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1=head1 NAME
2
184e9718 3perlipc - Perl interprocess communication (signals, fifos, pipes, safe subprocesses, sockets, and semaphores)
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4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
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7The basic IPC facilities of Perl are built out of the good old Unix
8signals, named pipes, pipe opens, the Berkeley socket routines, and SysV
9IPC calls. Each is used in slightly different situations.
10
11=head1 Signals
12
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13Perl uses a simple signal handling model: the %SIG hash contains names
14or references of user-installed signal handlers. These handlers will
15be called with an argument which is the name of the signal that
16triggered it. A signal may be generated intentionally from a
17particular keyboard sequence like control-C or control-Z, sent to you
18from another process, or triggered automatically by the kernel when
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19special events transpire, like a child process exiting, your own process
20running out of stack space, or hitting a process file-size limit.
4633a7c4 21
a11adca0 22For example, to trap an interrupt signal, set up a handler like this:
4633a7c4 23
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24 our $shucks;
25
4633a7c4 26 sub catch_zap {
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27 my $signame = shift;
28 $shucks++;
29 die "Somebody sent me a SIG$signame";
54310121 30 }
82f82fdb 31 $SIG{INT} = __PACKAGE__ . "::catch_zap";
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32 $SIG{INT} = \&catch_zap; # best strategy
33
e6aa8b84 34Prior to Perl 5.8.0 it was necessary to do as little as you possibly
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35could in your handler; notice how all we do is set a global variable
36and then raise an exception. That's because on most systems,
37libraries are not re-entrant; particularly, memory allocation and I/O
38routines are not. That meant that doing nearly I<anything> in your
39handler could in theory trigger a memory fault and subsequent core
ec488bcf 40dump - see L</Deferred Signals (Safe Signals)> below.
a11adca0 41
4633a7c4 42The names of the signals are the ones listed out by C<kill -l> on your
de7ba517 43system, or you can retrieve them using the CPAN module L<IPC::Signal>.
4633a7c4 44
cf21866a 45You may also choose to assign the strings C<"IGNORE"> or C<"DEFAULT"> as
4633a7c4 46the handler, in which case Perl will try to discard the signal or do the
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47default thing.
48
19799a22 49On most Unix platforms, the C<CHLD> (sometimes also known as C<CLD>) signal
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50has special behavior with respect to a value of C<"IGNORE">.
51Setting C<$SIG{CHLD}> to C<"IGNORE"> on such a platform has the effect of
f648820c 52not creating zombie processes when the parent process fails to C<wait()>
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53on its child processes (i.e., child processes are automatically reaped).
54Calling C<wait()> with C<$SIG{CHLD}> set to C<"IGNORE"> usually returns
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55C<-1> on such platforms.
56
cf21866a 57Some signals can be neither trapped nor ignored, such as the KILL and STOP
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58(but not the TSTP) signals. Note that ignoring signals makes them disappear.
59If you only want them blocked temporarily without them getting lost you'll
60have to use POSIX' sigprocmask.
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61
62Sending a signal to a negative process ID means that you send the signal
cf21866a 63to the entire Unix process group. This code sends a hang-up signal to all
82f82fdb 64processes in the current process group, and also sets $SIG{HUP} to C<"IGNORE">
cf21866a 65so it doesn't kill itself:
4633a7c4 66
cf21866a 67 # block scope for local
4633a7c4 68 {
cf21866a 69 local $SIG{HUP} = "IGNORE";
322c2516 70 kill HUP => -$$;
cf21866a 71 # snazzy writing of: kill("HUP", -$$)
4633a7c4 72 }
a0d0e21e 73
4633a7c4 74Another interesting signal to send is signal number zero. This doesn't
1e9c1022 75actually affect a child process, but instead checks whether it's alive
de7ba517 76or has changed its UIDs.
a0d0e21e 77
4633a7c4 78 unless (kill 0 => $kid_pid) {
322c2516 79 warn "something wicked happened to $kid_pid";
54310121 80 }
a0d0e21e 81
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82Signal number zero may fail because you lack permission to send the
83signal when directed at a process whose real or saved UID is not
84identical to the real or effective UID of the sending process, even
85though the process is alive. You may be able to determine the cause of
86failure using C<$!> or C<%!>.
1e9c1022 87
cf21866a 88 unless (kill(0 => $pid) || $!{EPERM}) {
322c2516 89 warn "$pid looks dead";
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90 }
91
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92You might also want to employ anonymous functions for simple signal
93handlers:
a0d0e21e 94
4633a7c4 95 $SIG{INT} = sub { die "\nOutta here!\n" };
a0d0e21e 96
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97SIGCHLD handlers require some special care. If a second child dies
98while in the signal handler caused by the first death, we won't get
99another signal. So must loop here else we will leave the unreaped child
100as a zombie. And the next time two children die we get another zombie.
101And so on.
4633a7c4 102
6a3992aa 103 use POSIX ":sys_wait_h";
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104 $SIG{CHLD} = sub {
105 while ((my $child = waitpid(-1, WNOHANG)) > 0) {
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106 $Kid_Status{$child} = $?;
107 }
de7ba517 108 };
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109 # do something that forks...
110
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111Be careful: qx(), system(), and some modules for calling external commands
112do a fork(), then wait() for the result. Thus, your signal handler
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113will be called. Because wait() was already called by system() or qx(),
114the wait() in the signal handler will see no more zombies and will
115therefore block.
0a18a49b 116
cf21866a 117The best way to prevent this issue is to use waitpid(), as in the following
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118example:
119
120 use POSIX ":sys_wait_h"; # for nonblocking read
121
122 my %children;
123
124 $SIG{CHLD} = sub {
125 # don't change $! and $? outside handler
cf21866a 126 local ($!, $?);
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127 while ( (my $pid = waitpid(-1, WNOHANG)) > 0 ) {
128 delete $children{$pid};
129 cleanup_child($pid, $?);
130 }
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131 };
132
133 while (1) {
134 my $pid = fork();
cf21866a 135 die "cannot fork" unless defined $pid;
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136 if ($pid == 0) {
137 # ...
138 exit 0;
139 } else {
cf21866a 140 $children{$pid}=1;
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141 # ...
142 system($command);
143 # ...
144 }
145 }
146
147Signal handling is also used for timeouts in Unix. While safely
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148protected within an C<eval{}> block, you set a signal handler to trap
149alarm signals and then schedule to have one delivered to you in some
150number of seconds. Then try your blocking operation, clearing the alarm
151when it's done but not before you've exited your C<eval{}> block. If it
de7ba517 152goes off, you'll use die() to jump out of the block.
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153
154Here's an example:
155
cf21866a 156 my $ALARM_EXCEPTION = "alarm clock restart";
54310121 157 eval {
cf21866a 158 local $SIG{ALRM} = sub { die $ALARM_EXCEPTION };
54310121 159 alarm 10;
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160 flock(FH, 2) # blocking write lock
161 || die "cannot flock: $!";
54310121 162 alarm 0;
4633a7c4 163 };
cf21866a 164 if ($@ && $@ !~ quotemeta($ALARM_EXCEPTION)) { die }
4633a7c4 165
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166If the operation being timed out is system() or qx(), this technique
167is liable to generate zombies. If this matters to you, you'll
168need to do your own fork() and exec(), and kill the errant child process.
169
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170For more complex signal handling, you might see the standard POSIX
171module. Lamentably, this is almost entirely undocumented, but
172the F<t/lib/posix.t> file from the Perl source distribution has some
173examples in it.
174
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175=head2 Handling the SIGHUP Signal in Daemons
176
177A process that usually starts when the system boots and shuts down
178when the system is shut down is called a daemon (Disk And Execution
179MONitor). If a daemon process has a configuration file which is
180modified after the process has been started, there should be a way to
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181tell that process to reread its configuration file without stopping
182the process. Many daemons provide this mechanism using a C<SIGHUP>
183signal handler. When you want to tell the daemon to reread the file,
184simply send it the C<SIGHUP> signal.
28494392 185
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186The following example implements a simple daemon, which restarts
187itself every time the C<SIGHUP> signal is received. The actual code is
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188located in the subroutine C<code()>, which just prints some debugging
189info to show that it works; it should be replaced with the real code.
28494392 190
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191 #!/usr/bin/perl
192
193 use strict;
194 use warnings;
d6fd60d6 195
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196 use POSIX ();
197 use FindBin ();
198 use File::Basename ();
8bc5de20 199 use File::Spec::Functions qw(catfile);
d6fd60d6 200
cf21866a 201 $| = 1;
d6fd60d6 202
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203 # make the daemon cross-platform, so exec always calls the script
204 # itself with the right path, no matter how the script was invoked.
205 my $script = File::Basename::basename($0);
cf21866a 206 my $SELF = catfile($FindBin::Bin, $script);
d6fd60d6 207
28494392 208 # POSIX unmasks the sigprocmask properly
de7ba517 209 $SIG{HUP} = sub {
28494392 210 print "got SIGHUP\n";
cf21866a 211 exec($SELF, @ARGV) || die "$0: couldn't restart: $!";
de7ba517 212 };
d6fd60d6 213
28494392 214 code();
d6fd60d6 215
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216 sub code {
217 print "PID: $$\n";
218 print "ARGV: @ARGV\n";
cf21866a 219 my $count = 0;
8bc5de20 220 while (1) {
28494392 221 sleep 2;
8bc5de20 222 print ++$count, "\n";
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223 }
224 }
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225
226
ffc145e8 227=head2 Deferred Signals (Safe Signals)
5a964f20 228
e6aa8b84 229Before Perl 5.8.0, installing Perl code to deal with signals exposed you to
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230danger from two things. First, few system library functions are
231re-entrant. If the signal interrupts while Perl is executing one function
232(like malloc(3) or printf(3)), and your signal handler then calls the same
233function again, you could get unpredictable behavior--often, a core dump.
234Second, Perl isn't itself re-entrant at the lowest levels. If the signal
235interrupts Perl while Perl is changing its own internal data structures,
236similarly unpredictable behavior may result.
5a964f20 237
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238There were two things you could do, knowing this: be paranoid or be
239pragmatic. The paranoid approach was to do as little as possible in your
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240signal handler. Set an existing integer variable that already has a
241value, and return. This doesn't help you if you're in a slow system call,
7b34eba2 242which will just restart. That means you have to C<die> to longjmp(3) out
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243of the handler. Even this is a little cavalier for the true paranoiac,
244who avoids C<die> in a handler because the system I<is> out to get you.
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245The pragmatic approach was to say "I know the risks, but prefer the
246convenience", and to do anything you wanted in your signal handler,
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247and be prepared to clean up core dumps now and again.
248
e6aa8b84 249Perl 5.8.0 and later avoid these problems by "deferring" signals. That is,
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250when the signal is delivered to the process by the system (to the C code
251that implements Perl) a flag is set, and the handler returns immediately.
