perlfunc - Perl builtin functions |
perlfunc - Perl builtin functions
The functions in this section can serve as terms in an expression.
They fall into two major categories: list operators and named unary
operators. These differ in their precedence relationship with a
following comma. (See the precedence table in the perlop manpage.) List
operators take more than one argument, while unary operators can never
take more than one argument. Thus, a comma terminates the argument of
a unary operator, but merely separates the arguments of a list
operator. A unary operator generally provides a scalar context to its
argument, while a list operator may provide either scalar or list
contexts for its arguments. If it does both, the scalar arguments will
be first, and the list argument will follow. (Note that there can ever
be only one such list argument.) For instance, splice()
has three scalar
arguments followed by a list, whereas gethostbyname()
has four scalar
arguments.
In the syntax descriptions that follow, list operators that expect a list (and provide list context for the elements of the list) are shown with LIST as an argument. Such a list may consist of any combination of scalar arguments or list values; the list values will be included in the list as if each individual element were interpolated at that point in the list, forming a longer single-dimensional list value. Elements of the LIST should be separated by commas.
Any function in the list below may be used either with or without parentheses around its arguments. (The syntax descriptions omit the parentheses.) If you use the parentheses, the simple (but occasionally surprising) rule is this: It looks like a function, therefore it is a function, and precedence doesn't matter. Otherwise it's a list operator or unary operator, and precedence does matter. And whitespace between the function and left parenthesis doesn't count--so you need to be careful sometimes:
print 1+2+4; # Prints 7. print(1+2) + 4; # Prints 3. print (1+2)+4; # Also prints 3! print +(1+2)+4; # Prints 7. print ((1+2)+4); # Prints 7.
If you run Perl with the -w switch it can warn you about this. For example, the third line above produces:
print (...) interpreted as function at - line 1. Useless use of integer addition in void context at - line 1.
A few functions take no arguments at all, and therefore work as neither
unary nor list operators. These include such functions as time
and endpwent
. For example, time+86_400
always means
time() + 86_400
.
For functions that can be used in either a scalar or list context, nonabortive failure is generally indicated in a scalar context by returning the undefined value, and in a list context by returning the null list.
Remember the following important rule: There is no rule that relates the behavior of an expression in list context to its behavior in scalar context, or vice versa. It might do two totally different things. Each operator and function decides which sort of value it would be most appropriate to return in scalar context. Some operators return the length of the list that would have been returned in list context. Some operators return the first value in the list. Some operators return the last value in the list. Some operators return a count of successful operations. In general, they do what you want, unless you want consistency.
An named array in scalar context is quite different from what would at
first glance appear to be a list in scalar context. You can't get a list
like (1,2,3)
into being in scalar context, because the compiler knows
the context at compile time. It would generate the scalar comma operator
there, not the list construction version of the comma. That means it
was never a list to start with.
In general, functions in Perl that serve as wrappers for system calls
of the same name (like chown(2), fork(2), closedir(2), etc.) all return
true when they succeed and undef
otherwise, as is usually mentioned
in the descriptions below. This is different from the C interfaces,
which return -1
on failure. Exceptions to this rule are wait
,
waitpid
, and syscall
. System calls also set the special $!
variable on failure. Other functions do not, except accidentally.
Here are Perl's functions (including things that look like functions, like some keywords and named operators) arranged by category. Some functions appear in more than one place.
chomp
, chop
, chr
, crypt
, hex
, index
, lc
, lcfirst
,
length
, oct
, ord
, pack
, q/STRING/
, qq/STRING/
, reverse
,
rindex
, sprintf
, substr
, tr///
, uc
, ucfirst
, y///
m//
, pos
, quotemeta
, s///
, split
, study
, qr//
abs
, atan2
, cos
, exp
, hex
, int
, log
, oct
, rand
,
sin
, sqrt
, srand
pop
, push
, shift
, splice
, unshift
grep
, join
, map
, qw/STRING/
, reverse
, sort
, unpack
delete
, each
, exists
, keys
, values
binmode
, close
, closedir
, dbmclose
, dbmopen
, die
, eof
,
fileno
, flock
, format
, getc
, print
, printf
, read
,
readdir
, rewinddir
, seek
, seekdir
, select
, syscall
,
sysread
, sysseek
, syswrite
, tell
, telldir
, truncate
,
warn
, write
pack
, read
, syscall
, sysread
, syswrite
, unpack
, vec
-X
, chdir
, chmod
, chown
, chroot
, fcntl
, glob
,
ioctl
, link
, lstat
, mkdir
, open
, opendir
,
readlink
, rename
, rmdir
, stat
, symlink
, umask
,
unlink
, utime
caller
, continue
, die
, do
, dump
, eval
, exit
,
goto
, last
, next
, redo
, return
, sub
, wantarray
caller
, import
, local
, my
, our
, package
, use
defined
, dump
, eval
, formline
, local
, my
, our
, reset
,
scalar
, undef
, wantarray
alarm
, exec
, fork
, getpgrp
, getppid
, getpriority
, kill
,
pipe
, qx/STRING/
, setpgrp
, setpriority
, sleep
, system
,
times
, wait
, waitpid
do
, import
, no
, package
, require
, use
bless
, dbmclose
, dbmopen
, package
, ref
, tie
, tied
,
untie
, use
accept
, bind
, connect
, getpeername
, getsockname
,
getsockopt
, listen
, recv
, send
, setsockopt
, shutdown
,
socket
, socketpair
msgctl
, msgget
, msgrcv
, msgsnd
, semctl
, semget
, semop
,
shmctl
, shmget
, shmread
, shmwrite
endgrent
, endhostent
, endnetent
, endpwent
, getgrent
,
getgrgid
, getgrnam
, getlogin
, getpwent
, getpwnam
,
getpwuid
, setgrent
, setpwent
endprotoent
, endservent
, gethostbyaddr
, gethostbyname
,
gethostent
, getnetbyaddr
, getnetbyname
, getnetent
,
getprotobyname
, getprotobynumber
, getprotoent
,
getservbyname
, getservbyport
, getservent
, sethostent
,
setnetent
, setprotoent
, setservent
gmtime
, localtime
, time
, times
abs
, bless
, chomp
, chr
, exists
, formline
, glob
,
import
, lc
, lcfirst
, map
, my
, no
, our
, prototype
,
qx
, qw
, readline
, readpipe
, ref
, sub*
, sysopen
, tie
,
tied
, uc
, ucfirst
, untie
, use
* - sub
was a keyword in perl4, but in perl5 it is an
operator, which can be used in expressions.
dbmclose
, dbmopen
Perl was born in Unix and can therefore access all common Unix system calls. In non-Unix environments, the functionality of some Unix system calls may not be available, or details of the available functionality may differ slightly. The Perl functions affected by this are:
-X
, binmode
, chmod
, chown
, chroot
, crypt
,
dbmclose
, dbmopen
, dump
, endgrent
, endhostent
,
endnetent
, endprotoent
, endpwent
, endservent
, exec
,
fcntl
, flock
, fork
, getgrent
, getgrgid
, gethostent
,
getlogin
, getnetbyaddr
, getnetbyname
, getnetent
,
getppid
, getprgp
, getpriority
, getprotobynumber
,
getprotoent
, getpwent
, getpwnam
, getpwuid
,
getservbyport
, getservent
, getsockopt
, glob
, ioctl
,
kill
, link
, lstat
, msgctl
, msgget
, msgrcv
,
msgsnd
, open
, pipe
, readlink
, rename
, select
, semctl
,
semget
, semop
, setgrent
, sethostent
, setnetent
,
setpgrp
, setpriority
, setprotoent
, setpwent
,
setservent
, setsockopt
, shmctl
, shmget
, shmread
,
shmwrite
, socket
, socketpair
, stat
, symlink
, syscall
,
sysopen
, system
, times
, truncate
, umask
, unlink
,
utime
, wait
, waitpid
For more information about the portability of these functions, see the perlport manpage and other available platform-specific documentation.
$_
, except for -t
, which tests STDIN.
Unless otherwise documented, it returns 1
for true and ''
for false, or
the undefined value if the file doesn't exist. Despite the funny
names, precedence is the same as any other named unary operator, and
the argument may be parenthesized like any other unary operator. The
operator may be any of:
-r File is readable by effective uid/gid. -w File is writable by effective uid/gid. -x File is executable by effective uid/gid. -o File is owned by effective uid.
-R File is readable by real uid/gid. -W File is writable by real uid/gid. -X File is executable by real uid/gid. -O File is owned by real uid.
-e File exists. -z File has zero size (is empty). -s File has nonzero size (returns size in bytes).
-f File is a plain file. -d File is a directory. -l File is a symbolic link. -p File is a named pipe (FIFO), or Filehandle is a pipe. -S File is a socket. -b File is a block special file. -c File is a character special file. -t Filehandle is opened to a tty.
-u File has setuid bit set. -g File has setgid bit set. -k File has sticky bit set.
-T File is an ASCII text file. -B File is a "binary" file (opposite of -T).
-M Age of file in days when script started. -A Same for access time. -C Same for inode change time.
Example:
while (<>) { chomp; next unless -f $_; # ignore specials #... }
The interpretation of the file permission operators -r
, -R
,
-w
, -W
, -x
, and -X
is by default based solely on the mode
of the file and the uids and gids of the user. There may be other
reasons you can't actually read, write, or execute the file. Such
reasons may be for example network filesystem access controls, ACLs
(access control lists), read-only filesystems, and unrecognized
executable formats.
