diff options
author | Iain Truskett <spoon@cpan.org> | 2003-11-20 11:41:33 +1100 |
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committer | Rafael Garcia-Suarez <rgarciasuarez@gmail.com> | 2003-11-19 22:39:51 +0000 |
commit | 3d897973af512747f1e151f6cf3b7bc2230d4067 (patch) | |
tree | 63d1d4e9233659bc6b1e0e8060b574bfdeebe01c /lib/PerlIO.pm | |
parent | 113738bb099c38d994cf82554560490df0f6d525 (diff) | |
download | perl-3d897973af512747f1e151f6cf3b7bc2230d4067.tar.gz |
[docpatch] PerlIO layers in perlrun.pod and PerlIO.pm
Message-ID: <20031119134132.GG21314@gytha.anu.edu.au>
p4raw-id: //depot/perl@21754
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/PerlIO.pm')
-rw-r--r-- | lib/PerlIO.pm | 85 |
1 files changed, 66 insertions, 19 deletions
diff --git a/lib/PerlIO.pm b/lib/PerlIO.pm index c7b9f1312b..3b277d9376 100644 --- a/lib/PerlIO.pm +++ b/lib/PerlIO.pm @@ -61,30 +61,65 @@ The following layers are currently defined: =over 4 -=item unix +=item :unix -Low level layer which calls C<read>, C<write> and C<lseek> etc. +Lowest level layer which provides basic PerlIO operations in terms of +UNIX/POSIX numeric file descriptor calls +(open(), read(), write(), lseek(), close()). -=item stdio +=item :stdio Layer which calls C<fread>, C<fwrite> and C<fseek>/C<ftell> etc. Note that as this is "real" stdio it will ignore any layers beneath it and got straight to the operating system via the C library as usual. -=item perlio +=item :perlio -This is a re-implementation of "stdio-like" buffering written as a -PerlIO "layer". As such it will call whatever layer is below it for -its operations. +A from scratch implementation of buffering for PerlIO. Provides fast +access to the buffer for C<sv_gets> which implements perl's readline/E<lt>E<gt> +and in general attempts to minimize data copying. -=item crlf +C<:perlio> will insert a C<:unix> layer below itself to do low level IO. -A layer which does CRLF to "\n" translation distinguishing "text" and -"binary" files in the manner of MS-DOS and similar operating systems. -(It currently does I<not> mimic MS-DOS as far as treating of Control-Z -as being an end-of-file marker.) +=item :crlf -=item utf8 +A layer that implements DOS/Windows like CRLF line endings. On read +converts pairs of CR,LF to a single "\n" newline character. On write +converts each "\n" to a CR,LF pair. Note that this layer likes to be +one of its kind: it silently ignores attempts to be pushed into the +layer stack more than once. + +It currently does I<not> mimic MS-DOS as far as treating of Control-Z +as being an end-of-file marker. + +(Gory details follow) To be more exact what happens is this: after +pushing itself to the stack, the C<:crlf> layer checks all the layers +below itself to find the first layer that is capable of being a CRLF +layer but is not yet enabled to be a CRLF layer. If it finds such a +layer, it enables the CRLFness of that other deeper layer, and then +pops itself off the stack. If not, fine, use the one we just pushed. + +The end result is that a C<:crlf> means "please enable the first CRLF +layer you can find, and if you can't find one, here would be a good +spot to place a new one." + +Based on the C<:perlio> layer. + +=item :mmap + +A layer which implements "reading" of files by using C<mmap()> to +make (whole) file appear in the process's address space, and then +using that as PerlIO's "buffer". This I<may> be faster in certain +circumstances for large files, and may result in less physical memory +use when multiple processes are reading the same file. + +Files which are not C<mmap()>-able revert to behaving like the C<:perlio> +layer. Writes also behave like C<:perlio> layer as C<mmap()> for write +needs extra house-keeping (to extend the file) which negates any advantage. + +The C<:mmap> layer will not exist if platform does not support C<mmap()>. + +=item :utf8 Declares that the stream accepts perl's internal encoding of characters. (Which really is UTF-8 on ASCII machines, but is @@ -104,7 +139,7 @@ and then read it back in. $in = <F>; close(F); -=item bytes +=item :bytes This is the inverse of C<:utf8> layer. It turns off the flag on the layer below so that data read from it is considered to @@ -112,14 +147,20 @@ be "octets" i.e. characters in range 0..255 only. Likewise on output perl will warn if a "wide" character is written to a such a stream. -=item raw +=item :raw The C<:raw> layer is I<defined> as being identical to calling C<binmode($fh)> - the stream is made suitable for passing binary data i.e. each byte is passed as-is. The stream will still be -buffered. Unlike in the earlier versions of Perl C<:raw> is I<not> -just the inverse of C<:crlf> - other layers which would affect the -binary nature of the stream are also removed or disabled. +buffered. + +In Perl 5.6 and some books the C<:raw> layer (previously sometimes also +referred to as a "discipline") is documented as the inverse of the +C<:crlf> layer. That is no longer the case - other layers which would +alter binary nature of the stream are also disabled. If you want UNIX +line endings on a platform that normally does CRLF translation, but still +want UTF-8 or encoding defaults the appropriate thing to do is to add +C<:perlio> to PERLIO environment variable. The implementation of C<:raw> is as a pseudo-layer which when "pushed" pops itself and then any layers which do not declare themselves as suitable @@ -135,7 +176,7 @@ a known base on which to build e.g. will construct a "binary" stream, but then enable UTF-8 translation. -=item pop +=item :pop A pseudo layer that removes the top-most layer. Gives perl code a way to manipulate the layer stack. Should be considered @@ -151,6 +192,12 @@ An example of a possible use might be: A more elegant (and safer) interface is needed. +=item :win32 + +On Win32 platforms this I<experimental> layer uses native "handle" IO +rather than unix-like numeric file descriptor layer. Known to be +buggy as of perl 5.8.2. + =back =head2 Custom Layers |