252Then at strategic "safe" points in the Perl interpreter (e.g. when it is
253about to execute a new opcode) the flags are checked and the Perl level
254handler from %SIG is executed. The "deferred" scheme allows much more
255flexibility in the coding of signal handlers as we know the Perl
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256interpreter is in a safe state, and that we are not in a system library
257function when the handler is called. However the implementation does
cf21866a 258differ from previous Perls in the following ways:
5a964f20 259
a11adca0 260=over 4
5a964f20 261
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262=item Long-running opcodes
263
cf21866a 264As the Perl interpreter looks at signal flags only when it is about
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265to execute a new opcode, a signal that arrives during a long-running
266opcode (e.g. a regular expression operation on a very large string) will
267not be seen until the current opcode completes.
268
82f82fdb 269If a signal of any given type fires multiple times during an opcode
e188fdae 270(such as from a fine-grained timer), the handler for that signal will
cf21866a 271be called only once, after the opcode completes; all other
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272instances will be discarded. Furthermore, if your system's signal queue
273gets flooded to the point that there are signals that have been raised
274but not yet caught (and thus not deferred) at the time an opcode
275completes, those signals may well be caught and deferred during
276subsequent opcodes, with sometimes surprising results. For example, you
277may see alarms delivered even after calling C<alarm(0)> as the latter
278stops the raising of alarms but does not cancel the delivery of alarms
279raised but not yet caught. Do not depend on the behaviors described in
280this paragraph as they are side effects of the current implementation and
281may change in future versions of Perl.
a11adca0 282
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283=item Interrupting IO
284
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285When a signal is delivered (e.g., SIGINT from a control-C) the operating
286system breaks into IO operations like I<read>(2), which is used to
287implement Perl's readline() function, the C<< <> >> operator. On older
288Perls the handler was called immediately (and as C<read> is not "unsafe",
289this worked well). With the "deferred" scheme the handler is I<not> called
290immediately, and if Perl is using the system's C<stdio> library that
291library may restart the C<read> without returning to Perl to give it a
292chance to call the %SIG handler. If this happens on your system the
293solution is to use the C<:perlio> layer to do IO--at least on those handles
294that you want to be able to break into with signals. (The C<:perlio> layer
295checks the signal flags and calls %SIG handlers before resuming IO
296operation.)
297
e6aa8b84 298The default in Perl 5.8.0 and later is to automatically use
490f90af 299the C<:perlio> layer.
a11adca0 300
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301Note that it is not advisable to access a file handle within a signal
302handler where that signal has interrupted an I/O operation on that same
303handle. While perl will at least try hard not to crash, there are no
304guarantees of data integrity; for example, some data might get dropped or
305written twice.
306
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307Some networking library functions like gethostbyname() are known to have
308their own implementations of timeouts which may conflict with your
309timeouts. If you have problems with such functions, try using the POSIX
310sigaction() function, which bypasses Perl safe signals. Be warned that
311this does subject you to possible memory corruption, as described above.
312
313Instead of setting C<$SIG{ALRM}>:
91d81acc 314
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315 local $SIG{ALRM} = sub { die "alarm" };
316
317try something like the following:
318
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319 use POSIX qw(SIGALRM);
320 POSIX::sigaction(SIGALRM, POSIX::SigAction->new(sub { die "alarm" }))
321 || die "Error setting SIGALRM handler: $!\n";
91d81acc 322
a1966b02 323Another way to disable the safe signal behavior locally is to use
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324the C<Perl::Unsafe::Signals> module from CPAN, which affects
325all signals.
a1966b02 326
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327=item Restartable system calls
328
329On systems that supported it, older versions of Perl used the
330SA_RESTART flag when installing %SIG handlers. This meant that
331restartable system calls would continue rather than returning when
332a signal arrived. In order to deliver deferred signals promptly,
82f82fdb 333Perl 5.8.0 and later do I<not> use SA_RESTART. Consequently,
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334restartable system calls can fail (with $! set to C<EINTR>) in places
335where they previously would have succeeded.
336
cf21866a 337The default C<:perlio> layer retries C<read>, C<write>
82f82fdb 338and C<close> as described above; interrupted C<wait> and
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339C<waitpid> calls will always be retried.
340
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341=item Signals as "faults"
342
cf21866a 343Certain signals like SEGV, ILL, and BUS are generated by virtual memory
c69ca1d4 344addressing errors and similar "faults". These are normally fatal: there is
de7ba517 345little a Perl-level handler can do with them. So Perl delivers them
e188fdae 346immediately rather than attempting to defer them.
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347
348=item Signals triggered by operating system state
349
490f90af 350On some operating systems certain signal handlers are supposed to "do
cf21866a 351something" before returning. One example can be CHLD or CLD, which
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352indicates a child process has completed. On some operating systems the
353signal handler is expected to C<wait> for the completed child
354process. On such systems the deferred signal scheme will not work for
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355those signals: it does not do the C<wait>. Again the failure will
356look like a loop as the operating system will reissue the signal because
357there are completed child processes that have not yet been C<wait>ed for.
a11adca0 358
818c4caa 359=back
a0d0e21e 360
cf21866a 361If you want the old signal behavior back despite possible
4ffa73a3 362memory corruption, set the environment variable C<PERL_SIGNALS> to
cf21866a 363C<"unsafe">. This feature first appeared in Perl 5.8.1.
4ffa73a3 364
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365=head1 Named Pipes
366
367A named pipe (often referred to as a FIFO) is an old Unix IPC
368mechanism for processes communicating on the same machine. It works
369just like regular anonymous pipes, except that the
370processes rendezvous using a filename and need not be related.
371
372To create a named pipe, use the C<POSIX::mkfifo()> function.
373
374 use POSIX qw(mkfifo);
375 mkfifo($path, 0700) || die "mkfifo $path failed: $!";
376
377You can also use the Unix command mknod(1), or on some
378systems, mkfifo(1). These may not be in your normal path, though.
379
380 # system return val is backwards, so && not ||
381 #
382 $ENV{PATH} .= ":/etc:/usr/etc";
383 if ( system("mknod", $path, "p")
384 && system("mkfifo", $path) )
385 {
386 die "mk{nod,fifo} $path failed";
387 }
388
389
390A fifo is convenient when you want to connect a process to an unrelated
391one. When you open a fifo, the program will block until there's something
392on the other end.
393
394For example, let's say you'd like to have your F<.signature> file be a
395named pipe that has a Perl program on the other end. Now every time any
396program (like a mailer, news reader, finger program, etc.) tries to read
397from that file, the reading program will read the new signature from your
398program. We'll use the pipe-checking file-test operator, B<-p>, to find
399out whether anyone (or anything) has accidentally removed our fifo.
400
401 chdir(); # go home
402 my $FIFO = ".signature";
403
404 while (1) {
405 unless (-p $FIFO) {
406 unlink $FIFO; # discard any failure, will catch later
407 require POSIX; # delayed loading of heavy module
408 POSIX::mkfifo($FIFO, 0700)
409 || die "can't mkfifo $FIFO: $!";
410 }
411
412 # next line blocks till there's a reader
413 open (FIFO, "> $FIFO") || die "can't open $FIFO: $!";
414 print FIFO "John Smith (smith\@host.org)\n", `fortune -s`;
415 close(FIFO) || die "can't close $FIFO: $!";
416 sleep 2; # to avoid dup signals
417 }
418
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419=head1 Using open() for IPC
420
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421Perl's basic open() statement can also be used for unidirectional
422interprocess communication by either appending or prepending a pipe
423symbol to the second argument to open(). Here's how to start
424something up in a child process you intend to write to:
4633a7c4 425
54310121 426 open(SPOOLER, "| cat -v | lpr -h 2>/dev/null")
cf21866a 427 || die "can't fork: $!";
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428 local $SIG{PIPE} = sub { die "spooler pipe broke" };
429 print SPOOLER "stuff\n";
cf21866a 430 close SPOOLER || die "bad spool: $! $?";
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431
432And here's how to start up a child process you intend to read from:
433
434 open(STATUS, "netstat -an 2>&1 |")
cf21866a 435 || die "can't fork: $!";
4633a7c4 436 while (<STATUS>) {
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437 next if /^(tcp|udp)/;
438 print;
54310121 439 }
cf21866a 440 close STATUS || die "bad netstat: $! $?";
4633a7c4 441
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442If one can be sure that a particular program is a Perl script expecting
443filenames in @ARGV, the clever programmer can write something like this:
4633a7c4 444
5a964f20 445 % program f1 "cmd1|" - f2 "cmd2|" f3 < tmpfile
4633a7c4 446
cf21866a 447and no matter which sort of shell it's called from, the Perl program will
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448read from the file F<f1>, the process F<cmd1>, standard input (F<tmpfile>
449in this case), the F<f2> file, the F<cmd2> command, and finally the F<f3>
450file. Pretty nifty, eh?
451
54310121 452You might notice that you could use backticks for much the
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453same effect as opening a pipe for reading:
454
455 print grep { !/^(tcp|udp)/ } `netstat -an 2>&1`;
cf21866a 456 die "bad netstatus ($?)" if $?;
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457
458While this is true on the surface, it's much more efficient to process the
459file one line or record at a time because then you don't have to read the
19799a22 460whole thing into memory at once. It also gives you finer control of the
cf21866a 461whole process, letting you kill off the child process early if you'd like.
4633a7c4 462
cf21866a 463Be careful to check the return values from both open() and close(). If
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464you're I<writing> to a pipe, you should also trap SIGPIPE. Otherwise,
465think of what happens when you start up a pipe to a command that doesn't
466exist: the open() will in all likelihood succeed (it only reflects the
467fork()'s success), but then your output will fail--spectacularly. Perl
cf21866a 468can't know whether the command worked, because your command is actually
4633a7c4 469running in a separate process whose exec() might have failed. Therefore,
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470while readers of bogus commands return just a quick EOF, writers
471to bogus commands will get hit with a signal, which they'd best be prepared
472to handle. Consider:
4633a7c4 473
cf21866a 474 open(FH, "|bogus") || die "can't fork: $!";
82f82fdb 475 print FH "bang\n"; # neither necessary nor sufficient
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476 # to check print retval!
477 close(FH) || die "can't close: $!";
5a964f20 478
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479The reason for not checking the return value from print() is because of
480pipe buffering; physical writes are delayed. That won't blow up until the
481close, and it will blow up with a SIGPIPE. To catch it, you could use
482this:
5a964f20 483
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484 $SIG{PIPE} = "IGNORE";
485 open(FH, "|bogus") || die "can't fork: $!";
486 print FH "bang\n";
487 close(FH) || die "can't close: status=$?";
4633a7c4 488
68dc0745 489=head2 Filehandles
490
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491Both the main process and any child processes it forks share the same
492STDIN, STDOUT, and STDERR filehandles. If both processes try to access
45bc9206 493them at once, strange things can happen. You may also want to close
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494or reopen the filehandles for the child. You can get around this by
495opening your pipe with open(), but on some systems this means that the
496child process cannot outlive the parent.