Also note that, for the superuser on the local filesystems, the -r
,
-R
, -w
, and -W
tests always return 1, and -x
and -X
return 1
if any execute bit is set in the mode. Scripts run by the superuser
may thus need to do a stat()
to determine the actual mode of the file,
or temporarily set their effective uid to something else.
If you are using ACLs, there is a pragma called filetest
that may
produce more accurate results than the bare stat()
mode bits.
When under the use filetest 'access'
the above-mentioned filetests
will test whether the permission can (not) be granted using the
access()
family of system calls. Also note that the -x
and -X
may
under this pragma return true even if there are no execute permission
bits set (nor any extra execute permission ACLs). This strangeness is
due to the underlying system calls' definitions. Read the
documentation for the filetest
pragma for more information.
Note that -s/a/b/
does not do a negated substitution. Saying
-exp($foo)
still works as expected, however--only single letters
following a minus are interpreted as file tests.
The -T
and -B
switches work as follows. The first block or so of the
file is examined for odd characters such as strange control codes or
characters with the high bit set. If too many strange characters (>30%)
are found, it's a -B
file, otherwise it's a -T
file. Also, any file
containing null in the first block is considered a binary file. If -T
or -B
is used on a filehandle, the current stdio buffer is examined
rather than the first block. Both -T
and -B
return true on a null
file, or a file at EOF when testing a filehandle. Because you have to
read a file to do the -T
test, on most occasions you want to use a -f
against the file first, as in next unless -f $file && -T $file
.
If any of the file tests (or either the stat
or lstat
operators) are given
the special filehandle consisting of a solitary underline, then the stat
structure of the previous file test (or stat operator) is used, saving
a system call. (This doesn't work with -t
, and you need to remember
that lstat()
and -l
will leave values in the stat structure for the
symbolic link, not the real file.) Example:
print "Can do.\n" if -r $a || -w _ || -x _;
stat($filename); print "Readable\n" if -r _; print "Writable\n" if -w _; print "Executable\n" if -x _; print "Setuid\n" if -u _; print "Setgid\n" if -g _; print "Sticky\n" if -k _; print "Text\n" if -T _; print "Binary\n" if -B _;
$_
.
accept(2)
system call
does. Returns the packed address if it succeeded, false otherwise.
See the example in Sockets: Client/Server Communication in the perlipc manpage.
On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will be set for the newly opened file descriptor, as determined by the value of $^F. See $^F in the perlvar manpage.
$_
is used. (On some machines,
unfortunately, the elapsed time may be up to one second less than you
specified because of how seconds are counted.) Only one timer may be
counting at once. Each call disables the previous timer, and an
argument of 0
may be supplied to cancel the previous timer without
starting a new one. The returned value is the amount of time remaining
on the previous timer.
For delays of finer granularity than one second, you may use Perl's
four-argument version of select()
leaving the first three arguments
undefined, or you might be able to use the syscall
interface to
access setitimer(2)
if your system supports it. The Time::HiRes module
from CPAN may also prove useful.
It is usually a mistake to intermix alarm
and sleep
calls.
(sleep
may be internally implemented in your system with alarm
)
If you want to use alarm
to time out a system call you need to use an
eval
/die
pair. You can't rely on the alarm causing the system call to
fail with $!
set to EINTR
because Perl sets up signal handlers to
restart system calls on some systems. Using eval
/die
always works,
modulo the caveats given in Signals in the perlipc manpage.
eval { local $SIG{ALRM} = sub { die "alarm\n" }; # NB: \n required alarm $timeout; $nread = sysread SOCKET, $buffer, $size; alarm 0; }; if ($@) { die unless $@ eq "alarm\n"; # propagate unexpected errors # timed out } else { # didn't }
For the tangent operation, you may use the Math::Trig::tan
function, or use the familiar relation:
sub tan { sin($_[0]) / cos($_[0]) }
":raw"
for
binary mode or ":crlf"
for ``text'' mode. If the DISCIPLINE is
omitted, it defaults to ":raw"
.
binmode()
should be called after open()
but before any I/O is done on
the filehandle.
On many systems binmode()
currently has no effect, but in future, it
will be extended to support user-defined input and output disciplines.
On some systems binmode()
is necessary when you're not working with a
text file. For the sake of portability it is a good idea to always use
it when appropriate, and to never use it when it isn't appropriate.
In other words: Regardless of platform, use binmode()
on binary
files, and do not use binmode()
on text files.
The open
pragma can be used to establish default disciplines.
See the open manpage.
The operating system, device drivers, C libraries, and Perl run-time
system all work together to let the programmer treat a single
character (\n
) as the line terminator, irrespective of the external
representation. On many operating systems, the native text file
representation matches the internal representation, but on some
platforms the external representation of \n
is made up of more than
one character.
Mac OS and all variants of Unix use a single character to end each line
in the external representation of text (even though that single
character is not necessarily the same across these platforms).
Consequently binmode()
has no effect on these operating systems. In
other systems like VMS, MS-DOS and the various flavors of MS-Windows
your program sees a \n
as a simple \cJ
, but what's stored in text
files are the two characters \cM\cJ
. That means that, if you don't
use binmode()
on these systems, \cM\cJ
sequences on disk will be
converted to \n
on input, and any \n
in your program will be
converted back to \cM\cJ
on output. This is what you want for text
files, but it can be disastrous for binary files.
Another consequence of using binmode()
(on some systems) is that
special end-of-file markers will be seen as part of the data stream.
For systems from the Microsoft family this means that if your binary
data contains \cZ
, the I/O subsystem will regard it as the end of
the file, unless you use binmode().
binmode()
is not only important for readline()
and print()
operations,
but also when using read(), seek(), sysread(), syswrite()
and tell()
(see the perlport manpage for more details). See the $/
and $\
variables
in the perlvar manpage for how to manually set your input and output
line-termination sequences.
bless
is often the last thing in a constructor,
it returns the reference for convenience. Always use the two-argument
version if the function doing the blessing might be inherited by a
derived class. See the perltoot manpage and the perlobj manpage for more about the blessing
(and blessings) of objects.
Consider always blessing objects in CLASSNAMEs that are mixed case. Namespaces with all lowercase names are considered reserved for Perl pragmata. Builtin types have all uppercase names, so to prevent confusion, you may wish to avoid such package names as well. Make sure that CLASSNAME is a true value.
eval
or require
, and the undefined value
otherwise. In list context, returns
($package, $filename, $line) = caller;
With EXPR, it returns some extra information that the debugger uses to print a stack trace. The value of EXPR indicates how many call frames to go back before the current one.
($package, $filename, $line, $subroutine, $hasargs, $wantarray, $evaltext, $is_require, $hints, $bitmask) = caller($i);
Here $subroutine may be (eval)
if the frame is not a subroutine
call, but an eval
. In such a case additional elements $evaltext and
$is_require
are set: $is_require
is true if the frame is created by a
require
or use
statement, $evaltext contains the text of the
eval EXPR
statement. In particular, for an eval BLOCK
statement,
$filename is (eval)
, but $evaltext is undefined. (Note also that
each use
statement creates a require
frame inside an eval EXPR
)
frame. $hasargs
is true if a new instance of @_
was set up for the
frame. $hints
and $bitmask
contain pragmatic hints that the caller
was compiled with. The $hints
and $bitmask
values are subject to
change between versions of Perl, and are not meant for external use.
Furthermore, when called from within the DB package, caller returns more
detailed information: it sets the list variable @DB::args
to be the
arguments with which the subroutine was invoked.
Be aware that the optimizer might have optimized call frames away before
caller
had a chance to get the information. That means that caller(N)
might not return information about the call frame you expect it do, for
N > 1
. In particular, @DB::args
might have information from the
previous time caller
was called.
$ENV{HOME}
, if set; if not,
changes to the directory specified by $ENV{LOGDIR}
. If neither is
set, chdir
does nothing. It returns true upon success, false
otherwise. See the example under die
.
0644
is okay, '0644'
is not. Returns the number of files
successfully changed. See also oct, if all you have is a string.
$cnt = chmod 0755, 'foo', 'bar'; chmod 0755, @executables; $mode = '0644'; chmod $mode, 'foo'; # !!! sets mode to # --w----r-T $mode = '0644'; chmod oct($mode), 'foo'; # this is better $mode = 0644; chmod $mode, 'foo'; # this is best
You can also import the symbolic S_I*
constants from the Fcntl
module:
use Fcntl ':mode';
chmod S_IRWXU|S_IRGRP|S_IXGRP|S_IROTH|S_IXOTH, @executables; # This is identical to the chmod 0755 of the above example.
$/
(also known as
$INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR in the English
module). It returns the total
number of characters removed from all its arguments. It's often used to
remove the newline from the end of an input record when you're worried
that the final record may be missing its newline. When in paragraph
mode ($/ = ""
), it removes all trailing newlines from the string.
When in slurp mode ($/ = undef
) or fixed-length record mode ($/
is
a reference to an integer or the like, see the perlvar manpage) chomp()
won't
remove anything.
If VARIABLE is omitted, it chomps $_
. Example:
while (<>) { chomp; # avoid \n on last field @array = split(/:/); # ... }
If VARIABLE is a hash, it chomps the hash's values, but not its keys.
