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1package PerlIO;
2
3our $VERSION = '1.04';
4
5# Map layer name to package that defines it
6our %alias;
7
8sub import
9{
10 my $class = shift;
11 while (@_)
12 {
13 my $layer = shift;
14 if (exists $alias{$layer})
15 {
16 $layer = $alias{$layer}
17 }
18 else
19 {
20 $layer = "${class}::$layer";
21 }
22 eval "require $layer";
23 warn $@ if $@;
24 }
25}
26
27sub F_UTF8 () { 0x8000 }
28
291;
30__END__
31
32=head1 NAME
33
34PerlIO - On demand loader for PerlIO layers and root of PerlIO::* name space
35
36=head1 SYNOPSIS
37
38 open($fh,"<:crlf", "my.txt"); # support platform-native and CRLF text files
39
40 open($fh,"<","his.jpg"); # portably open a binary file for reading
41 binmode($fh);
42
43 Shell:
44 PERLIO=perlio perl ....
45
46=head1 DESCRIPTION
47
48When an undefined layer 'foo' is encountered in an C<open> or
49C<binmode> layer specification then C code performs the equivalent of:
50
51 use PerlIO 'foo';
52
53The perl code in PerlIO.pm then attempts to locate a layer by doing
54
55 require PerlIO::foo;
56
57Otherwise the C<PerlIO> package is a place holder for additional
58PerlIO related functions.
59
60The following layers are currently defined:
61
62=over 4
63
64=item :unix
65
66Lowest level layer which provides basic PerlIO operations in terms of
67UNIX/POSIX numeric file descriptor calls
68(open(), read(), write(), lseek(), close()).
69
70=item :stdio
71
72Layer which calls C<fread>, C<fwrite> and C<fseek>/C<ftell> etc. Note
73that as this is "real" stdio it will ignore any layers beneath it and
74got straight to the operating system via the C library as usual.
75
76=item :perlio
77
78A from scratch implementation of buffering for PerlIO. Provides fast
79access to the buffer for C<sv_gets> which implements perl's readline/E<lt>E<gt>
80and in general attempts to minimize data copying.
81
82C<:perlio> will insert a C<:unix> layer below itself to do low level IO.
83
84=item :crlf
85
86A layer that implements DOS/Windows like CRLF line endings. On read
87converts pairs of CR,LF to a single "\n" newline character. On write
88converts each "\n" to a CR,LF pair. Note that this layer likes to be
89one of its kind: it silently ignores attempts to be pushed into the
90layer stack more than once.
91
92It currently does I<not> mimic MS-DOS as far as treating of Control-Z
93as being an end-of-file marker.
94
95(Gory details follow) To be more exact what happens is this: after
96pushing itself to the stack, the C<:crlf> layer checks all the layers
97below itself to find the first layer that is capable of being a CRLF
98layer but is not yet enabled to be a CRLF layer. If it finds such a
99layer, it enables the CRLFness of that other deeper layer, and then
100pops itself off the stack. If not, fine, use the one we just pushed.
101
102The end result is that a C<:crlf> means "please enable the first CRLF
103layer you can find, and if you can't find one, here would be a good
104spot to place a new one."
105
106Based on the C<:perlio> layer.
107
108=item :mmap
109
110A layer which implements "reading" of files by using C<mmap()> to
111make (whole) file appear in the process's address space, and then
112using that as PerlIO's "buffer". This I<may> be faster in certain
113circumstances for large files, and may result in less physical memory
114use when multiple processes are reading the same file.
115
116Files which are not C<mmap()>-able revert to behaving like the C<:perlio>
117layer. Writes also behave like C<:perlio> layer as C<mmap()> for write
118needs extra house-keeping (to extend the file) which negates any advantage.
119
120The C<:mmap> layer will not exist if platform does not support C<mmap()>.
121
122=item :utf8
123
124Declares that the stream accepts perl's I<internal> encoding of
125characters. (Which really is UTF-8 on ASCII machines, but is
126UTF-EBCDIC on EBCDIC machines.) This allows any character perl can
127represent to be read from or written to the stream. The UTF-X encoding
128is chosen to render simple text parts (i.e. non-accented letters,
129digits and common punctuation) human readable in the encoded file.
130
131Here is how to write your native data out using UTF-8 (or UTF-EBCDIC)
132and then read it back in.
133
134 open(F, ">:utf8", "data.utf");
135 print F $out;
136 close(F);
137
138 open(F, "<:utf8", "data.utf");
139 $in = <F>;
140 close(F);
141
142Note that this layer does not validate byte sequences. For reading
143input, using C<:encoding(utf8)> instead of bare C<:utf8>, is strongly
144recommended.
145
146=item :bytes
147
148This is the inverse of C<:utf8> layer. It turns off the flag
149on the layer below so that data read from it is considered to
150be "octets" i.e. characters in range 0..255 only. Likewise
151on output perl will warn if a "wide" character is written
152to a such a stream.
153
154=item :raw
155
156The C<:raw> layer is I<defined> as being identical to calling
157C<binmode($fh)> - the stream is made suitable for passing binary data
158i.e. each byte is passed as-is. The stream will still be
159buffered.
160
161In Perl 5.6 and some books the C<:raw> layer (previously sometimes also
162referred to as a "discipline") is documented as the inverse of the
163C<:crlf> layer. That is no longer the case - other layers which would
164alter binary nature of the stream are also disabled. If you want UNIX
165line endings on a platform that normally does CRLF translation, but still
166want UTF-8 or encoding defaults the appropriate thing to do is to add
167C<:perlio> to PERLIO environment variable.
168
169The implementation of C<:raw> is as a pseudo-layer which when "pushed"
170pops itself and then any layers which do not declare themselves as suitable
171for binary data. (Undoing :utf8 and :crlf are implemented by clearing
172flags rather than popping layers but that is an implementation detail.)
