functions are modeled on those in I<stdio.h>, but parameter order 76 has been "tidied up a little". 77 78 C<PerlIO *> takes the place of FILE *. Like FILE * it should be 79 treated as opaque (it is probably safe to assume it is a pointer to 80 something). 81 82 There are currently three implementations: 83 84 =over 4 85 86 =item 1. USE_STDIO 87 88 All above are #define'd to stdio functions or are trivial wrapper 89 functions which call stdio. In this case I<only> PerlIO * is a FILE *. 90 This has been the default implementation since the abstraction was 91 introduced in perl5.003_02. 92 93 =item 2. USE_SFIO 94 95 A "legacy" implementation in terms of the "sfio" library. Used for 96 some specialist applications on Unix machines ("sfio" is not widely 97 ported away from Unix). Most of above are #define'd to the sfio 98 functions. PerlIO * is in this case Sfio_t *. 99 100 =item 3. USE_PERLIO 101 102 Introduced just after perl5.7.0, this is a re-implementation of the 103 above abstraction which allows perl more control over how IO is done 104 as it decouples IO from the way the operating system and C library 105 choose to do things. For USE_PERLIO PerlIO * has an extra layer of 106 indirection - it is a pointer-to-a-pointer. This allows the PerlIO * 107 to remain with a known value while swapping the implementation around 108 underneath I<at run time>. In this case all the above are true (but 109 very simple) functions which call the underlying implementation. 110 111 This is the only implementation for which C<PerlIO_apply_layers()> 112 does anything "interesting". 113 114 The USE_PERLIO implementation is described in L<perliol>. 115 116 =back 117 118 Because "perlio.h" is a thin layer (for efficiency) the semantics of 119 these functions are somewhat dependent on the underlying implementation. 120 Where these variations are understood they are noted below. 121 122 Unless otherwise noted, functions return 0 on success, or a negative 123 value (usually C<EOF> which is usually -1) and set C<errno> on error. 124 125 =over 4 126 127 =item B<PerlIO_stdin()>, B<PerlIO_stdout()>, B<PerlIO_stderr()> 128 129 Use these rather than C<stdin>, C<stdout>, C<stderr>. They are written 130 to look like "function calls" rather than variables because this makes 131 it easier to I<make them> function calls if platform cannot export data 132 to loaded modules, or if (say) different "threads" might have different 133 values. 134 135 =item B<PerlIO_open(path, mode)>, B<PerlIO_fdopen(fd,mode)> 136 137 These correspond to fopen()/fdopen() and the arguments are the same. 138 Return C<NULL> and set C<errno> if there is an error. There may be an 139 implementation limit on the number of open handles, which may be lower 140 than the limit on the number of open files - C<errno> may not be set 141 when C<NULL> is returned if this limit is exceeded. 142 143 =item B<PerlIO_reopen(path,mode,f)> 144 145 While this currently exists in all three implementations perl itself 146 does not use it. I<As perl does not use it, it is not well tested.> 147 148 Perl prefers to C<dup> the new low-level descriptor to the descriptor 149 used by the existing PerlIO. This may become the behaviour of this 150 function in the future. 151 152 =item B<PerlIO_printf(f,fmt,...)>, B<PerlIO_vprintf(f,fmt,a)> 153 154 These are fprintf()/vfprintf() equivalents. 155 156 =item B<PerlIO_stdoutf(fmt,...)> 157 158 This is printf() equivalent. printf is #defined to this function, 159 so it is (currently) legal to use C<printf(fmt,...)> in perl sources. 160 161 =item B<PerlIO_read(f,buf,count)>, B<PerlIO_write(f,buf,count)> 162 163 These correspond functionally to fread() and fwrite() but the 164 arguments and return values are different. The PerlIO_read() and 165 PerlIO_write() signatures have been modeled on the more sane low level 166 read() and write() functions instead: The "file" argument is passed 167 first, there is only one "count", and the return value can distinguish 168 between error and C<EOF>. 169 170 Returns a byte count if successful (which may be zero or 171 positive), returns negative value and sets C<errno> on error. 172 Depending on implementation C<errno> may be C<EINTR> if operation was 173 interrupted by a signal. 174 175 =item B<PerlIO_close(f)> 176 177 Depending on implementation C<errno> may be C<EINTR> if operation was 178 interrupted by a signal. 179 180 =item B<PerlIO_puts(f,s)>, B<PerlIO_putc(f,c)> 181 182 These correspond to fputs() and fputc(). 183 Note that arguments have been revised to have "file" first. 