You can actually chomp anything that's an lvalue, including an assignment:
chomp($cwd = `pwd`); chomp($answer = <STDIN>);
If you chomp a list, each element is chomped, and the total number of characters removed is returned.
s/.$//s
because it neither
scans nor copies the string. If VARIABLE is omitted, chops $_
.
If VARIABLE is a hash, it chops the hash's values, but not its keys.
You can actually chop anything that's an lvalue, including an assignment.
If you chop a list, each element is chopped. Only the value of the
last chop
is returned.
Note that chop
returns the last character. To return all but the last
character, use substr($string, 0, -1)
.
$cnt = chown $uid, $gid, 'foo', 'bar'; chown $uid, $gid, @filenames;
Here's an example that looks up nonnumeric uids in the passwd file:
print "User: "; chomp($user = <STDIN>); print "Files: "; chomp($pattern = <STDIN>);
($login,$pass,$uid,$gid) = getpwnam($user) or die "$user not in passwd file";
@ary = glob($pattern); # expand filenames chown $uid, $gid, @ary;
On most systems, you are not allowed to change the ownership of the file unless you're the superuser, although you should be able to change the group to any of your secondary groups. On insecure systems, these restrictions may be relaxed, but this is not a portable assumption. On POSIX systems, you can detect this condition this way:
use POSIX qw(sysconf _PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED); $can_chown_giveaway = not sysconf(_PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED);
chr(65)
is "A"
in either ASCII or Unicode, and
chr(0x263a)
is a Unicode smiley face (but only within the scope of
a use utf8
). For the reverse, use ord.
See the utf8 manpage for more about Unicode.
If NUMBER is omitted, uses $_
.
/
by your process and all its children. (It doesn't
change your current working directory, which is unaffected.) For security
reasons, this call is restricted to the superuser. If FILENAME is
omitted, does a chroot
to $_
.
You don't have to close FILEHANDLE if you are immediately going to do
another open
on it, because open
will close it for you. (See
open
.) However, an explicit close
on an input file resets the line
counter ($.
), while the implicit close done by open
does not.
If the file handle came from a piped open close
will additionally
return false if one of the other system calls involved fails or if the
program exits with non-zero status. (If the only problem was that the
program exited non-zero $!
will be set to 0
.) Closing a pipe
also waits for the process executing on the pipe to complete, in case you
want to look at the output of the pipe afterwards, and
implicitly puts the exit status value of that command into $?
.
Prematurely closing the read end of a pipe (i.e. before the process writing to it at the other end has closed it) will result in a SIGPIPE being delivered to the writer. If the other end can't handle that, be sure to read all the data before closing the pipe.
Example:
open(OUTPUT, '|sort >foo') # pipe to sort or die "Can't start sort: $!"; #... # print stuff to output close OUTPUT # wait for sort to finish or warn $! ? "Error closing sort pipe: $!" : "Exit status $? from sort"; open(INPUT, 'foo') # get sort's results or die "Can't open 'foo' for input: $!";
FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value can be used as an indirect filehandle, usually the real filehandle name.
opendir
and returns the success of that
system call.
DIRHANDLE may be an expression whose value can be used as an indirect dirhandle, usually the real dirhandle name.
continue
BLOCK attached to a BLOCK (typically in a while
or
foreach
), it is always executed just before the conditional is about to
be evaluated again, just like the third part of a for
loop in C. Thus
it can be used to increment a loop variable, even when the loop has been
continued via the next
statement (which is similar to the C continue
statement).
last
, next
, or redo
may appear within a continue
block. last
and redo
will behave as if they had been executed within
the main block. So will next
, but since it will execute a continue
block, it may be more entertaining.
while (EXPR) { ### redo always comes here do_something; } continue { ### next always comes here do_something_else; # then back the top to re-check EXPR } ### last always comes here
Omitting the continue
section is semantically equivalent to using an
empty one, logically enough. In that case, next
goes directly back
to check the condition at the top of the loop.
$_
.
For the inverse cosine operation, you may use the Math::Trig::acos()
function, or use this relation:
sub acos { atan2( sqrt(1 - $_[0] * $_[0]), $_[0] ) }
crypt(3)
function in the C library
(assuming that you actually have a version there that has not been
extirpated as a potential munition). This can prove useful for checking
the password file for lousy passwords, amongst other things. Only the
guys wearing white hats should do this.
Note that crypt
is intended to be a one-way function, much like breaking
eggs to make an omelette. There is no (known) corresponding decrypt
function. As a result, this function isn't all that useful for
cryptography. (For that, see your nearby CPAN mirror.)
When verifying an existing encrypted string you should use the encrypted
text as the salt (like crypt($plain, $crypted) eq $crypted
). This
allows your code to work with the standard crypt
and with more
exotic implementations. When choosing a new salt create a random two
character string whose characters come from the set [./0-9A-Za-z]
(like join '', ('.', '/', 0..9, 'A'..'Z', 'a'..'z')[rand 64, rand 64]
).
Here's an example that makes sure that whoever runs this program knows their own password:
$pwd = (getpwuid($<))[1];
system "stty -echo"; print "Password: "; chomp($word = <STDIN>); print "\n"; system "stty echo";
if (crypt($word, $pwd) ne $pwd) { die "Sorry...\n"; } else { print "ok\n"; }
Of course, typing in your own password to whoever asks you for it is unwise.
The crypt function is unsuitable for encrypting large quantities of data, not least of all because you can't get the information back. Look at the by-module/Crypt and by-module/PGP directories on your favorite CPAN mirror for a slew of potentially useful modules.
untie
function.]
Breaks the binding between a DBM file and a hash.
tie
function.]
This binds a dbm(3), ndbm(3), sdbm(3), gdbm(3), or Berkeley DB file to a
hash. HASH is the name of the hash. (Unlike normal open
, the first
argument is not a filehandle, even though it looks like one). DBNAME
is the name of the database (without the .dir or .pag extension if
any). If the database does not exist, it is created with protection
specified by MASK (as modified by the umask
). If your system supports
only the older DBM functions, you may perform only one dbmopen
in your
program. In older versions of Perl, if your system had neither DBM nor
ndbm, calling dbmopen
produced a fatal error; it now falls back to
sdbm(3).
If you don't have write access to the DBM file, you can only read hash
variables, not set them. If you want to test whether you can write,
either use file tests or try setting a dummy hash entry inside an eval
,
which will trap the error.
Note that functions such as keys
and values
may return huge lists
when used on large DBM files. You may prefer to use the each
function to iterate over large DBM files. Example:
# print out history file offsets dbmopen(%HIST,'/usr/lib/news/history',0666); while (($key,$val) = each %HIST) { print $key, ' = ', unpack('L',$val), "\n"; } dbmclose(%HIST);
See also the AnyDBM_File manpage for a more general description of the pros and cons of the various dbm approaches, as well as the DB_File manpage for a particularly rich implementation.
You can control which DBM library you use by loading that library before you call dbmopen():
use DB_File; dbmopen(%NS_Hist, "$ENV{HOME}/.netscape/history.db") or die "Can't open netscape history file: $!";
undef
. If EXPR is not present, $_
will be
checked.
Many operations return undef
to indicate failure, end of file,
system error, uninitialized variable, and other exceptional
conditions. This function allows you to distinguish undef
from
other values. (A simple Boolean test will not distinguish among
undef
, zero, the empty string, and "0"
, which are all equally
false.) Note that since undef
is a valid scalar, its presence
doesn't necessarily indicate an exceptional condition: pop
returns undef
when its argument is an empty array, or when the
element to return happens to be undef
.
You may also use defined(&func)
to check whether subroutine &func
has ever been defined. The return value is unaffected by any forward
declarations of &foo
. Note that a subroutine which is not defined
may still be callable: its package may have an AUTOLOAD
method that
makes it spring into existence the first time that it is called -- see
the perlsub manpage.
Use of defined
on aggregates (hashes and arrays) is deprecated. It
used to report whether memory for that aggregate has ever been
allocated. This behavior may disappear in future versions of Perl.
You should instead use a simple test for size:
if (@an_array) { print "has array elements\n" } if (%a_hash) { print "has hash members\n" }
When used on a hash element, it tells you whether the value is defined, not whether the key exists in the hash. Use exists for the latter purpose.
Examples:
print if defined $switch{'D'}; print "$val\n" while defined($val = pop(@ary)); die "Can't readlink $sym: $!" unless defined($value = readlink $sym); sub foo { defined &$bar ? &$bar(@_) : die "No bar"; } $debugging = 0 unless defined $debugging;
Note: Many folks tend to overuse defined
, and then are surprised to
discover that the number 0
and ""
(the zero-length string) are, in fact,
defined values. For example, if you say
"ab" =~ /a(.*)b/;
The pattern match succeeds, and $1
is defined, despite the fact that it
matched ``nothing''. But it didn't really match nothing--rather, it
matched something that happened to be zero characters long. This is all
very above-board and honest. When a function returns an undefined value,
it's an admission that it couldn't give you an honest answer. So you
should use defined
only when you're questioning the integrity of what
you're trying to do. At other times, a simple comparison to 0
or ""
is
what you want.
element(s)
from the hash or array.
In the case of an array, if the array elements happen to be at the end,
the size of the array will shrink to the highest element that tests
true for exists()
(or 0 if no such element exists).