68dc0745 497
498=head2 Background Processes
499
500You can run a command in the background with:
501
7b05b7e3 502 system("cmd &");
68dc0745 503
504The command's STDOUT and STDERR (and possibly STDIN, depending on your
505shell) will be the same as the parent's. You won't need to catch
cf21866a 506SIGCHLD because of the double-fork taking place; see below for details.
68dc0745 507
508=head2 Complete Dissociation of Child from Parent
509
510In some cases (starting server processes, for instance) you'll want to
893af57a 511completely dissociate the child process from the parent. This is
cf21866a
TC
512often called daemonization. A well-behaved daemon will also chdir()
513to the root directory so it doesn't prevent unmounting the filesystem
514containing the directory from which it was launched, and redirect its
515standard file descriptors from and to F</dev/null> so that random
516output doesn't wind up on the user's terminal.
893af57a 517
cf21866a 518 use POSIX "setsid";
893af57a
RS
519
520 sub daemonize {
cf21866a
TC
521 chdir("/") || die "can't chdir to /: $!";
522 open(STDIN, "< /dev/null") || die "can't read /dev/null: $!";
523 open(STDOUT, "> /dev/null") || die "can't write to /dev/null: $!";
524 defined(my $pid = fork()) || die "can't fork: $!";
c0919ef1 525 exit if $pid; # non-zero now means I am the parent
cd799e5a 526 (setsid() != -1) || die "Can't start a new session: $!";
cf21866a 527 open(STDERR, ">&STDOUT") || die "can't dup stdout: $!";
893af57a 528 }
5a964f20 529
cf21866a
TC
530The fork() has to come before the setsid() to ensure you aren't a
531process group leader; the setsid() will fail if you are. If your
893af57a 532system doesn't have the setsid() function, open F</dev/tty> and use the
f979aebc 533C<TIOCNOTTY> ioctl() on it instead. See tty(4) for details.
5a964f20 534
82f82fdb 535Non-Unix users should check their C<< I<Your_OS>::Process >> module for
cf21866a 536other possible solutions.
68dc0745 537
4633a7c4
LW
538=head2 Safe Pipe Opens
539
540Another interesting approach to IPC is making your single program go
cf21866a 541multiprocess and communicate between--or even amongst--yourselves. The
4633a7c4
LW
542open() function will accept a file argument of either C<"-|"> or C<"|-">
543to do a very interesting thing: it forks a child connected to the
544filehandle you've opened. The child is running the same program as the
545parent. This is useful for safely opening a file when running under an
546assumed UID or GID, for example. If you open a pipe I<to> minus, you can
cf21866a 547write to the filehandle you opened and your kid will find it in I<his>
4633a7c4 548STDIN. If you open a pipe I<from> minus, you can read from the filehandle
cf21866a 549you opened whatever your kid writes to I<his> STDOUT.
4633a7c4 550
6ca3c6c6 551 use English;
cf21866a
TC
552 my $PRECIOUS = "/path/to/some/safe/file";
553 my $sleep_count;
554 my $pid;
4633a7c4 555
54310121 556 do {
322c2516
SF
557 $pid = open(KID_TO_WRITE, "|-");
558 unless (defined $pid) {
559 warn "cannot fork: $!";
560 die "bailing out" if $sleep_count++ > 6;
561 sleep 10;
562 }
4633a7c4
LW
563 } until defined $pid;
564
82f82fdb 565 if ($pid) { # I am the parent
322c2516 566 print KID_TO_WRITE @some_data;
cf21866a
TC
567 close(KID_TO_WRITE) || warn "kid exited $?";
568 } else { # I am the child
569 # drop permissions in setuid and/or setgid programs:
82f82fdb
SF
570 ($EUID, $EGID) = ($UID, $GID);
571 open (OUTFILE, "> $PRECIOUS")
cf21866a 572 || die "can't open $PRECIOUS: $!";
322c2516 573 while (<STDIN>) {
cf21866a 574 print OUTFILE; # child's STDIN is parent's KID_TO_WRITE
322c2516 575 }
cf21866a
TC
576 close(OUTFILE) || die "can't close $PRECIOUS: $!";
577 exit(0); # don't forget this!!
54310121 578 }
4633a7c4
LW
579
580Another common use for this construct is when you need to execute
581something without the shell's interference. With system(), it's
54310121 582straightforward, but you can't use a pipe open or backticks safely.
4633a7c4
LW
583That's because there's no way to stop the shell from getting its hands on
584your arguments. Instead, use lower-level control to call exec() directly.
585
54310121 586Here's a safe backtick or pipe open for read:
4633a7c4 587
cf21866a
TC
588 my $pid = open(KID_TO_READ, "-|");
589 defined($pid) || die "can't fork: $!";
4633a7c4 590
cf21866a 591 if ($pid) { # parent
322c2516 592 while (<KID_TO_READ>) {
cf21866a 593 # do something interesting
322c2516 594 }
cf21866a 595 close(KID_TO_READ) || warn "kid exited $?";
4633a7c4 596
cf21866a 597 } else { # child
322c2516
SF
598 ($EUID, $EGID) = ($UID, $GID); # suid only
599 exec($program, @options, @args)
cf21866a 600 || die "can't exec program: $!";
322c2516 601 # NOTREACHED
54310121 602 }
4633a7c4 603
4633a7c4
LW
604And here's a safe pipe open for writing:
605
cf21866a
TC
606 my $pid = open(KID_TO_WRITE, "|-");
607 defined($pid) || die "can't fork: $!";
608
76c0e0db 609 $SIG{PIPE} = sub { die "whoops, $program pipe broke" };
4633a7c4 610
cf21866a
TC
611 if ($pid) { # parent
612 print KID_TO_WRITE @data;
322c2516 613 close(KID_TO_WRITE) || warn "kid exited $?";
4633a7c4 614
cf21866a 615 } else { # child
322c2516
SF
616 ($EUID, $EGID) = ($UID, $GID);
617 exec($program, @options, @args)
cf21866a 618 || die "can't exec program: $!";
322c2516 619 # NOTREACHED
54310121 620 }
4633a7c4 621
c40e8e9b 622It is very easy to dead-lock a process using this form of open(), or
82f82fdb 623indeed with any use of pipe() with multiple subprocesses. The
cf21866a 624example above is "safe" because it is simple and calls exec(). See
c40e8e9b
SV
625L</"Avoiding Pipe Deadlocks"> for general safety principles, but there
626are extra gotchas with Safe Pipe Opens.
627
628In particular, if you opened the pipe using C<open FH, "|-">, then you
629cannot simply use close() in the parent process to close an unwanted
630writer. Consider this code:
631
cf21866a
TC
632 my $pid = open(WRITER, "|-"); # fork open a kid
633 defined($pid) || die "first fork failed: $!";
c40e8e9b
SV
634 if ($pid) {
635 if (my $sub_pid = fork()) {
cf21866a
TC
636 defined($sub_pid) || die "second fork failed: $!";
637 close(WRITER) || die "couldn't close WRITER: $!";
638 # now do something else...
c40e8e9b
SV
639 }
640 else {
cf21866a
TC
641 # first write to WRITER
642 # ...
643 # then when finished
644 close(WRITER) || die "couldn't close WRITER: $!";
645 exit(0);
c40e8e9b
SV
646 }
647 }
648 else {
cf21866a
TC
649 # first do something with STDIN, then
650 exit(0);
c40e8e9b
SV
651 }
652
cf21866a 653In the example above, the true parent does not want to write to the WRITER
c40e8e9b 654filehandle, so it closes it. However, because WRITER was opened using
cf21866a
TC
655C<open FH, "|-">, it has a special behavior: closing it calls
656waitpid() (see L<perlfunc/waitpid>), which waits for the subprocess
c40e8e9b 657to exit. If the child process ends up waiting for something happening
cf21866a 658in the section marked "do something else", you have deadlock.
c40e8e9b 659
cf21866a 660This can also be a problem with intermediate subprocesses in more
c40e8e9b 661complicated code, which will call waitpid() on all open filehandles
cf21866a 662during global destruction--in no predictable order.
c40e8e9b
SV
663
664To solve this, you must manually use pipe(), fork(), and the form of
cf21866a 665open() which sets one file descriptor to another, as shown below:
c40e8e9b 666
cf21866a 667 pipe(READER, WRITER) || die "pipe failed: $!";
c40e8e9b 668 $pid = fork();
cf21866a 669 defined($pid) || die "first fork failed: $!";
c40e8e9b 670 if ($pid) {
322c2516 671 close READER;
c40e8e9b 672 if (my $sub_pid = fork()) {
cf21866a
TC
673 defined($sub_pid) || die "first fork failed: $!";
674 close(WRITER) || die "can't close WRITER: $!";
c40e8e9b
SV
675 }
676 else {
677 # write to WRITER...
cf21866a
TC
678 # ...
679 # then when finished
680 close(WRITER) || die "can't close WRITER: $!";
681 exit(0);
c40e8e9b
SV
682 }
683 # write to WRITER...
684 }
685 else {
cf21866a
TC
686 open(STDIN, "<&READER") || die "can't reopen STDIN: $!";
687 close(WRITER) || die "can't close WRITER: $!";
c40e8e9b 688 # do something...
cf21866a 689 exit(0);
c40e8e9b
SV
690 }
691
cf21866a
TC
692Since Perl 5.8.0, you can also use the list form of C<open> for pipes.
693This is preferred when you wish to avoid having the shell interpret
694metacharacters that may be in your command string.
307eac13 695
cf21866a 696So for example, instead of using:
307eac13 697
cf21866a 698 open(PS_PIPE, "ps aux|") || die "can't open ps pipe: $!";
307eac13 699
cf21866a 700One would use either of these:
4633a7c4 701
82f82fdb 702 open(PS_PIPE, "-|", "ps", "aux")
cf21866a 703 || die "can't open ps pipe: $!";
c40e8e9b 704
cf21866a
TC
705 @ps_args = qw[ ps aux ];
706 open(PS_PIPE, "-|", @ps_args)
707 || die "can't open @ps_args|: $!";
c40e8e9b 708
cf21866a
TC
709Because there are more than three arguments to open(), forks the ps(1)
710command I<without> spawning a shell, and reads its standard output via the
711C<PS_PIPE> filehandle. The corresponding syntax to I<write> to command
82f82fdb 712pipes is to use C<"|-"> in place of C<"-|">.
c40e8e9b 713
cf21866a
TC
714This was admittedly a rather silly example, because you're using string
715literals whose content is perfectly safe. There is therefore no cause to
faa783ac 716resort to the harder-to-read, multi-argument form of pipe open(). However,
cf21866a
TC
717whenever you cannot be assured that the program arguments are free of shell
718metacharacters, the fancier form of open() should be used. For example:
c40e8e9b 719
cf21866a
TC
720 @grep_args = ("egrep", "-i", $some_pattern, @many_files);
721 open(GREP_PIPE, "-|", @grep_args)
722 || die "can't open @grep_args|: $!";
723
724Here the multi-argument form of pipe open() is preferred because the
725pattern and indeed even the filenames themselves might hold metacharacters.
