Initial commit of OpenSPARC T2 architecture model.
[OpenSPARC-T2-SAM] / sam-t2 / devtools / amd64 / lib / perl5 / 5.8.8 / i86pc-solaris-64-ld / PerlIO / via.pm
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1package PerlIO::via;
2our $VERSION = '0.03';
3use XSLoader ();
4XSLoader::load 'PerlIO::via';
51;
6__END__
7
8=head1 NAME
9
10PerlIO::via - Helper class for PerlIO layers implemented in perl
11
12=head1 SYNOPSIS
13
14 use PerlIO::via::Layer;
15 open($fh,"<:via(Layer)",...);
16
17 use Some::Other::Package;
18 open($fh,">:via(Some::Other::Package)",...);
19
20=head1 DESCRIPTION
21
22The PerlIO::via module allows you to develop PerlIO layers in Perl, without
23having to go into the nitty gritty of programming C with XS as the interface
24to Perl.
25
26One example module, L<PerlIO::via::QuotedPrint>, is included with Perl
275.8.0, and more example modules are available from CPAN, such as
28L<PerlIO::via::StripHTML> and L<PerlIO::via::Base64>. The
29PerlIO::via::StripHTML module for instance, allows you to say:
30
31 use PerlIO::via::StripHTML;
32 open( my $fh, "<:via(StripHTML)", "index.html" );
33 my @line = <$fh>;
34
35to obtain the text of an HTML-file in an array with all the HTML-tags
36automagically removed.
37
38Please note that if the layer is created in the PerlIO::via:: namespace, it
39does B<not> have to be fully qualified. The PerlIO::via module will prefix
40the PerlIO::via:: namespace if the specified modulename does not exist as a
41fully qualified module name.
42
43=head1 EXPECTED METHODS
44
45To create a Perl module that implements a PerlIO layer in Perl (as opposed to
46in C using XS as the interface to Perl), you need to supply some of the
47following subroutines. It is recommended to create these Perl modules in the
48PerlIO::via:: namespace, so that they can easily be located on CPAN and use
49the default namespace feature of the PerlIO::via module itself.
50
51Please note that this is an area of recent development in Perl and that the
52interface described here is therefore still subject to change (and hopefully
53will have better documentation and more examples).
54
55In the method descriptions below I<$fh> will be
56a reference to a glob which can be treated as a perl file handle.
57It refers to the layer below. I<$fh> is not passed if the layer
58is at the bottom of the stack, for this reason and to maintain
59some level of "compatibility" with TIEHANDLE classes it is passed last.
60
61=over 4
62
63=item $class->PUSHED([$mode[,$fh]])
64
65Should return an object or the class, or -1 on failure. (Compare
66TIEHANDLE.) The arguments are an optional mode string ("r", "w",
67"w+", ...) and a filehandle for the PerlIO layer below. Mandatory.
68
69When layer is pushed as part of an C<open> call, C<PUSHED> will be called
70I<before> the actual open occurs whether than be via C<OPEN>, C<SYSOPEN>,
71C<FDOPEN> or by letting lower layer do the open.
72
73=item $obj->POPPED([$fh])
74
75Optional - layer is about to be removed.
76
77=item $obj->UTF8($bellowFlag,[$fh])
78
79Optional - if present it will be called immediately after PUSHED has
80returned. It should return true value if the layer expects data to be
81UTF-8 encoded. If it returns true result is as if caller had done
82
83 ":via(YourClass):utf8"
84
85If not present of it it returns false, then stream is left with
86flag clear.
87The I<$bellowFlag> argument will be true if there is a layer below
88and that layer was expecting UTF-8.
89
90
91=item $obj->OPEN($path,$mode[,$fh])
92
93Optional - if not present lower layer does open.
94If present called for normal opens after layer is pushed.
95This function is subject to change as there is no easy way
96to get lower layer to do open and then regain control.
97
98=item $obj->BINMODE([,$fh])
99
100Optional - if not available layer is popped on binmode($fh) or when C<:raw>
101is pushed. If present it should return 0 on success -1 on error and undef
102to pop the layer.