Returns each element so deleted or the undefined value if there was no such
element. Deleting from $ENV{}
modifies the environment. Deleting from
a hash tied to a DBM file deletes the entry from the DBM file. Deleting
from a tie
d hash or array may not necessarily return anything.
Deleting an array element effectively returns that position of the array
to its initial, uninitialized state. Subsequently testing for the same
element with exists()
will return false. Note that deleting array
elements in the middle of an array will not shift the index of the ones
after them down--use splice()
for that. See exists.
The following (inefficiently) deletes all the values of %HASH and @ARRAY:
foreach $key (keys %HASH) { delete $HASH{$key}; }
foreach $index (0 .. $#ARRAY) { delete $ARRAY[$index]; }
And so do these:
delete @HASH{keys %HASH};
delete @ARRAY[0 .. $#ARRAY];
But both of these are slower than just assigning the empty list or undefining %HASH or @ARRAY:
%HASH = (); # completely empty %HASH undef %HASH; # forget %HASH ever existed
@ARRAY = (); # completely empty @ARRAY undef @ARRAY; # forget @ARRAY ever existed
Note that the EXPR can be arbitrarily complicated as long as the final operation is a hash element, array element, hash slice, or array slice lookup:
delete $ref->[$x][$y]{$key}; delete @{$ref->[$x][$y]}{$key1, $key2, @morekeys};
delete $ref->[$x][$y][$index]; delete @{$ref->[$x][$y]}[$index1, $index2, @moreindices];
eval
, prints the value of LIST to STDERR
and
exits with the current value of $!
(errno). If $!
is 0
,
exits with the value of ($? >> 8)
(backtick `command`
status). If ($? >> 8)
is 0
, exits with 255
. Inside
an eval(),
the error message is stuffed into $@
and the
eval
is terminated with the undefined value. This makes
die
the way to raise an exception.
Equivalent examples:
die "Can't cd to spool: $!\n" unless chdir '/usr/spool/news'; chdir '/usr/spool/news' or die "Can't cd to spool: $!\n"
If the value of EXPR does not end in a newline, the current script line
number and input line number (if any) are also printed, and a newline
is supplied. Note that the ``input line number'' (also known as ``chunk'')
is subject to whatever notion of ``line'' happens to be currently in
effect, and is also available as the special variable $.
.
See $/ in the perlvar manpage and $. in the perlvar manpage.
Hint: sometimes appending ", stopped"
to your message
will cause it to make better sense when the string "at foo line 123"
is
appended. Suppose you are running script ``canasta''.
die "/etc/games is no good"; die "/etc/games is no good, stopped";
produce, respectively
/etc/games is no good at canasta line 123. /etc/games is no good, stopped at canasta line 123.
See also exit(), warn(), and the Carp module.
If LIST is empty and $@
already contains a value (typically from a
previous eval) that value is reused after appending "\t...propagated"
.
This is useful for propagating exceptions:
eval { ... }; die unless $@ =~ /Expected exception/;
If $@
is empty then the string "Died"
is used.
die()
can also be called with a reference argument. If this happens to be
trapped within an eval(), $@ contains the reference. This behavior permits
a more elaborate exception handling implementation using objects that
maintain arbitrary state about the nature of the exception. Such a scheme
is sometimes preferable to matching particular string values of $@ using
regular expressions. Here's an example:
eval { ... ; die Some::Module::Exception->new( FOO => "bar" ) }; if ($@) { if (ref($@) && UNIVERSAL::isa($@,"Some::Module::Exception")) { # handle Some::Module::Exception } else { # handle all other possible exceptions } }
Because perl will stringify uncaught exception messages before displaying them, you may want to overload stringification operations on such custom exception objects. See the overload manpage for details about that.
You can arrange for a callback to be run just before the die
does its deed, by setting the $SIG{__DIE__}
hook. The associated
handler will be called with the error text and can change the error
message, if it sees fit, by calling die
again. See
$SIG{expr} in the perlvar manpage for details on setting %SIG
entries, and
eval BLOCK for some examples. Although this feature was meant
to be run only right before your program was to exit, this is not
currently the case--the $SIG{__DIE__}
hook is currently called
even inside eval()ed blocks/strings! If one wants the hook to do
nothing in such situations, put
die @_ if $^S;
as the first line of the handler (see $^S in the perlvar manpage). Because this promotes strange action at a distance, this counterintuitive behavior may be fixed in a future release.
do BLOCK
does not count as a loop, so the loop control statements
next
, last
, or redo
cannot be used to leave or restart the block.
See the perlsyn manpage for alternative strategies.
SUBROUTINE(LIST)
do 'stat.pl';
is just like
scalar eval `cat stat.pl`;
except that it's more efficient and concise, keeps track of the current
filename for error messages, searches the @INC libraries, and updates
%INC
if the file is found. See Predefined Names in the perlvar manpage for these
variables. It also differs in that code evaluated with do FILENAME
cannot see lexicals in the enclosing scope; eval STRING
does. It's the
same, however, in that it does reparse the file every time you call it,
so you probably don't want to do this inside a loop.
If do
cannot read the file, it returns undef and sets $!
to the
error. If do
can read the file but cannot compile it, it
returns undef and sets an error message in $@
. If the file is
successfully compiled, do
returns the value of the last expression
evaluated.
Note that inclusion of library modules is better done with the
use
and require
operators, which also do automatic error checking
and raise an exception if there's a problem.
You might like to use do
to read in a program configuration
file. Manual error checking can be done this way:
# read in config files: system first, then user for $file ("/share/prog/defaults.rc", "$ENV{HOME}/.someprogrc") { unless ($return = do $file) { warn "couldn't parse $file: $@" if $@; warn "couldn't do $file: $!" unless defined $return; warn "couldn't run $file" unless $return; } }
goto LABEL
(with all the restrictions that goto
suffers).
Think of it as a goto with an intervening core dump and reincarnation.
If LABEL
is omitted, restarts the program from the top.
WARNING: Any files opened at the time of the dump will not be open any more when the program is reincarnated, with possible resulting confusion on the part of Perl.
This function is now largely obsolete, partly because it's very hard to convert a core file into an executable, and because the real compiler backends for generating portable bytecode and compilable C code have superseded it.
If you're looking to use the dump manpage to speed up your program, consider
generating bytecode or native C code as described in perlcc. If
you're just trying to accelerate a CGI script, consider using the
mod_perl
extension to Apache, or the CPAN module, Fast::CGI.
You might also consider autoloading or selfloading, which at least
make your program appear to run faster.
Entries are returned in an apparently random order. The actual random
order is subject to change in future versions of perl, but it is guaranteed
to be in the same order as either the keys
or values
function
would produce on the same (unmodified) hash.
When the hash is entirely read, a null array is returned in list context
(which when assigned produces a false (0
) value), and undef
in
scalar context. The next call to each
after that will start iterating
again. There is a single iterator for each hash, shared by all each
,
keys
, and values
function calls in the program; it can be reset by
reading all the elements from the hash, or by evaluating keys HASH
or
values HASH
. If you add or delete elements of a hash while you're
iterating over it, you may get entries skipped or duplicated, so
don't. Exception: It is always safe to delete the item most recently
returned by each()
, which means that the following code will work:
while (($key, $value) = each %hash) { print $key, "\n"; delete $hash{$key}; # This is safe }
The following prints out your environment like the printenv(1)
program,
only in a different order:
while (($key,$value) = each %ENV) { print "$key=$value\n"; }
ungetc
s it, so isn't very useful in an
interactive context.) Do not read from a terminal file (or call
eof(FILEHANDLE)
on it) after end-of-file is reached. File types such
as terminals may lose the end-of-file condition if you do.
An eof
without an argument uses the last file read. Using eof()
with empty parentheses is very different. It refers to the pseudo file
formed from the files listed on the command line and accessed via the
<>
operator. Since <>
isn't explicitly opened,
as a normal filehandle is, an eof()
before <>
has been
used will cause @ARGV
to be examined to determine if input is
available.
In a while (<>)
loop, eof
or eof(ARGV)
can be used to
detect the end of each file, eof()
will only detect the end of the
last file. Examples:
# reset line numbering on each input file while (<>) { next if /^\s*#/; # skip comments print "$.\t$_"; } continue { close ARGV if eof; # Not eof()! }
# insert dashes just before last line of last file while (<>) { if (eof()) { # check for end of current file print "--------------\n"; close(ARGV); # close or last; is needed if we # are reading from the terminal } print; }
Practical hint: you almost never need to use eof
in Perl, because the
input operators typically return undef
when they run out of data, or if
there was an error.
$_
. This form is typically used to
delay parsing and subsequent execution of the text of EXPR until run time.
In the second form, the code within the BLOCK is parsed only once--at the same time the code surrounding the eval itself was parsed--and executed within the context of the current Perl program. This form is typically used to trap exceptions more efficiently than the first (see below), while also providing the benefit of checking the code within BLOCK at compile time.
The final semicolon, if any, may be omitted from the value of EXPR or within the BLOCK.
In both forms, the value returned is the value of the last expression evaluated inside the mini-program; a return statement may be also used, just as with subroutines. The expression providing the return value is evaluated in void, scalar, or list context, depending on the context of the eval itself. See wantarray for more on how the evaluation context can be determined.
If there is a syntax error or runtime error, or a die
statement is
executed, an undefined value is returned by eval
, and $@
is set to the
error message. If there was no error, $@
is guaranteed to be a null
string. Beware that using eval
neither silences perl from printing
warnings to STDERR, nor does it stuff the text of warning messages into $@
.