726
727Be aware that these operations are full Unix forks, which means they may
9fba1c80 728not be correctly implemented on all alien systems.
cf21866a
TC
729
730=head2 Avoiding Pipe Deadlocks
731
732Whenever you have more than one subprocess, you must be careful that each
733closes whichever half of any pipes created for interprocess communication
734it is not using. This is because any child process reading from the pipe
735and expecting an EOF will never receive it, and therefore never exit. A
736single process closing a pipe is not enough to close it; the last process
737with the pipe open must close it for it to read EOF.
738
739Certain built-in Unix features help prevent this most of the time. For
740instance, filehandles have a "close on exec" flag, which is set I<en masse>
741under control of the C<$^F> variable. This is so any filehandles you
742didn't explicitly route to the STDIN, STDOUT or STDERR of a child
743I<program> will be automatically closed.
744
745Always explicitly and immediately call close() on the writable end of any
746pipe, unless that process is actually writing to it. Even if you don't
747explicitly call close(), Perl will still close() all filehandles during
748global destruction. As previously discussed, if those filehandles have
749been opened with Safe Pipe Open, this will result in calling waitpid(),
750which may again deadlock.
c40e8e9b 751
7b05b7e3 752=head2 Bidirectional Communication with Another Process
4633a7c4
LW
753
754While this works reasonably well for unidirectional communication, what
cf21866a 755about bidirectional communication? The most obvious approach doesn't work:
4633a7c4 756
cf21866a 757 # THIS DOES NOT WORK!!
c07a80fd 758 open(PROG_FOR_READING_AND_WRITING, "| some program |")
4633a7c4 759
cf21866a
TC
760If you forget to C<use warnings>, you'll miss out entirely on the
761helpful diagnostic message:
4633a7c4
LW
762
763 Can't do bidirectional pipe at -e line 1.
764
cf21866a
TC
765If you really want to, you can use the standard open2() from the
766C<IPC::Open2> module to catch both ends. There's also an open3() in
767C<IPC::Open3> for tridirectional I/O so you can also catch your child's
768STDERR, but doing so would then require an awkward select() loop and
769wouldn't allow you to use normal Perl input operations.
4633a7c4
LW
770
771If you look at its source, you'll see that open2() uses low-level
cf21866a
TC
772primitives like the pipe() and exec() syscalls to create all the
773connections. Although it might have been more efficient by using
774socketpair(), this would have been even less portable than it already
775is. The open2() and open3() functions are unlikely to work anywhere
776except on a Unix system, or at least one purporting POSIX compliance.
777
778=for TODO
779Hold on, is this even true? First it says that socketpair() is avoided
82f82fdb 780for portability, but then it says it probably won't work except on
cf21866a 781Unixy systems anyway. Which one of those is true?
4633a7c4
LW
782
783Here's an example of using open2():
784
785 use FileHandle;
786 use IPC::Open2;
cf21866a 787 $pid = open2(*Reader, *Writer, "cat -un");
4633a7c4
LW
788 print Writer "stuff\n";
789 $got = <Reader>;
790
cf21866a
TC
791The problem with this is that buffering is really going to ruin your
792day. Even though your C<Writer> filehandle is auto-flushed so the process
793on the other end gets your data in a timely manner, you can't usually do
794anything to force that process to give its data to you in a similarly quick
795fashion. In this special case, we could actually so, because we gave
796I<cat> a B<-u> flag to make it unbuffered. But very few commands are
797designed to operate over pipes, so this seldom works unless you yourself
798wrote the program on the other end of the double-ended pipe.
799
800A solution to this is to use a library which uses pseudottys to make your
801program behave more reasonably. This way you don't have to have control
802over the source code of the program you're using. The C<Expect> module
803from CPAN also addresses this kind of thing. This module requires two
804other modules from CPAN, C<IO::Pty> and C<IO::Stty>. It sets up a pseudo
805terminal to interact with programs that insist on talking to the terminal
806device driver. If your system is supported, this may be your best bet.
c8db1d39 807
5a964f20
TC
808=head2 Bidirectional Communication with Yourself
809
cf21866a
TC
810If you want, you may make low-level pipe() and fork() syscalls to stitch
811this together by hand. This example only talks to itself, but you could
812reopen the appropriate handles to STDIN and STDOUT and call other processes.
813(The following example lacks proper error checking.)
5a964f20
TC
814
815 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
816 # pipe1 - bidirectional communication using two pipe pairs
817 # designed for the socketpair-challenged
322c2516 818 use IO::Handle; # thousands of lines just for autoflush :-(
cf21866a
TC
819 pipe(PARENT_RDR, CHILD_WTR); # XXX: check failure?
820 pipe(CHILD_RDR, PARENT_WTR); # XXX: check failure?
5a964f20
TC
821 CHILD_WTR->autoflush(1);
822 PARENT_WTR->autoflush(1);
823
cf21866a 824 if ($pid = fork()) {
82f82fdb 825 close PARENT_RDR;
cf21866a 826 close PARENT_WTR;
322c2516
SF
827 print CHILD_WTR "Parent Pid $$ is sending this\n";
828 chomp($line = <CHILD_RDR>);
ccf3535a 829 print "Parent Pid $$ just read this: '$line'\n";
322c2516 830 close CHILD_RDR; close CHILD_WTR;
cf21866a 831 waitpid($pid, 0);
5a964f20 832 } else {
322c2516 833 die "cannot fork: $!" unless defined $pid;
82f82fdb 834 close CHILD_RDR;
cf21866a 835 close CHILD_WTR;
322c2516 836 chomp($line = <PARENT_RDR>);
ccf3535a 837 print "Child Pid $$ just read this: '$line'\n";
322c2516 838 print PARENT_WTR "Child Pid $$ is sending this\n";
82f82fdb 839 close PARENT_RDR;
cf21866a
TC
840 close PARENT_WTR;
841 exit(0);
5a964f20
TC
842 }
843
a11adca0 844But you don't actually have to make two pipe calls. If you
5a964f20
TC
845have the socketpair() system call, it will do this all for you.
846
847 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
848 # pipe2 - bidirectional communication using socketpair
849 # "the best ones always go both ways"
850
851 use Socket;
322c2516 852 use IO::Handle; # thousands of lines just for autoflush :-(
cf21866a 853
5a964f20
TC
854 # We say AF_UNIX because although *_LOCAL is the
855 # POSIX 1003.1g form of the constant, many machines
856 # still don't have it.
857 socketpair(CHILD, PARENT, AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, PF_UNSPEC)
cf21866a 858 || die "socketpair: $!";
5a964f20
TC
859
860 CHILD->autoflush(1);
861 PARENT->autoflush(1);
862
cf21866a 863 if ($pid = fork()) {
322c2516
SF
864 close PARENT;
865 print CHILD "Parent Pid $$ is sending this\n";
866 chomp($line = <CHILD>);
ccf3535a 867 print "Parent Pid $$ just read this: '$line'\n";
322c2516 868 close CHILD;
cf21866a 869 waitpid($pid, 0);
5a964f20 870 } else {
322c2516
SF
871 die "cannot fork: $!" unless defined $pid;
872 close CHILD;
873 chomp($line = <PARENT>);
cf21866a 874 print "Child Pid $$ just read this: '$line'\n";
322c2516
SF
875 print PARENT "Child Pid $$ is sending this\n";
876 close PARENT;
cf21866a 877 exit(0);
5a964f20
TC
878 }
879
4633a7c4 880=head1 Sockets: Client/Server Communication
a0d0e21e 881
cf21866a
TC
882While not entirely limited to Unix-derived operating systems (e.g., WinSock
883on PCs provides socket support, as do some VMS libraries), you might not have
884sockets on your system, in which case this section probably isn't going to
885do you much good. With sockets, you can do both virtual circuits like TCP
886streams and datagrams like UDP packets. You may be able to do even more
4633a7c4
LW
887depending on your system.
888
cf21866a 889The Perl functions for dealing with sockets have the same names as
4633a7c4 890the corresponding system calls in C, but their arguments tend to differ
cf21866a 891for two reasons. First, Perl filehandles work differently than C file
4633a7c4
LW
892descriptors. Second, Perl already knows the length of its strings, so you
893don't need to pass that information.
a0d0e21e 894
cf21866a
TC
895One of the major problems with ancient, antemillennial socket code in Perl
896was that it used hard-coded values for some of the constants, which
897severely hurt portability. If you ever see code that does anything like
82f82fdb 898explicitly setting C<$AF_INET = 2>, you know you're in for big trouble.
cf21866a
TC
899An immeasurably superior approach is to use the C<Socket> module, which more
900reliably grants access to the various constants and functions you'll need.
a0d0e21e 901
68dc0745 902If you're not writing a server/client for an existing protocol like
903NNTP or SMTP, you should give some thought to how your server will
904know when the client has finished talking, and vice-versa. Most
905protocols are based on one-line messages and responses (so one party
4a6725af 906knows the other has finished when a "\n" is received) or multi-line
68dc0745 907messages and responses that end with a period on an empty line
908("\n.\n" terminates a message/response).
909
5a964f20
TC
910=head2 Internet Line Terminators
911
912The Internet line terminator is "\015\012". Under ASCII variants of
913Unix, that could usually be written as "\r\n", but under other systems,
914"\r\n" might at times be "\015\015\012", "\012\012\015", or something
915completely different. The standards specify writing "\015\012" to be
916conformant (be strict in what you provide), but they also recommend
cf21866a 917accepting a lone "\012" on input (be lenient in what you require).
5a964f20 918We haven't always been very good about that in the code in this manpage,
82f82fdb 919but unless you're on a Mac from way back in its pre-Unix dark ages, you'll
cf21866a 920probably be ok.
5a964f20 921
4633a7c4 922=head2 Internet TCP Clients and Servers
a0d0e21e 923
4633a7c4
LW
924Use Internet-domain sockets when you want to do client-server
925communication that might extend to machines outside of your own system.
