PerlIO - phpMan

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NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION AUTHOR SEE ALSO
NAME
    PerlIO - On demand loader for PerlIO layers and root of PerlIO::* name
    space

SYNOPSIS
      # support platform-native and CRLF text files
      open(my $fh, "<:crlf", "my.txt") or die "open failed: $!";

      # append UTF-8 encoded text
      open(my $fh, ">>:encoding(UTF-8)", "some.log")
        or die "open failed: $!";

      # portably open a binary file for reading
      open(my $fh, "<", "his.jpg") or die "open failed: $!";
      binmode($fh) or die "binmode failed: $!";

      Shell:
        PERLIO=:perlio perl ....

DESCRIPTION
    When an undefined layer 'foo' is encountered in an "open" or "binmode"
    layer specification then C code performs the equivalent of:

      use PerlIO 'foo';

    The Perl code in PerlIO.pm then attempts to locate a layer by doing

      require PerlIO::foo;

    Otherwise the "PerlIO" package is a place holder for additional PerlIO
    related functions.

  Layers
    Generally speaking, PerlIO layers (previously sometimes referred to as
    "disciplines") are an ordered stack applied to a filehandle (specified
    as a space- or colon-separated list, conventionally written with a
    leading colon). Each layer performs some operation on any input or
    output, except when bypassed such as with "sysread" or "syswrite". Read
    operations go through the stack in the order they are set (left to
    right), and write operations in the reverse order.

    There are also layers which actually just set flags on lower layers, or
    layers that modify the current stack but don't persist on the stack
    themselves; these are referred to as pseudo-layers.

    When opening a handle, it will be opened with any layers specified
    explicitly in the open() call (or the platform defaults, if specified as
    a colon with no following layers).

    If layers are not explicitly specified, the handle will be opened with
    the layers specified by the ${^OPEN} variable (usually set by using the
    open pragma for a lexical scope, or the "-C" command-line switch or
    "PERL_UNICODE" environment variable for the main program scope).

    If layers are not specified in the open() call or "${^OPEN}" variable,
    the handle will be opened with the default layer stack configured for
    that architecture; see "Defaults and how to override them".

    Some layers will automatically insert required lower level layers if not
    present; for example ":perlio" will insert ":unix" below itself for low
    level IO, and ":encoding" will insert the platform defaults for buffered
    IO.

    The "binmode" function can be called on an opened handle to push
    additional layers onto the stack, which may also modify the existing
    layers. "binmode" called with no layers will remove or unset any
    existing layers which transform the byte stream, making the handle
    suitable for binary data.

    The following layers are currently defined:

    :unix
        Lowest level layer which provides basic PerlIO operations in terms
        of UNIX/POSIX numeric file descriptor calls (open(), read(),
        write(), lseek(), close()). It is used even on non-Unix
        architectures, and most other layers operate on top of it.

    :stdio
        Layer which calls "fread", "fwrite" and "fseek"/"ftell" etc. Note
        that as this is "real" stdio it will ignore any layers beneath it
        and go straight to the operating system via the C library as usual.
        This layer implements both low level IO and buffering, but is rarely
        used on modern architectures.

    :perlio
        A from scratch implementation of buffering for PerlIO. Provides fast
        access to the buffer for "sv_gets" which implements Perl's
        readline/<> and in general attempts to minimize data copying.

        ":perlio" will insert a ":unix" layer below itself to do low level
        IO.

    :crlf
        A layer that implements DOS/Windows like CRLF line endings. On read
        converts pairs of CR,LF to a single "\n" newline character. On write
        converts each "\n" to a CR,LF pair. Note that this layer will
        silently refuse to be pushed on top of itself.

        It currently does *not* mimic MS-DOS as far as treating of Control-Z
        as being an end-of-file marker.

        On DOS/Windows like architectures where this layer is part of the
        defaults, it also acts like the ":perlio" layer, and removing the
        CRLF translation (such as with ":raw") will only unset the CRLF
        translation flag. Since Perl 5.14, you can also apply another
        ":crlf" layer later, such as when the CRLF translation must occur
        after an encoding layer. On other architectures, it is a mundane
        CRLF translation layer and can be added and removed normally.