To do either of those, you have to use the $SIG{__WARN__}
facility. See
warn and the perlvar manpage.
Note that, because eval
traps otherwise-fatal errors, it is useful for
determining whether a particular feature (such as socket
or symlink
)
is implemented. It is also Perl's exception trapping mechanism, where
the die operator is used to raise exceptions.
If the code to be executed doesn't vary, you may use the eval-BLOCK
form to trap run-time errors without incurring the penalty of
recompiling each time. The error, if any, is still returned in $@
.
Examples:
# make divide-by-zero nonfatal eval { $answer = $a / $b; }; warn $@ if $@;
# same thing, but less efficient eval '$answer = $a / $b'; warn $@ if $@;
# a compile-time error eval { $answer = }; # WRONG
# a run-time error eval '$answer ='; # sets $@
Due to the current arguably broken state of __DIE__
hooks, when using
the eval{}
form as an exception trap in libraries, you may wish not
to trigger any __DIE__
hooks that user code may have installed.
You can use the local $SIG{__DIE__}
construct for this purpose,
as shown in this example:
# a very private exception trap for divide-by-zero eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'}; $answer = $a / $b; }; warn $@ if $@;
This is especially significant, given that __DIE__
hooks can call
die
again, which has the effect of changing their error messages:
# __DIE__ hooks may modify error messages { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = sub { (my $x = $_[0]) =~ s/foo/bar/g; die $x }; eval { die "foo lives here" }; print $@ if $@; # prints "bar lives here" }
Because this promotes action at a distance, this counterintuitive behavior may be fixed in a future release.
With an eval
, you should be especially careful to remember what's
being looked at when:
eval $x; # CASE 1 eval "$x"; # CASE 2
eval '$x'; # CASE 3 eval { $x }; # CASE 4
eval "\$$x++"; # CASE 5 $$x++; # CASE 6
Cases 1 and 2 above behave identically: they run the code contained in
the variable $x. (Although case 2 has misleading double quotes making
the reader wonder what else might be happening (nothing is).) Cases 3
and 4 likewise behave in the same way: they run the code '$x'
, which
does nothing but return the value of $x. (Case 4 is preferred for
purely visual reasons, but it also has the advantage of compiling at
compile-time instead of at run-time.) Case 5 is a place where
normally you would like to use double quotes, except that in this
particular situation, you can just use symbolic references instead, as
in case 6.
eval BLOCK
does not count as a loop, so the loop control statements
next
, last
, or redo
cannot be used to leave or restart the block.
exec
function executes a system command and never returns--
use system
instead of exec
if you want it to return. It fails and
returns false only if the command does not exist and it is executed
directly instead of via your system's command shell (see below).
Since it's a common mistake to use exec
instead of system
, Perl
warns you if there is a following statement which isn't die
, warn
,
or exit
(if -w
is set - but you always do that). If you
really want to follow an exec
with some other statement, you
can use one of these styles to avoid the warning:
exec ('foo') or print STDERR "couldn't exec foo: $!"; { exec ('foo') }; print STDERR "couldn't exec foo: $!";
If there is more than one argument in LIST, or if LIST is an array
with more than one value, calls execvp(3)
with the arguments in LIST.
If there is only one scalar argument or an array with one element in it,
the argument is checked for shell metacharacters, and if there are any,
the entire argument is passed to the system's command shell for parsing
(this is /bin/sh -c
on Unix platforms, but varies on other platforms).
If there are no shell metacharacters in the argument, it is split into
words and passed directly to execvp
, which is more efficient.
Examples:
exec '/bin/echo', 'Your arguments are: ', @ARGV; exec "sort $outfile | uniq";
If you don't really want to execute the first argument, but want to lie to the program you are executing about its own name, you can specify the program you actually want to run as an ``indirect object'' (without a comma) in front of the LIST. (This always forces interpretation of the LIST as a multivalued list, even if there is only a single scalar in the list.) Example:
$shell = '/bin/csh'; exec $shell '-sh'; # pretend it's a login shell
or, more directly,
exec {'/bin/csh'} '-sh'; # pretend it's a login shell
When the arguments get executed via the system shell, results will be subject to its quirks and capabilities. See `STRING` in the perlop manpage for details.
Using an indirect object with exec
or system
is also more
secure. This usage (which also works fine with system())
forces
interpretation of the arguments as a multivalued list, even if the
list had just one argument. That way you're safe from the shell
expanding wildcards or splitting up words with whitespace in them.
@args = ( "echo surprise" );
exec @args; # subject to shell escapes # if @args == 1 exec { $args[0] } @args; # safe even with one-arg list
The first version, the one without the indirect object, ran the echo
program, passing it "surprise"
an argument. The second version
didn't--it tried to run a program literally called ``echo surprise'',
didn't find it, and set $?
to a non-zero value indicating failure.
Beginning with v5.6.0, Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for
output before the exec, but this may not be supported on some platforms
(see the perlport manpage). To be safe, you may need to set $|
($AUTOFLUSH
in English) or call the autoflush()
method of IO::Handle
on any
open handles in order to avoid lost output.
Note that exec
will not call your END
blocks, nor will it call
any DESTROY
methods in your objects.
print "Exists\n" if exists $hash{$key}; print "Defined\n" if defined $hash{$key}; print "True\n" if $hash{$key};
print "Exists\n" if exists $array[$index]; print "Defined\n" if defined $array[$index]; print "True\n" if $array[$index];
A hash or array element can be true only if it's defined, and defined if it exists, but the reverse doesn't necessarily hold true.
Given an expression that specifies the name of a subroutine,
returns true if the specified subroutine has ever been declared, even
if it is undefined. Mentioning a subroutine name for exists or defined
does not count as declaring it. Note that a subroutine which does not
exist may still be callable: its package may have an AUTOLOAD
method that makes it spring into existence the first time that it is
called -- see the perlsub manpage.
print "Exists\n" if exists &subroutine; print "Defined\n" if defined &subroutine;
Note that the EXPR can be arbitrarily complicated as long as the final operation is a hash or array key lookup or subroutine name:
if (exists $ref->{A}->{B}->{$key}) { } if (exists $hash{A}{B}{$key}) { }
if (exists $ref->{A}->{B}->[$ix]) { } if (exists $hash{A}{B}[$ix]) { }
if (exists &{$ref->{A}{B}{$key}}) { }
Although the deepest nested array or hash will not spring into existence
just because its existence was tested, any intervening ones will.
Thus $ref->{"A"}
and $ref->{"A"}->{"B"}
will spring
into existence due to the existence test for the $key element above.
This happens anywhere the arrow operator is used, including even:
undef $ref; if (exists $ref->{"Some key"}) { } print $ref; # prints HASH(0x80d3d5c)
This surprising autovivification in what does not at first--or even second--glance appear to be an lvalue context may be fixed in a future release.
See Pseudo-hashes: Using an array as a hash in the perlref manpage for specifics
on how exists()
acts when used on a pseudo-hash.
Use of a subroutine call, rather than a subroutine name, as an argument
to exists()
is an error.
exists ⊂ # OK exists &sub(); # Error
$ans = <STDIN>; exit 0 if $ans =~ /^[Xx]/;
See also die
. If EXPR is omitted, exits with 0
status. The only
universally recognized values for EXPR are 0
for success and 1
for error; other values are subject to interpretation depending on the
environment in which the Perl program is running. For example, exiting
69 (EX_UNAVAILABLE) from a sendmail incoming-mail filter will cause
the mailer to return the item undelivered, but that's not true everywhere.
Don't use exit
to abort a subroutine if there's any chance that
someone might want to trap whatever error happened. Use die
instead,
which can be trapped by an eval
.
The exit()
function does not always exit immediately. It calls any
defined END
routines first, but these END
routines may not
themselves abort the exit. Likewise any object destructors that need to
be called are called before the real exit. If this is a problem, you
can call POSIX:_exit($status)
to avoid END and destructor processing.
See the perlmod manpage for details.
exp($_)
.
fcntl(2)
function. You'll probably have to say
use Fcntl;
first to get the correct constant definitions. Argument processing and
value return works just like ioctl
below.
For example:
use Fcntl; fcntl($filehandle, F_GETFL, $packed_return_buffer) or die "can't fcntl F_GETFL: $!";
You don't have to check for defined
on the return from fnctl
.
Like ioctl
, it maps a 0
return from the system call into
"0 but true"
in Perl. This string is true in boolean context and 0
in numeric context. It is also exempt from the normal -w warnings
on improper numeric conversions.
Note that fcntl
will produce a fatal error if used on a machine that
doesn't implement fcntl(2). See the Fcntl module or your fcntl(2)
manpage to learn what functions are available on your system.
select
and low-level POSIX tty-handling operations.
If FILEHANDLE is an expression, the value is taken as an indirect
filehandle, generally its name.
You can use this to find out whether two handles refer to the same underlying descriptor:
if (fileno(THIS) == fileno(THAT)) { print "THIS and THAT are dups\n"; }
fcntl(2)
locking, or lockf(3).
flock
is Perl's portable file locking interface, although it locks
only entire files, not records.