926
927Here's a sample TCP client using Internet-domain sockets:
928
929 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
4633a7c4
LW
930 use strict;
931 use Socket;
cf21866a 932 my ($remote, $port, $iaddr, $paddr, $proto, $line);
4633a7c4 933
cf21866a 934 $remote = shift || "localhost";
4633a7c4 935 $port = shift || 2345; # random port
cf21866a 936 if ($port =~ /\D/) { $port = getservbyname($port, "tcp") }
4633a7c4 937 die "No port" unless $port;
322c2516 938 $iaddr = inet_aton($remote) || die "no host: $remote";
4633a7c4
LW
939 $paddr = sockaddr_in($port, $iaddr);
940
cf21866a 941 $proto = getprotobyname("tcp");
322c2516 942 socket(SOCK, PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, $proto) || die "socket: $!";
cf21866a
TC
943 connect(SOCK, $paddr) || die "connect: $!";
944 while ($line = <SOCK>) {
322c2516 945 print $line;
54310121 946 }
4633a7c4 947
cf21866a
TC
948 close (SOCK) || die "close: $!";
949 exit(0);
4633a7c4
LW
950
951And here's a corresponding server to go along with it. We'll
cf21866a 952leave the address as C<INADDR_ANY> so that the kernel can choose
54310121 953the appropriate interface on multihomed hosts. If you want sit
c07a80fd 954on a particular interface (like the external side of a gateway
cf21866a 955or firewall machine), fill this in with your real address instead.
c07a80fd 956
957 #!/usr/bin/perl -Tw
c07a80fd 958 use strict;
cf21866a 959 BEGIN { $ENV{PATH} = "/usr/bin:/bin" }
c07a80fd 960 use Socket;
961 use Carp;
5865a7df 962 my $EOL = "\015\012";
c07a80fd 963
cf21866a 964 sub logmsg { print "$0 $$: @_ at ", scalar localtime(), "\n" }
c07a80fd 965
cf21866a
TC
966 my $port = shift || 2345;
967 die "invalid port" unless if $port =~ /^ \d+ $/x;
51ee6500 968
cf21866a 969 my $proto = getprotobyname("tcp");
6a3992aa 970
322c2516 971 socket(Server, PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, $proto) || die "socket: $!";
82f82fdb 972 setsockopt(Server, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, pack("l", 1))
cf21866a 973 || die "setsockopt: $!";
322c2516 974 bind(Server, sockaddr_in($port, INADDR_ANY)) || die "bind: $!";
cf21866a 975 listen(Server, SOMAXCONN) || die "listen: $!";
c07a80fd 976
977 logmsg "server started on port $port";
978
979 my $paddr;
980
981 $SIG{CHLD} = \&REAPER;
982
cf21866a
TC
983 for ( ; $paddr = accept(Client, Server); close Client) {
984 my($port, $iaddr) = sockaddr_in($paddr);
985 my $name = gethostbyaddr($iaddr, AF_INET);
c07a80fd 986
322c2516
SF
987 logmsg "connection from $name [",
988 inet_ntoa($iaddr), "]
989 at port $port";
c07a80fd 990
322c2516 991 print Client "Hello there, $name, it's now ",
cf21866a 992 scalar localtime(), $EOL;
54310121 993 }
c07a80fd 994
5e220227 995And here's a multitasking version. It's multitasked in that
cf21866a 996like most typical servers, it spawns (fork()s) a slave server to
c07a80fd 997handle the client request so that the master server can quickly
998go back to service a new client.
4633a7c4
LW
999
1000 #!/usr/bin/perl -Tw
4633a7c4 1001 use strict;
cf21866a 1002 BEGIN { $ENV{PATH} = "/usr/bin:/bin" }
a0d0e21e 1003 use Socket;
4633a7c4 1004 use Carp;
5865a7df 1005 my $EOL = "\015\012";
a0d0e21e 1006
4633a7c4 1007 sub spawn; # forward declaration
cf21866a 1008 sub logmsg { print "$0 $$: @_ at ", scalar localtime(), "\n" }
a0d0e21e 1009
cf21866a 1010 my $port = shift || 2345;
d338742c 1011 die "invalid port" unless $port =~ /^ \d+ $/x;
51ee6500 1012
cf21866a 1013 my $proto = getprotobyname("tcp");
54310121 1014
322c2516 1015 socket(Server, PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, $proto) || die "socket: $!";
82f82fdb 1016 setsockopt(Server, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, pack("l", 1))
cf21866a
TC
1017 || die "setsockopt: $!";
1018 bind(Server, sockaddr_in($port, INADDR_ANY)) || die "bind: $!";
1019 listen(Server, SOMAXCONN) || die "listen: $!";
a0d0e21e 1020
4633a7c4 1021 logmsg "server started on port $port";
a0d0e21e 1022
4633a7c4
LW
1023 my $waitedpid = 0;
1024 my $paddr;
a0d0e21e 1025
816229cf 1026 use POSIX ":sys_wait_h";
c5ae6365
AW
1027 use Errno;
1028
54310121 1029 sub REAPER {
c5ae6365 1030 local $!; # don't let waitpid() overwrite current error
cf21866a
TC
1031 while ((my $pid = waitpid(-1, WNOHANG)) > 0 && WIFEXITED($?)) {
1032 logmsg "reaped $waitedpid" . ($? ? " with exit $?" : "");
c5ae6365 1033 }
abf724c9 1034 $SIG{CHLD} = \&REAPER; # loathe SysV
4633a7c4
LW
1035 }
1036
1037 $SIG{CHLD} = \&REAPER;
1038
cf21866a 1039 while (1) {
c5ae6365 1040 $paddr = accept(Client, Server) || do {
cf21866a 1041 # try again if accept() returned because got a signal
c5ae6365
AW
1042 next if $!{EINTR};
1043 die "accept: $!";
1044 };
1045 my ($port, $iaddr) = sockaddr_in($paddr);
1046 my $name = gethostbyaddr($iaddr, AF_INET);
1047
1048 logmsg "connection from $name [",
1049 inet_ntoa($iaddr),
1050 "] at port $port";
1051
1052 spawn sub {
cf21866a
TC
1053 $| = 1;
1054 print "Hello there, $name, it's now ", scalar localtime(), $EOL;
1055 exec "/usr/games/fortune" # XXX: "wrong" line terminators
c5ae6365
AW
1056 or confess "can't exec fortune: $!";
1057 };
1058 close Client;
54310121 1059 }
a0d0e21e 1060
4633a7c4 1061 sub spawn {
c5ae6365
AW
1062 my $coderef = shift;
1063
cf21866a 1064 unless (@_ == 0 && $coderef && ref($coderef) eq "CODE") {
c5ae6365
AW
1065 confess "usage: spawn CODEREF";
1066 }
1067
1068 my $pid;
cf21866a 1069 unless (defined($pid = fork())) {
c5ae6365
AW
1070 logmsg "cannot fork: $!";
1071 return;
82f82fdb 1072 }
c5ae6365
AW
1073 elsif ($pid) {
1074 logmsg "begat $pid";
1075 return; # I'm the parent
1076 }
1077 # else I'm the child -- go spawn
1078
cf21866a
TC
1079 open(STDIN, "<&Client") || die "can't dup client to stdin";
1080 open(STDOUT, ">&Client") || die "can't dup client to stdout";
c5ae6365 1081 ## open(STDERR, ">&STDOUT") || die "can't dup stdout to stderr";
cf21866a 1082 exit($coderef->());
54310121 1083 }
4633a7c4 1084
c5ae6365
AW
1085This server takes the trouble to clone off a child version via fork()
1086for each incoming request. That way it can handle many requests at
1087once, which you might not always want. Even if you don't fork(), the
1088listen() will allow that many pending connections. Forking servers
1089have to be particularly careful about cleaning up their dead children
1090(called "zombies" in Unix parlance), because otherwise you'll quickly
1091fill up your process table. The REAPER subroutine is used here to
1092call waitpid() for any child processes that have finished, thereby
1093ensuring that they terminate cleanly and don't join the ranks of the
1094living dead.
1095
1096Within the while loop we call accept() and check to see if it returns
cf21866a
TC
1097a false value. This would normally indicate a system error needs
1098to be reported. However, the introduction of safe signals (see
e6aa8b84 1099L</Deferred Signals (Safe Signals)> above) in Perl 5.8.0 means that
cf21866a
TC
1100accept() might also be interrupted when the process receives a signal.
1101This typically happens when one of the forked subprocesses exits and
82f82fdb 1102notifies the parent process with a CHLD signal.
c5ae6365 1103
cf21866a
TC
1104If accept() is interrupted by a signal, $! will be set to EINTR.
1105If this happens, we can safely continue to the next iteration of
c5ae6365 1106the loop and another call to accept(). It is important that your
82f82fdb 1107signal handling code not modify the value of $!, or else this test
cf21866a
TC
1108will likely fail. In the REAPER subroutine we create a local version
1109of $! before calling waitpid(). When waitpid() sets $! to ECHILD as
82f82fdb 1110it inevitably does when it has no more children waiting, it
cf21866a 1111updates the local copy and leaves the original unchanged.
4633a7c4 1112
cf21866a 1113You should use the B<-T> flag to enable taint checking (see L<perlsec>)
4633a7c4 1114even if we aren't running setuid or setgid. This is always a good idea
cf21866a 1115for servers or any program run on behalf of someone else (like CGI
4633a7c4
LW
1116scripts), because it lessens the chances that people from the outside will
1117be able to compromise your system.
1118
1119Let's look at another TCP client. This one connects to the TCP "time"
1120service on a number of different machines and shows how far their clocks
1121differ from the system on which it's being run:
1122
1123 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
4633a7c4
LW
1124 use strict;
1125 use Socket;
1126
cf21866a
TC
1127 my $SECS_OF_70_YEARS = 2208988800;
1128 sub ctime { scalar localtime(shift() || time()) }
4633a7c4 1129
cf21866a
TC
1130 my $iaddr = gethostbyname("localhost");
1131 my $proto = getprotobyname("tcp");
1132 my $port = getservbyname("time", "tcp");
4633a7c4
LW
1133 my $paddr = sockaddr_in(0, $iaddr);
1134 my($host);
1135
1136 $| = 1;
cf21866a 1137 printf "%-24s %8s %s\n", "localhost", 0, ctime();
4633a7c4
LW
1138
1139 foreach $host (@ARGV) {
322c2516
SF
1140 printf "%-24s ", $host;
1141 my $hisiaddr = inet_aton($host) || die "unknown host";
1142 my $hispaddr = sockaddr_in($port, $hisiaddr);
82f82fdb 1143 socket(SOCKET, PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, $proto)
cf21866a 1144 || die "socket: $!";
322c2516 1145 connect(SOCKET, $hispaddr) || die "connect: $!";
cf21866a 1146 my $rtime = pack("C4", ());
322c2516
SF
1147 read(SOCKET, $rtime, 4);
1148 close(SOCKET);
cf21866a
TC
1149 my $histime = unpack("N", $rtime) - $SECS_OF_70_YEARS;
1150 printf "%8d %s\n", $histime - time(), ctime($histime);
a0d0e21e
LW
1151 }
1152
4633a7c4
LW
1153=head2 Unix-Domain TCP Clients and Servers
1154
a2eb9003 1155That's fine for Internet-domain clients and servers, but what about local
4633a7c4
LW
1156communications? While you can use the same setup, sometimes you don't
1157want to. Unix-domain sockets are local to the current host, and are often
54310121 1158used internally to implement pipes. Unlike Internet domain sockets, Unix
4633a7c4
LW
1159domain sockets can show up in the file system with an ls(1) listing.
