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authorKevin Ryde <user42@zip.com.au>2013-12-16 11:44:11 +1100
committerTony Cook <tony@develop-help.com>2013-12-18 09:16:01 +1100
commit18f6a8aad3d1f7c5884271c98ec97236d527e08f (patch)
tree384e2f678fef55d866e39d038eeedc0c58fef2d8 /ext/SDBM_File
parent5ab2cf16cddbadb6290706352c9e867acbb0009b (diff)
downloadperl-18f6a8aad3d1f7c5884271c98ec97236d527e08f.tar.gz
[perl #114350] improved documentation
Diffstat (limited to 'ext/SDBM_File')
-rw-r--r--ext/SDBM_File/SDBM_File.pm75
1 files changed, 27 insertions, 48 deletions
diff --git a/ext/SDBM_File/SDBM_File.pm b/ext/SDBM_File/SDBM_File.pm
index ca181b79bd..dcb12bcde9 100644
--- a/ext/SDBM_File/SDBM_File.pm
+++ b/ext/SDBM_File/SDBM_File.pm
@@ -40,69 +40,48 @@ SDBM_File - Tied access to sdbm files
=head1 DESCRIPTION
C<SDBM_File> establishes a connection between a Perl hash variable and
-a file in SDBM_File format;. You can manipulate the data in the file
+a file in SDBM_File format. You can manipulate the data in the file
just as if it were in a Perl hash, but when your program exits, the
data will remain in the file, to be used the next time your program
runs.
-Use C<SDBM_File> with the Perl built-in C<tie> function to establish
-the connection between the variable and the file. The arguments to
-C<tie> should be:
-
-=over 4
-
-=item 1.
-
-The hash variable you want to tie.
-
-=item 2.
-
-The string C<"SDBM_File">. (Ths tells Perl to use the C<SDBM_File>
-package to perform the functions of the hash.)
-
-=item 3.
-
-The name of the file you want to tie to the hash. If the page file
-name is supplied, this becomes the directory file name.
+=head2 Tie
-=item 4.
-
-Flags. Use one of:
-
-=over 2
-
-=item C<O_RDONLY>
-
-Read-only access to the data in the file.
-
-=item C<O_WRONLY>
+Use C<SDBM_File> with the Perl built-in C<tie> function to establish
+the connection between the variable and the file.
-Write-only access to the data in the file.
+ tie %hash, 'SDBM_File', $basename, $modeflags, $perms;
-=item C<O_RDWR>
+ tie %hash, 'SDBM_File', $dirfilename, $modeflags, $perms, $pagfilename;
-Both read and write access.
+C<$basename> is the base filename for the database. The database is two
+files with ".dir" and ".pag" extensions appended to C<$basename>,
-=back
+ $basename.dir (or .sdbm_dir on VMS, per DIRFEXT constant)
+ $basename.pag
-If you want to create the file if it does not exist, add C<O_CREAT> to
-any of these, as in the example. If you omit C<O_CREAT> and the file
-does not already exist, the C<tie> call will fail.
+The two filenames can also be given separately in full as C<$dirfilename>
+and C<$pagfilename>. This suits for two files without ".dir" and ".pag"
+extensions, perhaps for example two files from L<File::Temp>.
-=item 5.
+C<$modeflags> can be the following constants from the C<Fcntl> module (in
+the style of the L<open(2)> system call),
-The default permissions to use if a new file is created. The actual
-permissions will be modified by the user's umask, so you should
-probably use 0666 here. (See L<perlfunc/umask>.)
+ O_RDONLY read-only access
+ O_WRONLY write-only access
+ O_RDWR read and write access
-=item 6.
+If you want to create the file if it does not already exist then bitwise-OR
+(C<|>) C<O_CREAT> too. If you omit C<O_CREAT> and the database does not
+already exist then the C<tie> call will fail.
-Optionally, the name of the data page file (normally F<<
-I<filename>.pag >>. If this is supplied, then the first filename is
-treated as the directory file (normally F<< I<filename>.dir >> based
-on the first filename parameter).
+ O_CREAT create database if doesn't already exist
-=back
+C<$perms> is the file permissions bits to use if new database files are
+created. This parameter is mandatory even when not creating a new database.
+The permissions will be reduced by the user's umask so the usual value here
+would be 0666, or if some very private data then 0600. (See
+L<perlfunc/umask>.)
=head1 EXPORTS