            # translate CRLF after encoding on Perl 5.14 or newer
            binmode $fh, ":raw:encoding(UTF-16LE):crlf"
              or die "binmode failed: $!";

    :utf8
        Pseudo-layer that declares that the stream accepts Perl's *internal*
        upgraded encoding of characters, which is approximately UTF-8 on
        ASCII machines, but UTF-EBCDIC on EBCDIC machines. This allows any
        character Perl can represent to be read from or written to the
        stream.

        This layer (which actually sets a flag on the preceding layer, and
        is implicitly set by any ":encoding" layer) does not translate or
        validate byte sequences. It instead indicates that the byte stream
        will have been arranged by other layers to be provided in Perl's
        internal upgraded encoding, which Perl code (and correctly written
        XS code) will interpret as decoded Unicode characters.

        CAUTION: Do not use this layer to translate from UTF-8 bytes, as
        invalid UTF-8 or binary data will result in malformed Perl strings.
        It is unlikely to produce invalid UTF-8 when used for output, though
        it will instead produce UTF-EBCDIC on EBCDIC systems. The
        ":encoding(UTF-8)" layer (hyphen is significant) is preferred as it
        will ensure translation between valid UTF-8 bytes and valid Unicode
        characters.

    :bytes
        This is the inverse of the ":utf8" pseudo-layer. It turns off the
        flag on the layer below so that data read from it is considered to
        be Perl's internal downgraded encoding, thus interpreted as the
        native single-byte encoding of Latin-1 or EBCDIC. Likewise on output
        Perl will warn if a "wide" character (a codepoint not in the range
        0..255) is written to a such a stream.

        This is very dangerous to push on a handle using an ":encoding"
        layer, as such a layer assumes to be working with Perl's internal
        upgraded encoding, so you will likely get a mangled result. Instead
        use ":raw" or ":pop" to remove encoding layers.

    :raw
        The ":raw" pseudo-layer is *defined* as being identical to calling
        "binmode($fh)" - the stream is made suitable for passing binary
        data, i.e. each byte is passed as-is. The stream will still be
        buffered (but this was not always true before Perl 5.14).

        In Perl 5.6 and some books the ":raw" layer is documented as the
        inverse of the ":crlf" layer. That is no longer the case - other
        layers which would alter the binary nature of the stream are also
        disabled. If you want UNIX line endings on a platform that normally
        does CRLF translation, but still want UTF-8 or encoding defaults,
        the appropriate thing to do is to add ":perlio" to the PERLIO
        environment variable, or open the handle explicitly with that layer,
        to replace the platform default of ":crlf".

        The implementation of ":raw" is as a pseudo-layer which when
        "pushed" pops itself and then any layers which would modify the
        binary data stream. (Undoing ":utf8" and ":crlf" may be implemented
        by clearing flags rather than popping layers but that is an
        implementation detail.)

        As a consequence of the fact that ":raw" normally pops layers, it
        usually only makes sense to have it as the only or first element in
        a layer specification. When used as the first element it provides a
        known base on which to build e.g.

            open(my $fh,">:raw:encoding(UTF-8)",...)
              or die "open failed: $!";

        will construct a "binary" stream regardless of the platform
        defaults, but then enable UTF-8 translation.

    :pop
        A pseudo-layer that removes the top-most layer. Gives Perl code a
        way to manipulate the layer stack. Note that ":pop" only works on
        real layers and will not undo the effects of pseudo-layers or flags
        like ":utf8". An example of a possible use might be:

            open(my $fh,...) or die "open failed: $!";
            ...
            binmode($fh,":encoding(...)") or die "binmode failed: $!";
            # next chunk is encoded
            ...
            binmode($fh,":pop") or die "binmode failed: $!";
            # back to un-encoded

        A more elegant (and safer) interface is needed.

    :win32
        On Win32 platforms this *experimental* layer uses the native
        "handle" IO rather than the unix-like numeric file descriptor layer.
        Known to be buggy as of Perl 5.8.2.

  Custom Layers
    It is possible to write custom layers in addition to the above builtin
    ones, both in C/XS and Perl, as a module named "PerlIO::<layer name>".
    Some custom layers come with the Perl distribution.

    :encoding
        Use ":encoding(ENCODING)" to transparently do character set and
        encoding transformations, for example from Shift-JIS to Unicode.
        Note that an ":encoding" also enables ":utf8". See PerlIO::encoding
        for more information.

    :mmap
        A layer which implements "reading" of files by using "mmap()" to
        make a (whole) file appear in the process's address space, and then
        using that as PerlIO's "buffer". This *may* be faster in certain
        circumstances for large files, and may result in less physical
        memory use when multiple processes are reading the same file.