103
104=item $obj->FDOPEN($fd[,$fh])
105
106Optional - if not present lower layer does open.
107If present called for opens which pass a numeric file
108descriptor after layer is pushed.
109This function is subject to change as there is no easy way
110to get lower layer to do open and then regain control.
111
112=item $obj->SYSOPEN($path,$imode,$perm,[,$fh])
113
114Optional - if not present lower layer does open.
115If present called for sysopen style opens which pass a numeric mode
116and permissions after layer is pushed.
117This function is subject to change as there is no easy way
118to get lower layer to do open and then regain control.
119
120=item $obj->FILENO($fh)
121
122Returns a numeric value for Unix-like file descriptor. Return -1 if
123there isn't one. Optional. Default is fileno($fh).
124
125=item $obj->READ($buffer,$len,$fh)
126
127Returns the number of octets placed in $buffer (must be less than or
128equal to $len). Optional. Default is to use FILL instead.
129
130=item $obj->WRITE($buffer,$fh)
131
132Returns the number of octets from buffer that have been successfully written.
133
134=item $obj->FILL($fh)
135
136Should return a string to be placed in the buffer. Optional. If not
137provided must provide READ or reject handles open for reading in
138PUSHED.
139
140=item $obj->CLOSE($fh)
141
142Should return 0 on success, -1 on error.
143Optional.
144
145=item $obj->SEEK($posn,$whence,$fh)
146
147Should return 0 on success, -1 on error.
148Optional. Default is to fail, but that is likely to be changed
149in future.
150
151=item $obj->TELL($fh)
152
153Returns file postion.
154Optional. Default to be determined.
155
156=item $obj->UNREAD($buffer,$fh)
157
158Returns the number of octets from buffer that have been successfully
159saved to be returned on future FILL/READ calls. Optional. Default is
160to push data into a temporary layer above this one.
161
162=item $obj->FLUSH($fh)
163
164Flush any buffered write data. May possibly be called on readable
165handles too. Should return 0 on success, -1 on error.
166
167=item $obj->SETLINEBUF($fh)
168
169Optional. No return.
170
171=item $obj->CLEARERR($fh)
172
173Optional. No return.
174
175=item $obj->ERROR($fh)
176
177Optional. Returns error state. Default is no error until a mechanism
178to signal error (die?) is worked out.
179
180=item $obj->EOF($fh)
181
182Optional. Returns end-of-file state. Default is function of return
183value of FILL or READ.
184
185=back
186
187=head1 EXAMPLES
188
189Check the PerlIO::via:: namespace on CPAN for examples of PerlIO layers
190implemented in Perl. To give you an idea how simple the implementation of
191a PerlIO layer can look, as simple example is included here.
192
193=head2 Example - a Hexadecimal Handle
194
195Given the following module, PerlIO::via::Hex :
196
197 package PerlIO::via::Hex;
198
199 sub PUSHED
200 {
201 my ($class,$mode,$fh) = @_;
202 # When writing we buffer the data
203 my $buf = '';
204 return bless \$buf,$class;
205 }
206
207 sub FILL
208 {
209 my ($obj,$fh) = @_;
210 my $line = <$fh>;
211 return (defined $line) ? pack("H*", $line) : undef;
212 }
213
214 sub WRITE
215 {
216 my ($obj,$buf,$fh) = @_;
217 $$obj .= unpack("H*", $buf);
218 return length($buf);
219 }
220
221 sub FLUSH
222 {
223 my ($obj,$fh) = @_;
224 print $fh $$obj or return -1;
225 $$obj = '';
226 return 0;
227 }
228
229 1;
230
231the following code opens up an output handle that will convert any
232output to hexadecimal dump of the output bytes: for example "A" will
233be converted to "41" (on ASCII-based machines, on EBCDIC platforms
234the "A" will become "c1")
235
236 use PerlIO::via::Hex;
237 open(my $fh, ">:via(Hex)", "foo.hex");
238
239and the following code will read the hexdump in and convert it
240on the fly back into bytes:
241
242 open(my $fh, "<:via(Hex)", "foo.hex");
243
244=cut