1160
5a964f20 1161 % ls -l /dev/log
4633a7c4 1162 srw-rw-rw- 1 root 0 Oct 31 07:23 /dev/log
a0d0e21e 1163
4633a7c4
LW
1164You can test for these with Perl's B<-S> file test:
1165
cf21866a 1166 unless (-S "/dev/log") {
322c2516 1167 die "something's wicked with the log system";
54310121 1168 }
4633a7c4
LW
1169
1170Here's a sample Unix-domain client:
1171
1172 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
4633a7c4
LW
1173 use Socket;
1174 use strict;
1175 my ($rendezvous, $line);
1176
cf21866a 1177 $rendezvous = shift || "catsock";
322c2516
SF
1178 socket(SOCK, PF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0) || die "socket: $!";
1179 connect(SOCK, sockaddr_un($rendezvous)) || die "connect: $!";
54310121 1180 while (defined($line = <SOCK>)) {
322c2516 1181 print $line;
54310121 1182 }
cf21866a 1183 exit(0);
4633a7c4 1184
5a964f20
TC
1185And here's a corresponding server. You don't have to worry about silly
1186network terminators here because Unix domain sockets are guaranteed
1187to be on the localhost, and thus everything works right.
4633a7c4
LW
1188
1189 #!/usr/bin/perl -Tw
4633a7c4
LW
1190 use strict;
1191 use Socket;
1192 use Carp;
1193
cf21866a 1194 BEGIN { $ENV{PATH} = "/usr/bin:/bin" }
5865a7df 1195 sub spawn; # forward declaration
cf21866a 1196 sub logmsg { print "$0 $$: @_ at ", scalar localtime(), "\n" }
4633a7c4 1197
cf21866a 1198 my $NAME = "catsock";
4633a7c4 1199 my $uaddr = sockaddr_un($NAME);
cf21866a 1200 my $proto = getprotobyname("tcp");
4633a7c4 1201
cf21866a 1202 socket(Server, PF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0) || die "socket: $!";
4633a7c4 1203 unlink($NAME);
322c2516 1204 bind (Server, $uaddr) || die "bind: $!";
cf21866a 1205 listen(Server, SOMAXCONN) || die "listen: $!";
4633a7c4
LW
1206
1207 logmsg "server started on $NAME";
1208
5a964f20
TC
1209 my $waitedpid;
1210
816229cf 1211 use POSIX ":sys_wait_h";
5a964f20 1212 sub REAPER {
322c2516 1213 my $child;
cf21866a
TC
1214 while (($waitedpid = waitpid(-1, WNOHANG)) > 0) {
1215 logmsg "reaped $waitedpid" . ($? ? " with exit $?" : "");
322c2516
SF
1216 }
1217 $SIG{CHLD} = \&REAPER; # loathe SysV
5a964f20
TC
1218 }
1219
4633a7c4
LW
1220 $SIG{CHLD} = \&REAPER;
1221
5a964f20 1222
54310121 1223 for ( $waitedpid = 0;
cf21866a 1224 accept(Client, Server) || $waitedpid;
322c2516 1225 $waitedpid = 0, close Client)
4633a7c4 1226 {
322c2516
SF
1227 next if $waitedpid;
1228 logmsg "connection on $NAME";
1229 spawn sub {
cf21866a
TC
1230 print "Hello there, it's now ", scalar localtime(), "\n";
1231 exec("/usr/games/fortune") || die "can't exec fortune: $!";
322c2516 1232 };
54310121 1233 }
4633a7c4 1234
5865a7df 1235 sub spawn {
cf21866a 1236 my $coderef = shift();
322c2516 1237
cf21866a 1238 unless (@_ == 0 && $coderef && ref($coderef) eq "CODE") {
322c2516
SF
1239 confess "usage: spawn CODEREF";
1240 }
1241
1242 my $pid;
cf21866a 1243 unless (defined($pid = fork())) {
322c2516
SF
1244 logmsg "cannot fork: $!";
1245 return;
82f82fdb 1246 }
cf21866a 1247 elsif ($pid) {
322c2516
SF
1248 logmsg "begat $pid";
1249 return; # I'm the parent
82f82fdb 1250 }
cf21866a
TC
1251 else {
1252 # I'm the child -- go spawn
322c2516 1253 }
322c2516 1254
cf21866a
TC
1255 open(STDIN, "<&Client") || die "can't dup client to stdin";
1256 open(STDOUT, ">&Client") || die "can't dup client to stdout";
322c2516 1257 ## open(STDERR, ">&STDOUT") || die "can't dup stdout to stderr";
cf21866a 1258 exit($coderef->());
5865a7df
NC
1259 }
1260
4633a7c4
LW
1261As you see, it's remarkably similar to the Internet domain TCP server, so
1262much so, in fact, that we've omitted several duplicate functions--spawn(),
cf21866a 1263logmsg(), ctime(), and REAPER()--which are the same as in the other server.
4633a7c4
LW
1264
1265So why would you ever want to use a Unix domain socket instead of a
1266simpler named pipe? Because a named pipe doesn't give you sessions. You
1267can't tell one process's data from another's. With socket programming,
cf21866a 1268you get a separate session for each client; that's why accept() takes two
4633a7c4
LW
1269arguments.
1270
cf21866a
TC
1271For example, let's say that you have a long-running database server daemon
1272that you want folks to be able to access from the Web, but only
4633a7c4
LW
1273if they go through a CGI interface. You'd have a small, simple CGI
1274program that does whatever checks and logging you feel like, and then acts
1275as a Unix-domain client and connects to your private server.
1276
7b05b7e3
TC
1277=head1 TCP Clients with IO::Socket
1278
1279For those preferring a higher-level interface to socket programming, the
e6aa8b84
BF
1280IO::Socket module provides an object-oriented approach. If for some reason
1281you lack this module, you can just fetch IO::Socket from CPAN, where you'll also
cf21866a
TC
1282find modules providing easy interfaces to the following systems: DNS, FTP,
1283Ident (RFC 931), NIS and NISPlus, NNTP, Ping, POP3, SMTP, SNMP, SSLeay,
1284Telnet, and Time--to name just a few.
7b05b7e3
TC
1285
1286=head2 A Simple Client
1287
1288Here's a client that creates a TCP connection to the "daytime"
1289service at port 13 of the host name "localhost" and prints out everything
1290that the server there cares to provide.
1291
1292 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
1293 use IO::Socket;
1294 $remote = IO::Socket::INET->new(
322c2516
SF
1295 Proto => "tcp",
1296 PeerAddr => "localhost",
1297 PeerPort => "daytime(13)",
1298 )
cf21866a
TC
1299 || die "can't connect to daytime service on localhost";
1300 while (<$remote>) { print }
7b05b7e3
TC
1301
1302When you run this program, you should get something back that
1303looks like this:
1304
1305 Wed May 14 08:40:46 MDT 1997
1306
cf21866a 1307Here are what those parameters to the new() constructor mean:
7b05b7e3 1308
13a2d996 1309=over 4
7b05b7e3
TC
1310
1311=item C<Proto>
1312
1313This is which protocol to use. In this case, the socket handle returned
1314will be connected to a TCP socket, because we want a stream-oriented
1315connection, that is, one that acts pretty much like a plain old file.
1316Not all sockets are this of this type. For example, the UDP protocol
1317can be used to make a datagram socket, used for message-passing.
1318
1319=item C<PeerAddr>
1320
1321This is the name or Internet address of the remote host the server is
1322running on. We could have specified a longer name like C<"www.perl.com">,
cf21866a 1323or an address like C<"207.171.7.72">. For demonstration purposes, we've
7b05b7e3
TC
1324used the special hostname C<"localhost">, which should always mean the
1325current machine you're running on. The corresponding Internet address
cf21866a 1326for localhost is C<"127.0.0.1">, if you'd rather use that.
7b05b7e3
TC
1327
1328=item C<PeerPort>
1329
1330This is the service name or port number we'd like to connect to.
1331We could have gotten away with using just C<"daytime"> on systems with a
1332well-configured system services file,[FOOTNOTE: The system services file
cf21866a
TC
1333is found in I</etc/services> under Unixy systems.] but here we've specified the
1334port number (13) in parentheses. Using just the number would have also
1335worked, but numeric literals make careful programmers nervous.
7b05b7e3
TC
1336
1337=back
1338
1339Notice how the return value from the C<new> constructor is used as
cf21866a
TC
1340a filehandle in the C<while> loop? That's what's called an I<indirect
1341filehandle>, a scalar variable containing a filehandle. You can use
7b05b7e3
TC
1342it the same way you would a normal filehandle. For example, you
1343can read one line from it this way:
1344
1345 $line = <$handle>;
1346
1347all remaining lines from is this way:
1348
1349 @lines = <$handle>;
1350
1351and send a line of data to it this way:
1352
1353 print $handle "some data\n";
1354
1355=head2 A Webget Client
1356
1357Here's a simple client that takes a remote host to fetch a document
cf21866a 1358from, and then a list of files to get from that host. This is a
7b05b7e3
TC
1359more interesting client than the previous one because it first sends
1360something to the server before fetching the server's response.
1361
1362 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
1363 use IO::Socket;
cf21866a 1364 unless (@ARGV > 1) { die "usage: $0 host url ..." }
7b05b7e3 1365 $host = shift(@ARGV);
5a964f20
TC
1366 $EOL = "\015\012";
1367 $BLANK = $EOL x 2;
cf21866a 1368 for my $document (@ARGV) {
322c2516
SF
1369 $remote = IO::Socket::INET->new( Proto => "tcp",
1370 PeerAddr => $host,
1371 PeerPort => "http(80)",
cf21866a 1372 ) || die "cannot connect to httpd on $host";
322c2516
SF
1373 $remote->autoflush(1);
1374 print $remote "GET $document HTTP/1.0" . $BLANK;
1375 while ( <$remote> ) { print }
1376 close $remote;
7b05b7e3
TC
1377 }
1378
cf21866a
TC
1379The web server handling the HTTP service is assumed to be at
1380its standard port, number 80. If the server you're trying to
1381connect to is at a different port, like 1080 or 8080, you should specify it
c47ff5f1 1382as the named-parameter pair, C<< PeerPort => 8080 >>. The C<autoflush>
7b05b7e3 1383method is used on the socket because otherwise the system would buffer
cf21866a
TC
1384up the output we sent it. (If you're on a prehistoric Mac, you'll also
1385need to change every C<"\n"> in your code that sends data over the network
1386to be a C<"\015\012"> instead.)