184 185 =item B<PerlIO_ungetc(f,c)> 186 187 This corresponds to ungetc(). Note that arguments have been revised 188 to have "file" first. Arranges that next read operation will return 189 the byte B<c>. Despite the implied "character" in the name only 190 values in the range 0..0xFF are defined. Returns the byte B<c> on 191 success or -1 (C<EOF>) on error. The number of bytes that can be 192 "pushed back" may vary, only 1 character is certain, and then only if 193 it is the last character that was read from the handle. 194 195 =item B<PerlIO_getc(f)> 196 197 This corresponds to getc(). 198 Despite the c in the name only byte range 0..0xFF is supported. 199 Returns the character read or -1 (C<EOF>) on error. 200 201 =item B<PerlIO_eof(f)> 202 203 This corresponds to feof(). Returns a true/false indication of 204 whether the handle is at end of file. For terminal devices this may 205 or may not be "sticky" depending on the implementation. The flag is 206 cleared by PerlIO_seek(), or PerlIO_rewind(). 207 208 =item B<PerlIO_error(f)> 209 210 This corresponds to ferror(). Returns a true/false indication of 211 whether there has been an IO error on the handle. 212 213 =item B<PerlIO_fileno(f)> 214 215 This corresponds to fileno(), note that on some platforms, the meaning 216 of "fileno" may not match Unix. Returns -1 if the handle has no open 217 descriptor associated with it. 218 219 =item B<PerlIO_clearerr(f)> 220 221 This corresponds to clearerr(), i.e., clears 'error' and (usually) 222 'eof' flags for the "stream". Does not return a value. 223 224 =item B<PerlIO_flush(f)> 225 226 This corresponds to fflush(). Sends any buffered write data to the 227 underlying file. If called with C<NULL> this may flush all open 228 streams (or core dump with some USE_STDIO implementations). Calling 229 on a handle open for read only, or on which last operation was a read 230 of some kind may lead to undefined behaviour on some USE_STDIO 231 implementations. The USE_PERLIO (layers) implementation tries to 232 behave better: it flushes all open streams when passed C<NULL>, and 233 attempts to retain data on read streams either in the buffer or by 234 seeking the handle to the current logical position. 235 236 =item B<PerlIO_seek(f,offset,whence)> 237 238 This corresponds to fseek(). Sends buffered write data to the 239 underlying file, or discards any buffered read data, then positions 240 the file descriptor as specified by B<offset> and B<whence> (sic). 241 This is the correct thing to do when switching between read and write 242 on the same handle (see issues with PerlIO_flush() above). Offset is 243 of type C<Off_t> which is a perl Configure value which may not be same 244 as stdio's C<off_t>. 245 246 =item B<PerlIO_tell(f)> 247 248 This corresponds to ftell(). Returns the current file position, or 249 (Off_t) -1 on error. May just return value system "knows" without 250 making a system call or checking the underlying file descriptor (so 251 use on shared file descriptors is not safe without a 252 PerlIO_seek()). Return value is of type C<Off_t> which is a perl 253 Configure value which may not be same as stdio's C<off_t>. 254 255 =item B<PerlIO_getpos(f,p)>, B<PerlIO_setpos(f,p)> 256 257 These correspond (loosely) to fgetpos() and fsetpos(). Rather than 258 stdio's Fpos_t they expect a "Perl Scalar Value" to be passed. What is 259 stored there should be considered opaque. The layout of the data may 260 vary from handle to handle. When not using stdio or if platform does 261 not have the stdio calls then they are implemented in terms of 262 PerlIO_tell() and PerlIO_seek(). 263 264 =item B<PerlIO_rewind(f)> 265 266 This corresponds to rewind(). It is usually defined as being 267 268 PerlIO_seek(f,(Off_t)0L, SEEK_SET); 269 PerlIO_clearerr(f); 270 271 =item B<PerlIO_tmpfile()> 272 273 This corresponds to tmpfile(), i.e., returns an anonymous PerlIO or 274 NULL on error. The system will attempt to automatically delete the 275 file when closed. On Unix the file is usually C<unlink>-ed just after 276 it is created so it does not matter how it gets closed. On other 277 systems the file may only be deleted if closed via PerlIO_close() 278 and/or the program exits via C<exit>. Depending on the implementation 279 there may be "race conditions" which allow other processes access to 280 the file, though in general it will be safer in this regard than 281 ad. hoc. schemes. 