Two potentially non-obvious but traditional flock
semantics are
that it waits indefinitely until the lock is granted, and that its locks
merely advisory. Such discretionary locks are more flexible, but offer
fewer guarantees. This means that files locked with flock
may be
modified by programs that do not also use flock
. See the perlport manpage,
your port's specific documentation, or your system-specific local manpages
for details. It's best to assume traditional behavior if you're writing
portable programs. (But if you're not, you should as always feel perfectly
free to write for your own system's idiosyncrasies (sometimes called
``features''). Slavish adherence to portability concerns shouldn't get
in the way of your getting your job done.)
OPERATION is one of LOCK_SH, LOCK_EX, or LOCK_UN, possibly combined with
LOCK_NB. These constants are traditionally valued 1, 2, 8 and 4, but
you can use the symbolic names if you import them from the Fcntl module,
either individually, or as a group using the ':flock' tag. LOCK_SH
requests a shared lock, LOCK_EX requests an exclusive lock, and LOCK_UN
releases a previously requested lock. If LOCK_NB is bitwise-or'ed with
LOCK_SH or LOCK_EX then flock
will return immediately rather than blocking
waiting for the lock (check the return status to see if you got it).
To avoid the possibility of miscoordination, Perl now flushes FILEHANDLE before locking or unlocking it.
Note that the emulation built with lockf(3)
doesn't provide shared
locks, and it requires that FILEHANDLE be open with write intent. These
are the semantics that lockf(3)
implements. Most if not all systems
implement lockf(3)
in terms of fcntl(2)
locking, though, so the
differing semantics shouldn't bite too many people.
Note also that some versions of flock
cannot lock things over the
network; you would need to use the more system-specific fcntl
for
that. If you like you can force Perl to ignore your system's flock(2)
function, and so provide its own fcntl(2)-based emulation, by passing
the switch -Ud_flock
to the Configure program when you configure
perl.
Here's a mailbox appender for BSD systems.
use Fcntl ':flock'; # import LOCK_* constants
sub lock { flock(MBOX,LOCK_EX); # and, in case someone appended # while we were waiting... seek(MBOX, 0, 2); }
sub unlock { flock(MBOX,LOCK_UN); }
open(MBOX, ">>/usr/spool/mail/$ENV{'USER'}") or die "Can't open mailbox: $!";
lock(); print MBOX $msg,"\n\n"; unlock();
On systems that support a real flock(), locks are inherited across fork()
calls, whereas those that must resort to the more capricious fcntl()
function lose the locks, making it harder to write servers.
See also the DB_File manpage for other flock()
examples.
fork(2)
system call to create a new process running the
same program at the same point. It returns the child pid to the
parent process, 0
to the child process, or undef
if the fork is
unsuccessful. File descriptors (and sometimes locks on those descriptors)
are shared, while everything else is copied. On most systems supporting
fork(), great care has gone into making it extremely efficient (for
example, using copy-on-write technology on data pages), making it the
dominant paradigm for multitasking over the last few decades.
Beginning with v5.6.0, Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for
output before forking the child process, but this may not be supported
on some platforms (see the perlport manpage). To be safe, you may need to set
$|
($AUTOFLUSH in English) or call the autoflush()
method of
IO::Handle
on any open handles in order to avoid duplicate output.
If you fork
without ever waiting on your children, you will
accumulate zombies. On some systems, you can avoid this by setting
$SIG{CHLD}
to "IGNORE"
. See also the perlipc manpage for more examples of
forking and reaping moribund children.
Note that if your forked child inherits system file descriptors like STDIN and STDOUT that are actually connected by a pipe or socket, even if you exit, then the remote server (such as, say, a CGI script or a backgrounded job launched from a remote shell) won't think you're done. You should reopen those to /dev/null if it's any issue.
write
function. For
example:
format Something = Test: @<<<<<<<< @||||| @>>>>> $str, $%, '$' . int($num) .
$str = "widget"; $num = $cost/$quantity; $~ = 'Something'; write;
See the perlform manpage for many details and examples.
format
s, though you may call it,
too. It formats (see the perlform manpage) a list of values according to the
contents of PICTURE, placing the output into the format output
accumulator, $^A
(or $ACCUMULATOR
in English).
Eventually, when a write
is done, the contents of
$^A
are written to some filehandle, but you could also read $^A
yourself and then set $^A
back to ""
. Note that a format typically
does one formline
per line of form, but the formline
function itself
doesn't care how many newlines are embedded in the PICTURE. This means
that the ~
and ~~
tokens will treat the entire PICTURE as a single line.
You may therefore need to use multiple formlines to implement a single
record format, just like the format compiler.
Be careful if you put double quotes around the picture, because an @
character may be taken to mean the beginning of an array name.
formline
always returns true. See the perlform manpage for other examples.
if ($BSD_STYLE) { system "stty cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1"; } else { system "stty", '-icanon', 'eol', "\001"; }
$key = getc(STDIN);
if ($BSD_STYLE) { system "stty -cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1"; } else { system "stty", 'icanon', 'eol', '^@'; # ASCII null } print "\n";
Determination of whether $BSD_STYLE should be set is left as an exercise to the reader.
The POSIX::getattr
function can do this more portably on
systems purporting POSIX compliance. See also the Term::ReadKey
module from your nearest CPAN site; details on CPAN can be found on
CPAN in the perlmodlib manpage.
getpwuid
.
$login = getlogin || getpwuid($<) || "Kilroy";
Do not consider getlogin
for authentication: it is not as
secure as getpwuid
.
use Socket; $hersockaddr = getpeername(SOCK); ($port, $iaddr) = sockaddr_in($hersockaddr); $herhostname = gethostbyaddr($iaddr, AF_INET); $herstraddr = inet_ntoa($iaddr);
0
to get the current process group for the
current process. Will raise an exception if used on a machine that
doesn't implement getpgrp(2). If PID is omitted, returns process
group of current process. Note that the POSIX version of getpgrp
does not accept a PID argument, so only PID==0
is truly portable.
($name,$passwd,$uid,$gid, $quota,$comment,$gcos,$dir,$shell,$expire) = getpw* ($name,$passwd,$gid,$members) = getgr* ($name,$aliases,$addrtype,$length,@addrs) = gethost* ($name,$aliases,$addrtype,$net) = getnet* ($name,$aliases,$proto) = getproto* ($name,$aliases,$port,$proto) = getserv*
(If the entry doesn't exist you get a null list.)
The exact meaning of the $gcos field varies but it usually contains the real name of the user (as opposed to the login name) and other information pertaining to the user. Beware, however, that in many system users are able to change this information and therefore it cannot be trusted and therefore the $gcos is tainted (see the perlsec manpage). The $passwd and $shell, user's encrypted password and login shell, are also tainted, because of the same reason.
In scalar context, you get the name, unless the function was a lookup by name, in which case you get the other thing, whatever it is. (If the entry doesn't exist you get the undefined value.) For example:
$uid = getpwnam($name); $name = getpwuid($num); $name = getpwent(); $gid = getgrnam($name); $name = getgrgid($num; $name = getgrent(); #etc.
In getpw*() the fields $quota, $comment, and $expire are special
cases in the sense that in many systems they are unsupported. If the
$quota is unsupported, it is an empty scalar. If it is supported, it
usually encodes the disk quota. If the $comment field is unsupported,
it is an empty scalar. If it is supported it usually encodes some
administrative comment about the user. In some systems the $quota
field may be $change or $age, fields that have to do with password
aging. In some systems the $comment field may be $class. The $expire
field, if present, encodes the expiration period of the account or the
password. For the availability and the exact meaning of these fields
in your system, please consult your getpwnam(3)
documentation and your
pwd.h file. You can also find out from within Perl what your
$quota and $comment fields mean and whether you have the $expire field
by using the Config
module and the values d_pwquota
, d_pwage
,
d_pwchange
, d_pwcomment
, and d_pwexpire
. Shadow password
files are only supported if your vendor has implemented them in the
intuitive fashion that calling the regular C library routines gets the
shadow versions if you're running under privilege or if there exists
the shadow(3)
functions as found in System V ( this includes Solaris
and Linux.) Those systems which implement a proprietary shadow password
facility are unlikely to be supported.
The $members value returned by getgr*() is a space separated list of the login names of the members of the group.
For the gethost*() functions, if the h_errno
variable is supported in
C, it will be returned to you via $?
if the function call fails. The
@addrs
value returned by a successful call is a list of the raw
addresses returned by the corresponding system library call. In the
Internet domain, each address is four bytes long and you can unpack it
by saying something like:
($a,$b,$c,$d) = unpack('C4',$addr[0]);
The Socket library makes this slightly easier:
use Socket; $iaddr = inet_aton("127.1"); # or whatever address $name = gethostbyaddr($iaddr, AF_INET);
# or going the other way $straddr = inet_ntoa($iaddr);
If you get tired of remembering which element of the return list
contains which return value, by-name interfaces are provided
in standard modules: File::stat
, Net::hostent
, Net::netent
,
Net::protoent
, Net::servent
, Time::gmtime
, Time::localtime
,
and User::grent
. These override the normal built-ins, supplying
versions that return objects with the appropriate names
for each field. For example:
use File::stat; use User::pwent; $is_his = (stat($filename)->uid == pwent($whoever)->uid);
Even though it looks like they're the same method calls (uid),
they aren't, because a File::stat
object is different from
a User::pwent
object.
use Socket; $mysockaddr = getsockname(SOCK); ($port, $myaddr) = sockaddr_in($mysockaddr); printf "Connect to %s [%s]\n", scalar gethostbyaddr($myaddr, AF_INET), inet_ntoa($myaddr);
<*.c>
operator, but you can use it directly.
