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1=head1 NAME
2
3perlclib - Internal replacements for standard C library functions
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7One thing Perl porters should note is that F<perl> doesn't tend to use that
8much of the C standard library internally; you'll see very little use of,
9for example, the F<ctype.h> functions in there. This is because Perl
10tends to reimplement or abstract standard library functions, so that we
11know exactly how they're going to operate.
12
13This is a reference card for people who are familiar with the C library
56d22bd2 14and who want to do things the Perl way; to tell them which functions
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15they ought to use instead of the more normal C functions.
16
17=head2 Conventions
18
19In the following tables:
20
21=over 3
22
23=item C<t>
24
25is a type.
26
27=item C<p>
28
29is a pointer.
30
31=item C<n>
32
33is a number.
34
35=item C<s>
36
37is a string.
38
39=back
40
41C<sv>, C<av>, C<hv>, etc. represent variables of their respective types.
42
43=head2 File Operations
44
45Instead of the F<stdio.h> functions, you should use the Perl abstraction
46layer. Instead of C<FILE*> types, you need to be handling C<PerlIO*>
56d22bd2 47types. Don't forget that with the new PerlIO layered I/O abstraction
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48C<FILE*> types may not even be available. See also the C<perlapio>
49documentation for more information about the following functions:
50
5b282140 51 Instead Of: Use:
56d22bd2 52
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53 stdin PerlIO_stdin()
54 stdout PerlIO_stdout()
55 stderr PerlIO_stderr()
f40a6c71 56
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57 fopen(fn, mode) PerlIO_open(fn, mode)
58 freopen(fn, mode, stream) PerlIO_reopen(fn, mode, perlio) (Dep-
59 recated)
60 fflush(stream) PerlIO_flush(perlio)
61 fclose(stream) PerlIO_close(perlio)
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62
63=head2 File Input and Output
64
5b282140 65 Instead Of: Use:
f40a6c71 66
5b282140 67 fprintf(stream, fmt, ...) PerlIO_printf(perlio, fmt, ...)
f40a6c71 68
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69 [f]getc(stream) PerlIO_getc(perlio)
70 [f]putc(stream, n) PerlIO_putc(perlio, n)
71 ungetc(n, stream) PerlIO_ungetc(perlio, n)
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72
73Note that the PerlIO equivalents of C<fread> and C<fwrite> are slightly
74different from their C library counterparts:
75
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76 fread(p, size, n, stream) PerlIO_read(perlio, buf, numbytes)
77 fwrite(p, size, n, stream) PerlIO_write(perlio, buf, numbytes)
f40a6c71 78
5b282140 79 fputs(s, stream) PerlIO_puts(perlio, s)
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80
81There is no equivalent to C<fgets>; one should use C<sv_gets> instead:
82
5b282140 83 fgets(s, n, stream) sv_gets(sv, perlio, append)
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84
85=head2 File Positioning
86
5b282140 87 Instead Of: Use:
f40a6c71 88
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89 feof(stream) PerlIO_eof(perlio)
90 fseek(stream, n, whence) PerlIO_seek(perlio, n, whence)
91 rewind(stream) PerlIO_rewind(perlio)
f40a6c71 92
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93 fgetpos(stream, p) PerlIO_getpos(perlio, sv)
94 fsetpos(stream, p) PerlIO_setpos(perlio, sv)
f40a6c71 95
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96 ferror(stream) PerlIO_error(perlio)
97 clearerr(stream) PerlIO_clearerr(perlio)
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98
99=head2 Memory Management and String Handling
100
5b282140 101 Instead Of: Use:
702eb6d0 102
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103 t* p = malloc(n) Newx(p, n, t)
104 t* p = calloc(n, s) Newxz(p, n, t)
105 p = realloc(p, n) Renew(p, n, t)
106 memcpy(dst, src, n) Copy(src, dst, n, t)
107 memmove(dst, src, n) Move(src, dst, n, t)
108 memcpy(dst, src, sizeof(t)) StructCopy(src, dst, t)
109 memset(dst, 0, n * sizeof(t)) Zero(dst, n, t)
110 memzero(dst, 0) Zero(dst, n, char)
111 free(p) Safefree(p)
f40a6c71 112
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113 strdup(p) savepv(p)
114 strndup(p, n) savepvn(p, n) (Hey, strndup doesn't
115 exist!)
f40a6c71 116
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117 strstr(big, little) instr(big, little)
118 strcmp(s1, s2) strLE(s1, s2) / strEQ(s1, s2)
119 / strGT(s1,s2)
120 strncmp(s1, s2, n) strnNE(s1, s2, n) / strnEQ(s1, s2, n)
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121
122Notice the different order of arguments to C<Copy> and C<Move> than used
123in C<memcpy> and C<memmove>.
124
125Most of the time, though, you'll want to be dealing with SVs internally
126instead of raw C<char *> strings:
127
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128 strlen(s) sv_len(sv)
129 strcpy(dt, src) sv_setpv(sv, s)
130 strncpy(dt, src, n) sv_setpvn(sv, s, n)
131 strcat(dt, src) sv_catpv(sv, s)
132 strncat(dt, src) sv_catpvn(sv, s)
133 sprintf(s, fmt, ...) sv_setpvf(sv, fmt, ...)
f40a6c71 134
328bf373 135Note also the existence of C<sv_catpvf> and C<sv_vcatpvfn>, combining
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136concatenation with formatting.