282 283 =item B<PerlIO_setlinebuf(f)> 284 285 This corresponds to setlinebuf(). Does not return a value. What 286 constitutes a "line" is implementation dependent but usually means 287 that writing "\n" flushes the buffer. What happens with things like 288 "this\nthat" is uncertain. (Perl core uses it I<only> when "dumping"; 289 it has nothing to do with $| auto-flush.) 290 291 =back 292 293 =head2 Co-existence with stdio 294 295 There is outline support for co-existence of PerlIO with stdio. 296 Obviously if PerlIO is implemented in terms of stdio there is no 297 problem. However in other cases then mechanisms must exist to create a 298 FILE * which can be passed to library code which is going to use stdio 299 calls. 300 301 The first step is to add this line: 302 303 #define PERLIO_NOT_STDIO 0 304 305 I<before> including any perl header files. (This will probably become 306 the default at some point). That prevents "perlio.h" from attempting 307 to #define stdio functions onto PerlIO functions. 308 309 XS code is probably better using "typemap" if it expects FILE * 310 arguments. The standard typemap will be adjusted to comprehend any 311 changes in this area. 312 313 =over 4 314 315 =item B<PerlIO_importFILE(f,mode)> 316 317 Used to get a PerlIO * from a FILE *. 318 319 The mode argument should be a string as would be passed to 320 fopen/PerlIO_open. If it is NULL then - for legacy support - the code 321 will (depending upon the platform and the implementation) either 322 attempt to empirically determine the mode in which I<f> is open, or 323 use "r+" to indicate a read/write stream. 324 325 Once called the FILE * should I<ONLY> be closed by calling 326 C<PerlIO_close()> on the returned PerlIO *. 327 328 The PerlIO is set to textmode. Use PerlIO_binmode if this is 329 not the desired mode. 330 331 This is B<not> the reverse of PerlIO_exportFILE(). 332 333 =item B<PerlIO_exportFILE(f,mode)> 334 335 Given a PerlIO * create a 'native' FILE * suitable for passing to code 336 expecting to be compiled and linked with ANSI C I<stdio.h>. The mode 337 argument should be a string as would be passed to fopen/PerlIO_open. 338 If it is NULL then - for legacy support - the FILE * is opened in same 339 mode as the PerlIO *. 340 341 The fact that such a FILE * has been 'exported' is recorded, (normally 342 by pushing a new :stdio "layer" onto the PerlIO *), which may affect 343 future PerlIO operations on the original PerlIO *. You should not 344 call C<fclose()> on the file unless you call C<PerlIO_releaseFILE()> 345 to disassociate it from the PerlIO *. (Do not use PerlIO_importFILE() 346 for doing the disassociation.) 347 348 Calling this function repeatedly will create a FILE * on each call 349 (and will push an :stdio layer each time as well). 350 351 =item B<PerlIO_releaseFILE(p,f)> 352 353 Calling PerlIO_releaseFILE informs PerlIO that all use of FILE * is 354 complete. It is removed from the list of 'exported' FILE *s, and the 355 associated PerlIO * should revert to its original behaviour. 356 357 Use this to disassociate a file from a PerlIO * that was associated 358 using PerlIO_exportFILE(). 359 360 =item B<PerlIO_findFILE(f)> 361 362 Returns a native FILE * used by a stdio layer. If there is none, it 363 will create one with PerlIO_exportFILE. In either case the FILE * 364 should be considered as belonging to PerlIO subsystem and should 365 only be closed by calling C<PerlIO_close()>. 366 367 368 =back 369 370 =head2 "Fast gets" Functions 371 372 In addition to standard-like API defined so far above there is an 373 "implementation" interface which allows perl to get at internals of 374 PerlIO. The following calls correspond to the various FILE_xxx macros 375 determined by Configure - or their equivalent in other 376 implementations. This section is really of interest to only those 377 concerned with detailed perl-core behaviour, implementing a PerlIO 378 mapping or writing code which can make use of the "read ahead" that 379 has been done by the IO system in the same way perl does. Note that 380 any code that uses these interfaces must be prepared to do things the 381 traditional way if a handle does not support them. 382 383 =over 4 384 385 =item B<PerlIO_fast_gets(f)> 386 387 Returns true if implementation has all the interfaces required to 388 allow perl's C<sv_gets> to "bypass" normal IO mechanism. This can 389 vary from handle to handle. 