If EXPR is omitted, $_
is used. The <*.c>
operator is
discussed in more detail in I/O Operators in the perlop manpage.
Beginning with v5.6.0, this operator is implemented using the standard
File::Glob
extension. See the File::Glob manpage for details.
# 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday) = gmtime(time);
All list elements are numeric, and come straight out of the C `struct
tm'. $sec, $min, and $hour are the seconds, minutes, and hours of the
specified time. $mday is the day of the month, and $mon is the month
itself, in the range 0..11
with 0 indicating January and 11
indicating December. $year is the number of years since 1900. That
is, $year is 123
in year 2023. $wday is the day of the week, with
0 indicating Sunday and 3 indicating Wednesday. $yday is the day of
the year, in the range 0..364
(or 0..365
in leap years.)
Note that the $year element is not simply the last two digits of the year. If you assume it is, then you create non-Y2K-compliant programs--and you wouldn't want to do that, would you?
The proper way to get a complete 4-digit year is simply:
$year += 1900;
And to get the last two digits of the year (e.g., '01' in 2001) do:
$year = sprintf("%02d", $year % 100);
If EXPR is omitted, gmtime()
uses the current time (gmtime(time)
).
In scalar context, gmtime()
returns the ctime(3)
value:
$now_string = gmtime; # e.g., "Thu Oct 13 04:54:34 1994"
Also see the timegm
function provided by the Time::Local
module,
and the strftime(3)
function available via the POSIX module.
This scalar value is not locale dependent (see the perllocale manpage), but
is instead a Perl builtin. Also see the Time::Local
module, and the
strftime(3)
and mktime(3)
functions available via the POSIX module. To
get somewhat similar but locale dependent date strings, set up your
locale environment variables appropriately (please see the perllocale manpage)
and try for example:
use POSIX qw(strftime); $now_string = strftime "%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Y", gmtime;
Note that the %a
and %b
escapes, which represent the short forms
of the day of the week and the month of the year, may not necessarily
be three characters wide in all locales.
goto-LABEL
form finds the statement labeled with LABEL and resumes
execution there. It may not be used to go into any construct that
requires initialization, such as a subroutine or a foreach
loop. It
also can't be used to go into a construct that is optimized away,
or to get out of a block or subroutine given to sort
.
It can be used to go almost anywhere else within the dynamic scope,
including out of subroutines, but it's usually better to use some other
construct such as last
or die
. The author of Perl has never felt the
need to use this form of goto
(in Perl, that is--C is another matter).
The goto-EXPR
form expects a label name, whose scope will be resolved
dynamically. This allows for computed goto
s per FORTRAN, but isn't
necessarily recommended if you're optimizing for maintainability:
goto ("FOO", "BAR", "GLARCH")[$i];
The goto-&NAME
form is quite different from the other forms of goto
.
In fact, it isn't a goto in the normal sense at all, and doesn't have
the stigma associated with other gotos. Instead, it
substitutes a call to the named subroutine for the currently running
subroutine. This is used by AUTOLOAD
subroutines that wish to load
another subroutine and then pretend that the other subroutine had been
called in the first place (except that any modifications to @_
in the current subroutine are propagated to the other subroutine.)
After the goto
, not even caller
will be able to tell that this
routine was called first.
NAME needn't be the name of a subroutine; it can be a scalar variable containing a code reference, or a block which evaluates to a code reference.
grep(1)
and its
relatives. In particular, it is not limited to using regular expressions.
Evaluates the BLOCK or EXPR for each element of LIST (locally setting
$_
to each element) and returns the list value consisting of those
elements for which the expression evaluated to true. In scalar
context, returns the number of times the expression was true.
@foo = grep(!/^#/, @bar); # weed out comments
or equivalently,
@foo = grep {!/^#/} @bar; # weed out comments
Note that $_
is an alias to the list value, so it can be used to
modify the elements of the LIST. While this is useful and supported,
it can cause bizarre results if the elements of LIST are not variables.
Similarly, grep returns aliases into the original list, much as a for
loop's index variable aliases the list elements. That is, modifying an
element of a list returned by grep (for example, in a foreach
, map
or another grep
) actually modifies the element in the original list.
This is usually something to be avoided when writing clear code.
See also map for a list composed of the results of the BLOCK or EXPR.
$_
.
print hex '0xAf'; # prints '175' print hex 'aF'; # same
Hex strings may only represent integers. Strings that would cause integer overflow trigger a warning.
import
function. It is just an ordinary
method (subroutine) defined (or inherited) by modules that wish to export
names to another module. The use
function calls the import
method
for the package used. See also use, the perlmod manpage, and the Exporter manpage.
0
(or whatever
you've set the $[
variable to--but don't do that). If the substring
is not found, returns one less than the base, ordinarily -1
.
$_
.
You should not use this function for rounding: one because it truncates
towards 0
, and two because machine representations of floating point
numbers can sometimes produce counterintuitive results. For example,
int(-6.725/0.025)
produces -268 rather than the correct -269; that's
because it's really more like -268.99999999999994315658 instead. Usually,
the sprintf
, printf
, or the POSIX::floor
and POSIX::ceil
functions will serve you better than will int().
ioctl(2)
function. You'll probably first have to say
require "ioctl.ph"; # probably in /usr/local/lib/perl/ioctl.ph
to get the correct function definitions. If ioctl.ph doesn't
exist or doesn't have the correct definitions you'll have to roll your
own, based on your C header files such as <sys/ioctl.h >>.
(There is a Perl script called h2ph that comes with the Perl kit that
may help you in this, but it's nontrivial.) SCALAR will be read and/or
written depending on the FUNCTION--a pointer to the string value of SCALAR
will be passed as the third argument of the actual ioctl
call. (If SCALAR
has no string value but does have a numeric value, that value will be
passed rather than a pointer to the string value. To guarantee this to be
true, add a 0
to the scalar before using it.) The pack
and unpack
functions may be needed to manipulate the values of structures used by
ioctl
.
The return value of ioctl
(and fcntl
) is as follows:
if OS returns: then Perl returns: -1 undefined value 0 string "0 but true" anything else that number
Thus Perl returns true on success and false on failure, yet you can still easily determine the actual value returned by the operating system:
$retval = ioctl(...) || -1; printf "System returned %d\n", $retval;
The special string ``0
but true'' is exempt from -w complaints
about improper numeric conversions.
Here's an example of setting a filehandle named REMOTE
to be
non-blocking at the system level. You'll have to negotiate $|
on your own, though.
use Fcntl qw(F_GETFL F_SETFL O_NONBLOCK);
$flags = fcntl(REMOTE, F_GETFL, 0) or die "Can't get flags for the socket: $!\n";
$flags = fcntl(REMOTE, F_SETFL, $flags | O_NONBLOCK) or die "Can't set flags for the socket: $!\n";
$rec = join(':', $login,$passwd,$uid,$gid,$gcos,$home,$shell);
Beware that unlike split
, join
doesn't take a pattern as its
first argument. Compare split.
values
or each
function produces (given
that the hash has not been modified). As a side effect, it resets
HASH's iterator.
Here is yet another way to print your environment:
@keys = keys %ENV; @values = values %ENV; while (@keys) { print pop(@keys), '=', pop(@values), "\n"; }
or how about sorted by key:
foreach $key (sort(keys %ENV)) { print $key, '=', $ENV{$key}, "\n"; }
The returned values are copies of the original keys in the hash, so modifying them will not affect the original hash. Compare values.
To sort a hash by value, you'll need to use a sort
function.
Here's a descending numeric sort of a hash by its values:
foreach $key (sort { $hash{$b} <=> $hash{$a} } keys %hash) { printf "%4d %s\n", $hash{$key}, $key; }
As an lvalue keys
allows you to increase the number of hash buckets
allocated for the given hash. This can gain you a measure of efficiency if
you know the hash is going to get big. (This is similar to pre-extending
an array by assigning a larger number to $#array.) If you say
keys %hash = 200;
then %hash
will have at least 200 buckets allocated for it--256 of them,
in fact, since it rounds up to the next power of two. These
buckets will be retained even if you do %hash = ()
, use undef
%hash
if you want to free the storage while %hash
is still in scope.
You can't shrink the number of buckets allocated for the hash using
keys
in this way (but you needn't worry about doing this by accident,
as trying has no effect).
$cnt = kill 1, $child1, $child2; kill 9, @goners;
If SIGNAL is zero, no signal is sent to the process. This is a useful way to check that the process is alive and hasn't changed its UID. See the perlport manpage for notes on the portability of this construct.
Unlike in the shell, if SIGNAL is negative, it kills process groups instead of processes. (On System V, a negative PROCESS number will also kill process groups, but that's not portable.) That means you usually want to use positive not negative signals. You may also use a signal name in quotes. See Signals in the perlipc manpage for details.
last
command is like the break
statement in C (as used in
loops); it immediately exits the loop in question. If the LABEL is
omitted, the command refers to the innermost enclosing loop. The
continue
block, if any, is not executed:
LINE: while (<STDIN>) { last LINE if /^$/; # exit when done with header #... }
last
cannot be used to exit a block which returns a value such as
eval {}
, sub {}
or do {}
, and should not be used to exit
a grep()
or map()
operation.
Note that a block by itself is semantically identical to a loop
that executes once. Thus last
can be used to effect an early
exit out of such a block.