137
9f653bb5 138Sometimes instead of zeroing the allocated heap by using Newxz() you
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139should consider "poisoning" the data. This means writing a bit
140pattern into it that should be illegal as pointers (and floating point
141numbers), and also hopefully surprising enough as integers, so that
142any code attempting to use the data without forethought will break
143sooner rather than later. Poisoning can be done using the Poison()
ea787f3b 144macros, which have similar arguments to Zero():
9965345d 145
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146 PoisonWith(dst, n, t, b) scribble memory with byte b
147 PoisonNew(dst, n, t) equal to PoisonWith(dst, n, t, 0xAB)
148 PoisonFree(dst, n, t) equal to PoisonWith(dst, n, t, 0xEF)
149 Poison(dst, n, t) equal to PoisonFree(dst, n, t)
9965345d 150
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151=head2 Character Class Tests
152
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153There are several types of character class tests that Perl implements.
154The only ones described here are those that directly correspond to C
155library functions that operate on 8-bit characters, but there are
156equivalents that operate on wide characters, and UTF-8 encoded strings.
dcccc8ff 157All are more fully described in L<perlapi/Character classification> and
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158L<perlapi/Character case changing>.
159
160The C library routines listed in the table below return values based on
161the current locale. Use the entries in the final column for that
162functionality. The other two columns always assume a POSIX (or C)
163locale. The entries in the ASCII column are only meaningful for ASCII
164inputs, returning FALSE for anything else. Use these only when you
165B<know> that is what you want. The entries in the Latin1 column assume
166that the non-ASCII 8-bit characters are as Unicode defines, them, the
167same as ISO-8859-1, often called Latin 1.
168
169 Instead Of: Use for ASCII: Use for Latin1: Use for locale:
170
171 isalnum(c) isALPHANUMERIC(c) isALPHANUMERIC_L1(c) isALPHANUMERIC_LC(c)
172 isalpha(c) isALPHA(c) isALPHA_L1(c) isALPHA_LC(u )
173 isascii(c) isASCII(c) isASCII_LC(c)
174 isblank(c) isBLANK(c) isBLANK_L1(c) isBLANK_LC(c)
175 iscntrl(c) isCNTRL(c) isCNTRL_L1(c) isCNTRL_LC(c)
176 isdigit(c) isDIGIT(c) isDIGIT_L1(c) isDIGIT_LC(c)
177 isgraph(c) isGRAPH(c) isGRAPH_L1(c) isGRAPH_LC(c)
178 islower(c) isLOWER(c) isLOWER_L1(c) isLOWER_LC(c)
179 isprint(c) isPRINT(c) isPRINT_L1(c) isPRINT_LC(c)
180 ispunct(c) isPUNCT(c) isPUNCT_L1(c) isPUNCT_LC(c)
181 isspace(c) isSPACE(c) isSPACE_L1(c) isSPACE_LC(c)
182 isupper(c) isUPPER(c) isUPPER_L1(c) isUPPER_LC(c)
183 isxdigit(c) isXDIGIT(c) isXDIGIT_L1(c) isXDIGIT_LC(c)
184
185 tolower(c) toLOWER(c) toLOWER_L1(c) toLOWER_LC(c)
186 toupper(c) toUPPER(c) toUPPER_LC(c)
187
188To emphasize that you are operating only on ASCII characters, you can
189append C<_A> to each of the macros in the ASCII column: C<isALPHA_A>,
190C<isDIGIT_A>, and so on.
191
192(There is no entry in the Latin1 column for C<isascii> even though there
193is an C<isASCII_L1>, which is identical to C<isASCII>; the
194latter name is clearer. There is no entry in the Latin1 column for
195C<toupper> because the result can be non-Latin1. You have to use
196C<toUPPER_uni>, as described in L<perlapi/Character case changing>.)
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197
198=head2 F<stdlib.h> functions
199
5b282140 200 Instead Of: Use:
f40a6c71 201
5b282140 202 atof(s) Atof(s)
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203 atoi(s) grok_atou(s, &e)
204 atol(s) grok_atou(s, &e)
5b282140 205 strtod(s, &p) Nothing. Just don't use it.
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206 strtol(s, &p, n) grok_atou(s, &e)
207 strtoul(s, &p, n) grok_atou(s, &e)
f40a6c71 208
53305cf1 209Notice also the C<grok_bin>, C<grok_hex>, and C<grok_oct> functions in
2826e23d 210F<numeric.c> for converting strings representing numbers in the respective
338aa8b0 211bases into C<NV>s. Note that grok_atou() doesn't handle negative inputs,
e05c5d08 212or leading whitespace (being purposefully strict).
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213
214Note that strtol() and strtoul() may be disguised as Strtol(), Strtoul(),
215Atol(), Atoul(). Avoid those, too.
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216
217In theory C<Strtol> and C<Strtoul> may not be defined if the machine perl is
218built on doesn't actually have strtol and strtoul. But as those 2
219functions are part of the 1989 ANSI C spec we suspect you'll find them
220everywhere by now.
221
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222 int rand() double Drand01()
223 srand(n) { seedDrand01((Rand_seed_t)n);
224 PL_srand_called = TRUE; }
56d22bd2 225
5b282140 226 exit(n) my_exit(n)
6c1246d3 227 system(s) Don't. Look at pp_system or use my_popen.
f40a6c71 228
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229 getenv(s) PerlEnv_getenv(s)
230 setenv(s, val) my_putenv(s, val)
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231
232=head2 Miscellaneous functions
233
234You should not even B<want> to use F<setjmp.h> functions, but if you
235think you do, use the C<JMPENV> stack in F<scope.h> instead.
236
237For C<signal>/C<sigaction>, use C<rsignal(signo, handler)>.
238
239=head1 SEE ALSO
240
d974f73b 241L<perlapi>, L<perlapio>, L<perlguts>
f40a6c71 242