Initial commit of OpenSPARC T2 design and verification files.
[OpenSPARC-T2-DV] / tools / src / nas,5.n2.os.2 / lib / python / man / mann / fcopy.n
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245..
246.TH fcopy n 8.0 Tcl "Tcl Built-In Commands"
247.BS
248'\" Note: do not modify the .SH NAME line immediately below!
249.SH NAME
250fcopy \- Copy data from one channel to another.
251.SH SYNOPSIS
252\fBfcopy \fIinchan\fR \fIoutchan\fR ?\fB\-size \fIsize\fR? ?\fB\-command \fIcallback\fR?
253.BE
254
255.SH DESCRIPTION
256.PP
257The \fBfcopy\fP command copies data from one I/O channel, \fIinchan\fR to another I/O channel, \fIoutchan\fR.
258The \fBfcopy\fP command leverages the buffering in the Tcl I/O system to
259avoid extra copies and to avoid buffering too much data in
260main memory when copying large files to slow destinations like
261network sockets.
262.PP
263The \fBfcopy\fP
264command transfers data from \fIinchan\fR until end of file
265or \fIsize\fP bytes have been
266transferred. If no \fB\-size\fP argument is given,
267then the copy goes until end of file.
268All the data read from \fIinchan\fR is copied to \fIoutchan\fR.
269Without the \fB\-command\fP option, \fBfcopy\fP blocks until the copy is complete
270and returns the number of bytes written to \fIoutchan\fR.
271.PP
272The \fB\-command\fP argument makes \fBfcopy\fP work in the background.
273In this case it returns immediately and the \fIcallback\fP is invoked
274later when the copy completes.
275The \fIcallback\fP is called with
276one or two additional
277arguments that indicates how many bytes were written to \fIoutchan\fR.
278If an error occurred during the background copy, the second argument is the
279error string associated with the error.
280With a background copy,
281it is not necessary to put \fIinchan\fR or \fIoutchan\fR into
282non-blocking mode; the \fBfcopy\fP command takes care of that automatically.
283However, it is necessary to enter the event loop by using
284the \fBvwait\fP command or by using Tk.
285.PP
286You are not allowed to do other I/O operations with
287\fIinchan\fR or \fIoutchan\fR during a background fcopy.
288If either \fIinchan\fR or \fIoutchan\fR get closed
289while the copy is in progress, the current copy is stopped
290and the command callback is \fInot\fP made.
291If \fIinchan\fR is closed,
292then all data already queued for \fIoutchan\fR is written out.
293.PP
294Note that \fIinchan\fR can become readable during a background copy.
295You should turn off any \fBfileevent\fP handlers during a background
296copy so those handlers do not interfere with the copy.
297Any I/O attempted by a \fBfileevent\fP handler will get a "channel busy" error.
298.PP
299\fBFcopy\fR translates end-of-line sequences in \fIinchan\fR and \fIoutchan\fR
300according to the \fB\-translation\fR option
301for these channels.
302See the manual entry for \fBfconfigure\fR for details on the
303\fB\-translation\fR option.
304The translations mean that the number of bytes read from \fIinchan\fR
305can be different than the number of bytes written to \fIoutchan\fR.
306Only the number of bytes written to \fIoutchan\fR is reported,
307either as the return value of a synchronous \fBfcopy\fP or
308as the argument to the callback for an asynchronous \fBfcopy\fP.
309.PP
310\fBFcopy\fR obeys the encodings configured for the channels. This
311means that the incoming characters are converted internally first
312UTF-8 and then into the encoding of the channel \fBfcopy\fR writes
313to. See the manual entry for \fBfconfigure\fR for details on the
314\fB\-encoding\fR option. No conversion is done if both channels are
315set to encoding "binary". If only the output channel is set to
316encoding "binary" the system will write the internal UTF-8
317representation of the incoming characters. If only the input channel
318is set to encoding "binary" the system will assume that the incoming
319bytes are valid UTF-8 characters and convert them according to the
320output encoding. The behaviour of the system for bytes which are not
321valid UTF-8 characters is undefined in this case.
322
323.SH EXAMPLE
324.PP
325This first example shows how the callback gets
326passed the number of bytes transferred.
327It also uses vwait to put the application into the event loop.
328Of course, this simplified example could be done without the command
329callback.
330.DS
331proc Cleanup {in out bytes {error {}}} {
332 global total
333 set total $bytes
334 close $in
335 close $out
336 if {[string length $error] != 0} {
337 # error occurred during the copy
338 }
339}
340set in [open $file1]
341set out [socket $server $port]
342fcopy $in $out -command [list Cleanup $in $out]
343vwait total
344
345.DE
346.PP
347The second example copies in chunks and tests for end of file
348in the command callback
349.DS
350proc CopyMore {in out chunk bytes {error {}}} {
351 global total done
352 incr total $bytes
353 if {([string length $error] != 0) || [eof $in] {
354 set done $total
355 close $in
356 close $out
357 } else {
358 fcopy $in $out -command [list CopyMore $in $out $chunk] \\
359 -size $chunk
360 }
361}
362set in [open $file1]
363set out [socket $server $port]
364set chunk 1024
365set total 0
366fcopy $in $out -command [list CopyMore $in $out $chunk] -size $chunk
367vwait done
368
369.DE
370
371.SH "SEE ALSO"
372eof(n), fblocked(n), fconfigure(n)
373
374.SH KEYWORDS
375blocking, channel, end of line, end of file, nonblocking, read, translation