7b05b7e3
TC
1387
1388Connecting to the server is only the first part of the process: once you
1389have the connection, you have to use the server's language. Each server
1390on the network has its own little command language that it expects as
1391input. The string that we send to the server starting with "GET" is in
1392HTTP syntax. In this case, we simply request each specified document.
1393Yes, we really are making a new connection for each document, even though
1394it's the same host. That's the way you always used to have to speak HTTP.
1395Recent versions of web browsers may request that the remote server leave
1396the connection open a little while, but the server doesn't have to honor
1397such a request.
1398
1399Here's an example of running that program, which we'll call I<webget>:
1400
5a964f20 1401 % webget www.perl.com /guanaco.html
7b05b7e3
TC
1402 HTTP/1.1 404 File Not Found
1403 Date: Thu, 08 May 1997 18:02:32 GMT
1404 Server: Apache/1.2b6
1405 Connection: close
1406 Content-type: text/html
1407
1408 <HEAD><TITLE>404 File Not Found</TITLE></HEAD>
1409 <BODY><H1>File Not Found</H1>
1410 The requested URL /guanaco.html was not found on this server.<P>
1411 </BODY>
1412
1413Ok, so that's not very interesting, because it didn't find that
1414particular document. But a long response wouldn't have fit on this page.
1415
cf21866a 1416For a more featureful version of this program, you should look to
7b05b7e3
TC
1417the I<lwp-request> program included with the LWP modules from CPAN.
1418
1419=head2 Interactive Client with IO::Socket
1420
1421Well, that's all fine if you want to send one command and get one answer,
1422but what about setting up something fully interactive, somewhat like
1423the way I<telnet> works? That way you can type a line, get the answer,
1424type a line, get the answer, etc.
1425
1426This client is more complicated than the two we've done so far, but if
1427you're on a system that supports the powerful C<fork> call, the solution
1428isn't that rough. Once you've made the connection to whatever service
1429you'd like to chat with, call C<fork> to clone your process. Each of
1430these two identical process has a very simple job to do: the parent
1431copies everything from the socket to standard output, while the child
1432simultaneously copies everything from standard input to the socket.
1433To accomplish the same thing using just one process would be I<much>
1434harder, because it's easier to code two processes to do one thing than it
1435is to code one process to do two things. (This keep-it-simple principle
5a964f20
TC
1436a cornerstones of the Unix philosophy, and good software engineering as
1437well, which is probably why it's spread to other systems.)
7b05b7e3
TC
1438
1439Here's the code:
1440
1441 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
1442 use strict;
1443 use IO::Socket;
1444 my ($host, $port, $kidpid, $handle, $line);
1445
1446 unless (@ARGV == 2) { die "usage: $0 host port" }
1447 ($host, $port) = @ARGV;
1448
1449 # create a tcp connection to the specified host and port
1450 $handle = IO::Socket::INET->new(Proto => "tcp",
322c2516
SF
1451 PeerAddr => $host,
1452 PeerPort => $port)
cf21866a 1453 || die "can't connect to port $port on $host: $!";
7b05b7e3 1454
cf21866a 1455 $handle->autoflush(1); # so output gets there right away
7b05b7e3
TC
1456 print STDERR "[Connected to $host:$port]\n";
1457
1458 # split the program into two processes, identical twins
1459 die "can't fork: $!" unless defined($kidpid = fork());
1460
1461 # the if{} block runs only in the parent process
1462 if ($kidpid) {
322c2516
SF
1463 # copy the socket to standard output
1464 while (defined ($line = <$handle>)) {
1465 print STDOUT $line;
1466 }
cf21866a 1467 kill("TERM", $kidpid); # send SIGTERM to child
7b05b7e3
TC
1468 }
1469 # the else{} block runs only in the child process
1470 else {
322c2516
SF
1471 # copy standard input to the socket
1472 while (defined ($line = <STDIN>)) {
1473 print $handle $line;
1474 }
cf21866a 1475 exit(0); # just in case
7b05b7e3
TC
1476 }
1477
1478The C<kill> function in the parent's C<if> block is there to send a
cf21866a 1479signal to our child process, currently running in the C<else> block,
7b05b7e3
TC
1480as soon as the remote server has closed its end of the connection.
1481
7b05b7e3
TC
1482If the remote server sends data a byte at time, and you need that
1483data immediately without waiting for a newline (which might not happen),
1484you may wish to replace the C<while> loop in the parent with the
1485following:
1486
1487 my $byte;
1488 while (sysread($handle, $byte, 1) == 1) {
322c2516 1489 print STDOUT $byte;
7b05b7e3
TC
1490 }
1491
1492Making a system call for each byte you want to read is not very efficient
1493(to put it mildly) but is the simplest to explain and works reasonably
1494well.
1495
1496=head1 TCP Servers with IO::Socket
1497
5a964f20 1498As always, setting up a server is little bit more involved than running a client.
7b05b7e3
TC
1499The model is that the server creates a special kind of socket that
1500does nothing but listen on a particular port for incoming connections.
c47ff5f1 1501It does this by calling the C<< IO::Socket::INET->new() >> method with
7b05b7e3
TC
1502slightly different arguments than the client did.
1503
13a2d996 1504=over 4
7b05b7e3
TC
1505
1506=item Proto
1507
1508This is which protocol to use. Like our clients, we'll
1509still specify C<"tcp"> here.
1510
1511=item LocalPort
1512
1513We specify a local
1514port in the C<LocalPort> argument, which we didn't do for the client.
1515This is service name or port number for which you want to be the
1516server. (Under Unix, ports under 1024 are restricted to the
1517superuser.) In our sample, we'll use port 9000, but you can use
1518any port that's not currently in use on your system. If you try
1519to use one already in used, you'll get an "Address already in use"
19799a22 1520message. Under Unix, the C<netstat -a> command will show
7b05b7e3
TC
1521which services current have servers.
1522
1523=item Listen
1524
1525The C<Listen> parameter is set to the maximum number of
1526pending connections we can accept until we turn away incoming clients.
1527Think of it as a call-waiting queue for your telephone.
1528The low-level Socket module has a special symbol for the system maximum, which
1529is SOMAXCONN.
1530
1531=item Reuse
1532
1533The C<Reuse> parameter is needed so that we restart our server
1534manually without waiting a few minutes to allow system buffers to
1535clear out.
1536
1537=back
1538
1539Once the generic server socket has been created using the parameters
1540listed above, the server then waits for a new client to connect
d1be9408
JF
1541to it. The server blocks in the C<accept> method, which eventually accepts a
1542bidirectional connection from the remote client. (Make sure to autoflush
7b05b7e3
TC
1543this handle to circumvent buffering.)
1544
1545To add to user-friendliness, our server prompts the user for commands.
1546Most servers don't do this. Because of the prompt without a newline,
1547you'll have to use the C<sysread> variant of the interactive client above.
1548
cf21866a
TC
1549This server accepts one of five different commands, sending output back to
1550the client. Unlike most network servers, this one handles only one
5e220227 1551incoming client at a time. Multitasking servers are covered in
faa783ac 1552Chapter 16 of the Camel.
7b05b7e3
TC
1553
1554Here's the code. We'll
1555
1556 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
1557 use IO::Socket;
cf21866a 1558 use Net::hostent; # for OOish version of gethostbyaddr
7b05b7e3 1559
322c2516 1560 $PORT = 9000; # pick something not in use
7b05b7e3 1561
cf21866a 1562 $server = IO::Socket::INET->new( Proto => "tcp",
7b05b7e3
TC
1563 LocalPort => $PORT,
1564 Listen => SOMAXCONN,
1565 Reuse => 1);
1566
1567 die "can't setup server" unless $server;
1568 print "[Server $0 accepting clients]\n";
1569
1570 while ($client = $server->accept()) {
1571 $client->autoflush(1);
1572 print $client "Welcome to $0; type help for command list.\n";
1573 $hostinfo = gethostbyaddr($client->peeraddr);
78fc38e1 1574 printf "[Connect from %s]\n", $hostinfo ? $hostinfo->name : $client->peerhost;
7b05b7e3
TC
1575 print $client "Command? ";
1576 while ( <$client>) {
322c2516 1577 next unless /\S/; # blank line
cf21866a
TC
1578 if (/quit|exit/i) { last }
1579 elsif (/date|time/i) { printf $client "%s\n", scalar localtime() }
1580 elsif (/who/i ) { print $client `who 2>&1` }
1581 elsif (/cookie/i ) { print $client `/usr/games/fortune 2>&1` }
1582 elsif (/motd/i ) { print $client `cat /etc/motd 2>&1` }
7b05b7e3
TC
1583 else {
1584 print $client "Commands: quit date who cookie motd\n";
1585 }
1586 } continue {
1587 print $client "Command? ";
1588 }
1589 close $client;
1590 }
1591
1592=head1 UDP: Message Passing
4633a7c4
LW
1593
1594Another kind of client-server setup is one that uses not connections, but
1595messages. UDP communications involve much lower overhead but also provide
1596less reliability, as there are no promises that messages will arrive at
1597all, let alone in order and unmangled. Still, UDP offers some advantages
1598over TCP, including being able to "broadcast" or "multicast" to a whole
1599bunch of destination hosts at once (usually on your local subnet). If you
1600find yourself overly concerned about reliability and start building checks
6a3992aa 1601into your message system, then you probably should use just TCP to start
4633a7c4
LW
1602with.
1603
cf21866a
TC
1604UDP datagrams are I<not> a bytestream and should not be treated as such.
1605This makes using I/O mechanisms with internal buffering like stdio (i.e.
1606print() and friends) especially cumbersome. Use syswrite(), or better
1607send(), like in the example below.
90034919 1608
4633a7c4 1609Here's a UDP program similar to the sample Internet TCP client given
7b05b7e3 1610earlier. However, instead of checking one host at a time, the UDP version
4633a7c4
LW
1611will check many of them asynchronously by simulating a multicast and then
1612using select() to do a timed-out wait for I/O. To do something similar
1613with TCP, you'd have to use a different socket handle for each host.