        Files which are not "mmap()"-able revert to behaving like the
        ":perlio" layer. Writes also behave like the ":perlio" layer, as
        "mmap()" for write needs extra house-keeping (to extend the file)
        which negates any advantage.

        The ":mmap" layer will not exist if the platform does not support
        "mmap()". See PerlIO::mmap for more information.

    :via
        ":via(MODULE)" allows a transformation to be applied by an arbitrary
        Perl module, for example compression / decompression, encryption /
        decryption. See PerlIO::via for more information.

    :scalar
        A layer implementing "in memory" files using scalar variables,
        automatically used in place of the platform defaults for IO when
        opening such a handle. As such, the scalar is expected to act like a
        file, only containing or storing bytes. See PerlIO::scalar for more
        information.

  Alternatives to raw
    To get a binary stream an alternate method is to use:

        open(my $fh,"<","whatever") or die "open failed: $!";
        binmode($fh) or die "binmode failed: $!";

    This has the advantage of being backward compatible with older versions
    of Perl that did not use PerlIO or where ":raw" was buggy (as it was
    before Perl 5.14).

    To get an unbuffered stream specify an unbuffered layer (e.g. ":unix")
    in the open call:

        open(my $fh,"<:unix",$path) or die "open failed: $!";

  Defaults and how to override them
    If the platform is MS-DOS like and normally does CRLF to "\n"
    translation for text files then the default layers are:

      :unix:crlf

    Otherwise if "Configure" found out how to do "fast" IO using the
    system's stdio (not common on modern architectures), then the default
    layers are:

      :stdio

    Otherwise the default layers are

      :unix:perlio

    Note that the "default stack" depends on the operating system and on the
    Perl version, and both the compile-time and runtime configurations of
    Perl. The default can be overridden by setting the environment variable
    PERLIO to a space or colon separated list of layers, however this cannot
    be used to set layers that require loading modules like ":encoding".

    This can be used to see the effect of/bugs in the various layers e.g.

      cd .../perl/t
      PERLIO=:stdio  ./perl harness
      PERLIO=:perlio ./perl harness

    For the various values of PERLIO see "PERLIO" in perlrun.

    The following table summarizes the default layers on UNIX-like and
    DOS-like platforms and depending on the setting of $ENV{PERLIO}:

     PERLIO     UNIX-like                   DOS-like
     ------     ---------                   --------
     unset / "" :unix:perlio / :stdio [1]   :unix:crlf
     :stdio     :stdio                      :stdio
     :perlio    :unix:perlio                :unix:perlio

     # [1] ":stdio" if Configure found out how to do "fast stdio" (depends
     # on the stdio implementation) and in Perl 5.8, else ":unix:perlio"

  Querying the layers of filehandles
    The following returns the names of the PerlIO layers on a filehandle.

       my @layers = PerlIO::get_layers($fh); # Or FH, *FH, "FH".

    The layers are returned in the order an open() or binmode() call would
    use them, and without colons.

    By default the layers from the input side of the filehandle are
    returned; to get the output side, use the optional "output" argument:

       my @layers = PerlIO::get_layers($fh, output => 1);

    (Usually the layers are identical on either side of a filehandle but for
    example with sockets there may be differences.)

    There is no set_layers(), nor does get_layers() return a tied array
    mirroring the stack, or anything fancy like that. This is not accidental
    or unintentional. The PerlIO layer stack is a bit more complicated than
    just a stack (see for example the behaviour of ":raw"). You are supposed
    to use open() and binmode() to manipulate the stack.

    Implementation details follow, please close your eyes.

    The arguments to layers are by default returned in parentheses after the
    name of the layer, and certain layers (like ":utf8") are not real layers
    but instead flags on real layers; to get all of these returned
    separately, use the optional "details" argument:

       my @layer_and_args_and_flags = PerlIO::get_layers($fh, details => 1);

    The result will be up to be three times the number of layers: the first
    element will be a name, the second element the arguments (unspecified
    arguments will be "undef"), the third element the flags, the fourth
    element a name again, and so forth.

    You may open your eyes now.

AUTHOR
    Nick Ing-Simmons <nick AT ing-simmons.net>

SEE ALSO
    "binmode" in perlfunc, "open" in perlfunc, perlunicode, perliol, Encode


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