173
174As a consequence of the fact that C<:raw> normally pops layers
175it usually only makes sense to have it as the only or first element in
176a layer specification. When used as the first element it provides
177a known base on which to build e.g.
178
179 open($fh,":raw:utf8",...)
180
181will construct a "binary" stream, but then enable UTF-8 translation.
182
183=item :pop
184
185A pseudo layer that removes the top-most layer. Gives perl code
186a way to manipulate the layer stack. Should be considered
187as experimental. Note that C<:pop> only works on real layers
188and will not undo the effects of pseudo layers like C<:utf8>.
189An example of a possible use might be:
190
191 open($fh,...)
192 ...
193 binmode($fh,":encoding(...)"); # next chunk is encoded
194 ...
195 binmode($fh,":pop"); # back to un-encoded
196
197A more elegant (and safer) interface is needed.
198
199=item :win32
200
201On Win32 platforms this I<experimental> layer uses native "handle" IO
202rather than unix-like numeric file descriptor layer. Known to be
203buggy as of perl 5.8.2.
204
205=back
206
207=head2 Custom Layers
208
209It is possible to write custom layers in addition to the above builtin
210ones, both in C/XS and Perl. Two such layers (and one example written
211in Perl using the latter) come with the Perl distribution.
212
213=over 4
214
215=item :encoding
216
217Use C<:encoding(ENCODING)> either in open() or binmode() to install
218a layer that does transparently character set and encoding transformations,
219for example from Shift-JIS to Unicode. Note that under C<stdio>
220an C<:encoding> also enables C<:utf8>. See L<PerlIO::encoding>
221for more information.
222
223=item :via
224
225Use C<:via(MODULE)> either in open() or binmode() to install a layer
226that does whatever transformation (for example compression /
227decompression, encryption / decryption) to the filehandle.
228See L<PerlIO::via> for more information.
229
230=back
231
232=head2 Alternatives to raw
233
234To get a binary stream an alternate method is to use:
235
236 open($fh,"whatever")
237 binmode($fh);
238
239this has advantage of being backward compatible with how such things have
240had to be coded on some platforms for years.
241
242To get an un-buffered stream specify an unbuffered layer (e.g. C<:unix>)
243in the open call:
244
245 open($fh,"<:unix",$path)
246
247=head2 Defaults and how to override them
248
249If the platform is MS-DOS like and normally does CRLF to "\n"
250translation for text files then the default layers are :
251
252 unix crlf
253
254(The low level "unix" layer may be replaced by a platform specific low
255level layer.)
256
257Otherwise if C<Configure> found out how to do "fast" IO using system's
258stdio, then the default layers are:
259
260 unix stdio
261
262Otherwise the default layers are
263
264 unix perlio
265
266These defaults may change once perlio has been better tested and tuned.
267
268The default can be overridden by setting the environment variable
269PERLIO to a space separated list of layers (C<unix> or platform low
270level layer is always pushed first).
271
272This can be used to see the effect of/bugs in the various layers e.g.
273
274 cd .../perl/t
275 PERLIO=stdio ./perl harness
276 PERLIO=perlio ./perl harness
277
278For the various value of PERLIO see L<perlrun/PERLIO>.
279
280=head2 Querying the layers of filehandles
281
282The following returns the B<names> of the PerlIO layers on a filehandle.
283
284 my @layers = PerlIO::get_layers($fh); # Or FH, *FH, "FH".
285
286The layers are returned in the order an open() or binmode() call would
287use them. Note that the "default stack" depends on the operating
288system and on the Perl version, and both the compile-time and
289runtime configurations of Perl.
290
291The following table summarizes the default layers on UNIX-like and
292DOS-like platforms and depending on the setting of the C<$ENV{PERLIO}>:
293
294 PERLIO UNIX-like DOS-like
295 ------ --------- --------
296 unset / "" unix perlio / stdio [1] unix crlf
297 stdio unix perlio / stdio [1] stdio
298 perlio unix perlio unix perlio
299 mmap unix mmap unix mmap
300
301 # [1] "stdio" if Configure found out how to do "fast stdio" (depends
302 # on the stdio implementation) and in Perl 5.8, otherwise "unix perlio"
303
304By default the layers from the input side of the filehandle is
305returned, to get the output side use the optional C<output> argument:
306
307 my @layers = PerlIO::get_layers($fh, output => 1);
308
309(Usually the layers are identical on either side of a filehandle but
310for example with sockets there may be differences, or if you have
311been using the C<open> pragma.)
312
313There is no set_layers(), nor does get_layers() return a tied array
314mirroring the stack, or anything fancy like that. This is not
315accidental or unintentional. The PerlIO layer stack is a bit more
316complicated than just a stack (see for example the behaviour of C<:raw>).
317You are supposed to use open() and binmode() to manipulate the stack.
318
319B<Implementation details follow, please close your eyes.>
320
321The arguments to layers are by default returned in parenthesis after
322the name of the layer, and certain layers (like C<utf8>) are not real
323layers but instead flags on real layers: to get all of these returned
324separately use the optional C<details> argument:
325
326 my @layer_and_args_and_flags = PerlIO::get_layers($fh, details => 1);
327
328The result will be up to be three times the number of layers:
329the first element will be a name, the second element the arguments
330(unspecified arguments will be C<undef>), the third element the flags,
331the fourth element a name again, and so forth.
332
333B<You may open your eyes now.>
334
335=head1 AUTHOR
336
337Nick Ing-Simmons E<lt>nick@ing-simmons.netE<gt>
338
339=head1 SEE ALSO
340
341L<perlfunc/"binmode">, L<perlfunc/"open">, L<perlunicode>, L<perliol>,
342L<Encode>
343
344=cut