390 391 PerlIO_fast_gets(f) = PerlIO_has_cntptr(f) && \ 392 PerlIO_canset_cnt(f) && \ 393 `Can set pointer into buffer' 394 395 396 =item B<PerlIO_has_cntptr(f)> 397 398 Implementation can return pointer to current position in the "buffer" 399 and a count of bytes available in the buffer. Do not use this - use 400 PerlIO_fast_gets. 401 402 =item B<PerlIO_get_cnt(f)> 403 404 Return count of readable bytes in the buffer. Zero or negative return 405 means no more bytes available. 406 407 =item B<PerlIO_get_ptr(f)> 408 409 Return pointer to next readable byte in buffer, accessing via the 410 pointer (dereferencing) is only safe if PerlIO_get_cnt() has returned 411 a positive value. Only positive offsets up to value returned by 412 PerlIO_get_cnt() are allowed. 413 414 =item B<PerlIO_set_ptrcnt(f,p,c)> 415 416 Set pointer into buffer, and a count of bytes still in the 417 buffer. Should be used only to set pointer to within range implied by 418 previous calls to C<PerlIO_get_ptr> and C<PerlIO_get_cnt>. The two 419 values I<must> be consistent with each other (implementation may only 420 use one or the other or may require both). 421 422 =item B<PerlIO_canset_cnt(f)> 423 424 Implementation can adjust its idea of number of bytes in the buffer. 425 Do not use this - use PerlIO_fast_gets. 426 427 =item B<PerlIO_set_cnt(f,c)> 428 429 Obscure - set count of bytes in the buffer. Deprecated. Only usable 430 if PerlIO_canset_cnt() returns true. Currently used in only doio.c to 431 force count less than -1 to -1. Perhaps should be PerlIO_set_empty or 432 similar. This call may actually do nothing if "count" is deduced from 433 pointer and a "limit". Do not use this - use PerlIO_set_ptrcnt(). 434 435 =item B<PerlIO_has_base(f)> 436 437 Returns true if implementation has a buffer, and can return pointer 438 to whole buffer and its size. Used by perl for B<-T> / B<-B> tests. 439 Other uses would be very obscure... 440 441 =item B<PerlIO_get_base(f)> 442 443 Return I<start> of buffer. Access only positive offsets in the buffer 444 up to the value returned by PerlIO_get_bufsiz(). 445 446 =item B<PerlIO_get_bufsiz(f)> 447 448 Return the I<total number of bytes> in the buffer, this is neither the 449 number that can be read, nor the amount of memory allocated to the 450 buffer. Rather it is what the operating system and/or implementation 451 happened to C<read()> (or whatever) last time IO was requested. 452 453 =back 454 455 =head2 Other Functions 456 457 =over 4 458 459 =item PerlIO_apply_layers(f,mode,layers) 460 461 The new interface to the USE_PERLIO implementation. The layers ":crlf" 462 and ":raw" are only ones allowed for other implementations and those 463 are silently ignored. (As of perl5.8 ":raw" is deprecated.) Use 464 PerlIO_binmode() below for the portable case. 465 466 =item PerlIO_binmode(f,ptype,imode,layers) 467 468 The hook used by perl's C<binmode> operator. 469 B<ptype> is perl's character for the kind of IO: 470 471 =over 8 472 473 =item 'E<lt>' read 474 475 =item 'E<gt>' write 476 477 =item '+' read/write 478 479 =back 480 481 B<imode> is C<O_BINARY> or C<O_TEXT>. 482 483 B<layers> is a string of layers to apply, only ":crlf" makes sense in 484 the non USE_PERLIO case. (As of perl5.8 ":raw" is deprecated in favour 485 of passing NULL.) 486 487 Portable cases are: 488 489 PerlIO_binmode(f,ptype,O_BINARY,Nullch); 490 and 491 PerlIO_binmode(f,ptype,O_TEXT,":crlf"); 492 493 On Unix these calls probably have no effect whatsoever. Elsewhere 494 they alter "\n" to CR,LF translation and possibly cause a special text 495 "end of file" indicator to be written or honoured on read. The effect 496 of making the call after doing any IO to the handle depends on the 497 implementation. (It may be ignored, affect any data which is already 498 buffered as well, or only apply to subsequent data.) 499 500 =item PerlIO_debug(fmt,...) 501 502 PerlIO_debug is a printf()-like function which can be used for 503 debugging. No return value. Its main use is inside PerlIO where using 504 real printf, warn() etc. would recursively call PerlIO and be a 505 problem. 506 507 PerlIO_debug writes to the file named by $ENV{'PERLIO_DEBUG'} typical 508 use might be 509 510 Bourne shells (sh, ksh, bash, zsh, ash, ...): 511 PERLIO_DEBUG=/dev/tty ./perl somescript some args 512 513 Csh/Tcsh: 514 setenv PERLIO_DEBUG /dev/tty 515 ./perl somescript some args 516 517 If you have the "env" utility: 518 env PERLIO_DEBUG=/dev/tty ./perl somescript some args 519 520 Win32: 521 set PERLIO_DEBUG=CON 522 perl somescript some args 523 524 If $ENV{'PERLIO_DEBUG'} is not set PerlIO_debug() is a no-op. 525 526 =back
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