1614
1615 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
1616 use strict;
4633a7c4
LW
1617 use Socket;
1618 use Sys::Hostname;
1619
54310121 1620 my ( $count, $hisiaddr, $hispaddr, $histime,
322c2516 1621 $host, $iaddr, $paddr, $port, $proto,
cf21866a 1622 $rin, $rout, $rtime, $SECS_OF_70_YEARS);
4633a7c4 1623
cf21866a 1624 $SECS_OF_70_YEARS = 2_208_988_800;
4633a7c4
LW
1625
1626 $iaddr = gethostbyname(hostname());
cf21866a
TC
1627 $proto = getprotobyname("udp");
1628 $port = getservbyname("time", "udp");
4633a7c4
LW
1629 $paddr = sockaddr_in(0, $iaddr); # 0 means let kernel pick
1630
1631 socket(SOCKET, PF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, $proto) || die "socket: $!";
1632 bind(SOCKET, $paddr) || die "bind: $!";
1633
1634 $| = 1;
cf21866a 1635 printf "%-12s %8s %s\n", "localhost", 0, scalar localtime();
4633a7c4
LW
1636 $count = 0;
1637 for $host (@ARGV) {
322c2516 1638 $count++;
cf21866a 1639 $hisiaddr = inet_aton($host) || die "unknown host";
322c2516
SF
1640 $hispaddr = sockaddr_in($port, $hisiaddr);
1641 defined(send(SOCKET, 0, 0, $hispaddr)) || die "send $host: $!";
4633a7c4
LW
1642 }
1643
cf21866a 1644 $rin = "";
4633a7c4
LW
1645 vec($rin, fileno(SOCKET), 1) = 1;
1646
1647 # timeout after 10.0 seconds
1648 while ($count && select($rout = $rin, undef, undef, 10.0)) {
cf21866a
TC
1649 $rtime = "";
1650 $hispaddr = recv(SOCKET, $rtime, 4, 0) || die "recv: $!";
322c2516
SF
1651 ($port, $hisiaddr) = sockaddr_in($hispaddr);
1652 $host = gethostbyaddr($hisiaddr, AF_INET);
cf21866a 1653 $histime = unpack("N", $rtime) - $SECS_OF_70_YEARS;
322c2516 1654 printf "%-12s ", $host;
cf21866a 1655 printf "%8d %s\n", $histime - time(), scalar localtime($histime);
322c2516 1656 $count--;
4633a7c4
LW
1657 }
1658
cf21866a
TC
1659This example does not include any retries and may consequently fail to
1660contact a reachable host. The most prominent reason for this is congestion
1661of the queues on the sending host if the number of hosts to contact is
1662sufficiently large.
90034919 1663
4633a7c4
LW
1664=head1 SysV IPC
1665
1666While System V IPC isn't so widely used as sockets, it still has some
cf21866a
TC
1667interesting uses. However, you cannot use SysV IPC or Berkeley mmap() to
1668have a variable shared amongst several processes. That's because Perl
1669would reallocate your string when you weren't wanting it to. You might
1670look into the C<IPC::Shareable> or C<threads::shared> modules for that.
4633a7c4 1671
54310121 1672Here's a small example showing shared memory usage.
a0d0e21e 1673
7b34eba2 1674 use IPC::SysV qw(IPC_PRIVATE IPC_RMID S_IRUSR S_IWUSR);
0ade1984 1675
a0d0e21e 1676 $size = 2000;
cf21866a
TC
1677 $id = shmget(IPC_PRIVATE, $size, S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR);
1678 defined($id) || die "shmget: $!";
41d6edb2 1679 print "shm key $id\n";
a0d0e21e
LW
1680
1681 $message = "Message #1";
cf21866a 1682 shmwrite($id, $message, 0, 60) || die "shmwrite: $!";
0ade1984 1683 print "wrote: '$message'\n";
cf21866a 1684 shmread($id, $buff, 0, 60) || die "shmread: $!";
0ade1984 1685 print "read : '$buff'\n";
a0d0e21e 1686
0ade1984 1687 # the buffer of shmread is zero-character end-padded.
b18b5ffd 1688 substr($buff, index($buff, "\0")) = "";
0ade1984
JH
1689 print "un" unless $buff eq $message;
1690 print "swell\n";
a0d0e21e 1691
41d6edb2 1692 print "deleting shm $id\n";
cf21866a 1693 shmctl($id, IPC_RMID, 0) || die "shmctl: $!";
a0d0e21e
LW
1694
1695Here's an example of a semaphore:
1696
0ade1984
JH
1697 use IPC::SysV qw(IPC_CREAT);
1698
a0d0e21e 1699 $IPC_KEY = 1234;
cf21866a 1700 $id = semget($IPC_KEY, 10, 0666 | IPC_CREAT);
3389bcf7
JL
1701 defined($id) || die "semget: $!";
1702 print "sem id $id\n";
a0d0e21e 1703
a2eb9003 1704Put this code in a separate file to be run in more than one process.
a0d0e21e
LW
1705Call the file F<take>:
1706
1707 # create a semaphore
1708
1709 $IPC_KEY = 1234;
cf21866a 1710 $id = semget($IPC_KEY, 0, 0);
3389bcf7 1711 defined($id) || die "semget: $!";
a0d0e21e 1712
cf21866a 1713 $semnum = 0;
a0d0e21e
LW
1714 $semflag = 0;
1715
cf21866a 1716 # "take" semaphore
a0d0e21e
LW
1717 # wait for semaphore to be zero
1718 $semop = 0;
41d6edb2 1719 $opstring1 = pack("s!s!s!", $semnum, $semop, $semflag);
a0d0e21e
LW
1720
1721 # Increment the semaphore count
1722 $semop = 1;
41d6edb2 1723 $opstring2 = pack("s!s!s!", $semnum, $semop, $semflag);
cf21866a 1724 $opstring = $opstring1 . $opstring2;
a0d0e21e 1725
cf21866a 1726 semop($id, $opstring) || die "semop: $!";
a0d0e21e 1727
a2eb9003 1728Put this code in a separate file to be run in more than one process.
a0d0e21e
LW
1729Call this file F<give>:
1730
cf21866a 1731 # "give" the semaphore
a0d0e21e
LW
1732 # run this in the original process and you will see
1733 # that the second process continues
1734
1735 $IPC_KEY = 1234;
41d6edb2 1736 $id = semget($IPC_KEY, 0, 0);
cf21866a 1737 die unless defined($id);
a0d0e21e 1738
cf21866a 1739 $semnum = 0;
a0d0e21e
LW
1740 $semflag = 0;
1741
1742 # Decrement the semaphore count
1743 $semop = -1;
41d6edb2 1744 $opstring = pack("s!s!s!", $semnum, $semop, $semflag);
a0d0e21e 1745
cf21866a 1746 semop($id, $opstring) || die "semop: $!";
a0d0e21e 1747
7b05b7e3 1748The SysV IPC code above was written long ago, and it's definitely
e6aa8b84 1749clunky looking. For a more modern look, see the IPC::SysV module.
4633a7c4 1750
41d6edb2
JH
1751A small example demonstrating SysV message queues:
1752
7b34eba2 1753 use IPC::SysV qw(IPC_PRIVATE IPC_RMID IPC_CREAT S_IRUSR S_IWUSR);
41d6edb2 1754
7b34eba2 1755 my $id = msgget(IPC_PRIVATE, IPC_CREAT | S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR);
cf21866a 1756 defined($id) || die "msgget failed: $!";
41d6edb2 1757
cf21866a 1758 my $sent = "message";
e343e2e2 1759 my $type_sent = 1234;
cf21866a
TC
1760
1761 msgsnd($id, pack("l! a*", $type_sent, $sent), 0)
1762 || die "msgsnd failed: $!";
1763
1764 msgrcv($id, my $rcvd_buf, 60, 0, 0)
1765 || die "msgrcv failed: $!";
1766
1767 my($type_rcvd, $rcvd) = unpack("l! a*", $rcvd_buf);
1768
1769 if ($rcvd eq $sent) {
1770 print "okay\n";
41d6edb2 1771 } else {
cf21866a 1772 print "not okay\n";
41d6edb2
JH
1773 }
1774
cf21866a
TC
1775 msgctl($id, IPC_RMID, 0) || die "msgctl failed: $!\n";
1776
4633a7c4
LW
1777=head1 NOTES
1778
5a964f20
TC
1779Most of these routines quietly but politely return C<undef> when they
1780fail instead of causing your program to die right then and there due to
1781an uncaught exception. (Actually, some of the new I<Socket> conversion
cf21866a 1782functions do croak() on bad arguments.) It is therefore essential to
5a964f20 1783check return values from these functions. Always begin your socket
cf21866a
TC
1784programs this way for optimal success, and don't forget to add the B<-T>
1785taint-checking flag to the C<#!> line for servers:
4633a7c4 1786
5a964f20 1787 #!/usr/bin/perl -Tw
4633a7c4
LW
1788 use strict;
1789 use sigtrap;
1790 use Socket;
1791
1792=head1 BUGS
1793
cf21866a 1794These routines all create system-specific portability problems. As noted
4633a7c4 1795elsewhere, Perl is at the mercy of your C libraries for much of its system
cf21866a 1796behavior. It's probably safest to assume broken SysV semantics for
6a3992aa 1797signals and to stick with simple TCP and UDP socket operations; e.g., don't
a2eb9003 1798try to pass open file descriptors over a local UDP datagram socket if you
4633a7c4
LW
1799want your code to stand a chance of being portable.
1800
4633a7c4
LW
1801=head1 AUTHOR
1802
1803Tom Christiansen, with occasional vestiges of Larry Wall's original
7b05b7e3 1804version and suggestions from the Perl Porters.
4633a7c4
LW
1805
1806=head1 SEE ALSO
1807
7b05b7e3
TC
1808There's a lot more to networking than this, but this should get you
1809started.
1810
cf21866a
TC
1811For intrepid programmers, the indispensable textbook is I<Unix Network
1812Programming, 2nd Edition, Volume 1> by W. Richard Stevens (published by
1813Prentice-Hall). Most books on networking address the subject from the
1814perspective of a C programmer; translation to Perl is left as an exercise
1815for the reader.
7b05b7e3
TC
1816
1817The IO::Socket(3) manpage describes the object library, and the Socket(3)
1818manpage describes the low-level interface to sockets. Besides the obvious
cf21866a
TC
1819functions in L<perlfunc>, you should also check out the F<modules> file at
1820your nearest CPAN site, especially
82f82fdb 1821L<http://www.cpan.org/modules/00modlist.long.html#ID5_Networking_>.
cf21866a 1822See L<perlmodlib> or best yet, the F<Perl FAQ> for a description
82f82fdb 1823of what CPAN is and where to get it if the previous link doesn't work
cf21866a
TC
1824for you.
1825
1826Section 5 of CPAN's F<modules> file is devoted to "Networking, Device
1827Control (modems), and Interprocess Communication", and contains numerous
1828unbundled modules numerous networking modules, Chat and Expect operations,
1829CGI programming, DCE, FTP, IPC, NNTP, Proxy, Ptty, RPC, SNMP, SMTP, Telnet,
1830Threads, and ToolTalk--to name just a few.