See also continue for an illustration of how last
, next
, and
redo
work.
\L
escape in double-quoted strings.
Respects current LC_CTYPE locale if use locale
in force. See the perllocale manpage
and the utf8 manpage.
If EXPR is omitted, uses $_
.
\l
escape in double-quoted strings.
Respects current LC_CTYPE locale if use locale
in force. See the perllocale manpage.
If EXPR is omitted, uses $_
.
$_
. Note that this cannot be used on
an entire array or hash to find out how many elements these have.
For that, use scalar @array
and scalar keys %hash
respectively.
my
instead, because local
isn't
what most people think of as ``local''. See
Private Variables via my() in the perlsub manpage for details.
A local modifies the listed variables to be local to the enclosing block, file, or eval. If more than one value is listed, the list must be placed in parentheses. See Temporary Values via local() in the perlsub manpage for details, including issues with tied arrays and hashes.
# 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday,$isdst) = localtime(time);
All list elements are numeric, and come straight out of the C `struct
tm'. $sec, $min, and $hour are the seconds, minutes, and hours of the
specified time. $mday is the day of the month, and $mon is the month
itself, in the range 0..11
with 0 indicating January and 11
indicating December. $year is the number of years since 1900. That
is, $year is 123
in year 2023. $wday is the day of the week, with
0 indicating Sunday and 3 indicating Wednesday. $yday is the day of
the year, in the range 0..364
(or 0..365
in leap years.) $isdst
is true if the specified time occurs during daylight savings time,
false otherwise.
Note that the $year element is not simply the last two digits of the year. If you assume it is, then you create non-Y2K-compliant programs--and you wouldn't want to do that, would you?
The proper way to get a complete 4-digit year is simply:
$year += 1900;
And to get the last two digits of the year (e.g., '01' in 2001) do:
$year = sprintf("%02d", $year % 100);
If EXPR is omitted, localtime()
uses the current time (localtime(time)
).
In scalar context, localtime()
returns the ctime(3)
value:
$now_string = localtime; # e.g., "Thu Oct 13 04:54:34 1994"
This scalar value is not locale dependent, see the perllocale manpage, but
instead a Perl builtin. Also see the Time::Local
module
(to convert the second, minutes, hours, ... back to seconds since the
stroke of midnight the 1st of January 1970, the value returned by
time()), and the strftime(3)
and mktime(3)
functions available via the
POSIX module. To get somewhat similar but locale dependent date
strings, set up your locale environment variables appropriately
(please see the perllocale manpage) and try for example:
use POSIX qw(strftime); $now_string = strftime "%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Y", localtime;
Note that the %a
and %b
, the short forms of the day of the week
and the month of the year, may not necessarily be three characters wide.
lock I<THING>
This function places an advisory lock on a variable, subroutine,
or referenced object contained in THING until the lock goes out
of scope. This is a built-in function only if your version of Perl
was built with threading enabled, and if you've said use Threads
.
Otherwise a user-defined function by this name will be called. See
the Thread manpage.
$_
. To get the log of another base, use basic algebra:
The base-N log of a number is equal to the natural log of that number
divided by the natural log of N. For example:
sub log10 { my $n = shift; return log($n)/log(10); }
See also exp for the inverse operation.
stat
function (including setting the
special _
filehandle) but stats a symbolic link instead of the file
the symbolic link points to. If symbolic links are unimplemented on
your system, a normal stat
is done.
If EXPR is omitted, stats $_
.
$_
to each element) and returns the list value composed of the
results of each such evaluation. In scalar context, returns the
total number of elements so generated. Evaluates BLOCK or EXPR in
list context, so each element of LIST may produce zero, one, or
more elements in the returned value.
@chars = map(chr, @nums);
translates a list of numbers to the corresponding characters. And
%hash = map { getkey($_) => $_ } @array;
is just a funny way to write
%hash = (); foreach $_ (@array) { $hash{getkey($_)} = $_; }
Note that $_
is an alias to the list value, so it can be used to
modify the elements of the LIST. While this is useful and supported,
it can cause bizarre results if the elements of LIST are not variables.
Using a regular foreach
loop for this purpose would be clearer in
most cases. See also grep for an array composed of those items of
the original list for which the BLOCK or EXPR evaluates to true.
{
starts both hash references and blocks, so map { ...
could be either
the start of map BLOCK LIST or map EXPR, LIST. Because perl doesn't look
ahead for the closing }
it has to take a guess at which its dealing with
based what it finds just after the {
. Usually it gets it right, but if it
doesn't it won't realize something is wrong until it gets to the }
and
encounters the missing (or unexpected) comma. The syntax error will be
reported close to the }
but you'll need to change something near the {
such as using a unary +
to give perl some help:
%hash = map { "\L$_", 1 } @array # perl guesses EXPR. wrong %hash = map { +"\L$_", 1 } @array # perl guesses BLOCK. right %hash = map { ("\L$_", 1) } @array # this also works %hash = map { lc($_), 1 } @array # as does this. %hash = map +( lc($_), 1 ), @array # this is EXPR and works!
%hash = map ( lc($_), 1 ), @array # evaluates to (1, @array)
or to force an anon hash constructor use +{
@hashes = map +{ lc($_), 1 }, @array # EXPR, so needs , at end
and you get list of anonymous hashes each with only 1 entry.
umask
). If it succeeds it
returns true, otherwise it returns false and sets $!
(errno).
If omitted, MASK defaults to 0777.
In general, it is better to create directories with permissive MASK,
and let the user modify that with their umask
, than it is to supply
a restrictive MASK and give the user no way to be more permissive.
The exceptions to this rule are when the file or directory should be
kept private (mail files, for instance). The perlfunc(1)
entry on
umask
discusses the choice of MASK in more detail.
use IPC::SysV;
first to get the correct constant definitions. If CMD is IPC_STAT
,
then ARG must be a variable which will hold the returned msqid_ds
structure. Returns like ioctl
: the undefined value for error,
"0 but true"
for zero, or the actual return value otherwise. See also
SysV IPC in the perlipc manpage, IPC::SysV
, and IPC::Semaphore
documentation.
IPC::SysV
and IPC::Msg
documentation.
unpack("l! a*")
.
Taints the variable. Returns true if successful, or false if there is
an error. See also SysV IPC in the perlipc manpage, IPC::SysV
, and
IPC::SysV::Msg
documentation.
pack("l! a*", $type, $message)
. Returns true if successful,
or false if there is an error. See also IPC::SysV
and IPC::SysV::Msg
documentation.
my
declares the listed variables to be local (lexically) to the
enclosing block, file, or eval
. If
more than one value is listed, the list must be placed in parentheses. See
Private Variables via my() in the perlsub manpage for details.
next
command is like the continue
statement in C; it starts
the next iteration of the loop:
LINE: while (<STDIN>) { next LINE if /^#/; # discard comments #... }
Note that if there were a continue
block on the above, it would get
executed even on discarded lines. If the LABEL is omitted, the command
refers to the innermost enclosing loop.
next
cannot be used to exit a block which returns a value such as
eval {}
, sub {}
or do {}
, and should not be used to exit
a grep()
or map()
operation.
Note that a block by itself is semantically identical to a loop
that executes once. Thus next
will exit such a block early.
See also continue for an illustration of how last
, next
, and
redo
work.
no
is the opposite of.
0x
, interprets it as a
hex string. If EXPR starts off with 0b
, it is interpreted as a
binary string.) The following will handle decimal, binary, octal, and
hex in the standard Perl or C notation:
$val = oct($val) if $val =~ /^0/;
If EXPR is omitted, uses $_
. To go the other way (produce a number
in octal), use sprintf()
or printf():
$perms = (stat("filename"))[2] & 07777; $oct_perms = sprintf "%lo", $perms;
The oct()
function is commonly used when a string such as 644
needs
to be converted into a file mode, for example. (Although perl will
automatically convert strings into numbers as needed, this automatic
conversion assumes base 10.)
use strict 'refs'
should not be in effect.)
If EXPR is omitted, the scalar
variable of the same name as the FILEHANDLE contains the filename.
(Note that lexical variables--those declared with my
--will not work
for this purpose; so if you're using my
, specify EXPR in your call
to open.) See the perlopentut manpage for a kinder, gentler explanation of opening
files.
If MODE is '<'
or nothing, the file is opened for input.
If MODE is '>'
, the file is truncated and opened for
output, being created if necessary. If MODE is '>>'
,
the file is opened for appending, again being created if necessary.
You can put a '+'
in front of the '>'
or '<'
to indicate that
you want both read and write access to the file; thus '+<'
is almost
always preferred for read/write updates--the '+>'
mode would clobber the
file first. You can't usually use either read-write mode for updating
textfiles, since they have variable length records. See the -i
switch in the perlrun manpage for a better approach. The file is created with
permissions of 0666
modified by the process' umask
value.
These various prefixes correspond to the fopen(3)
modes of 'r'
, 'r+'
,
'w'
, 'w+'
, 'a'
, and 'a+'
.
In the 2-arguments (and 1-argument) form of the call the mode and
filename should be concatenated (in this order), possibly separated by
spaces. It is possible to omit the mode if the mode is '<'
.
If the filename begins with '|'
, the filename is interpreted as a
command to which output is to be piped, and if the filename ends with a
'|'
, the filename is interpreted as a command which pipes output to
us. See Using open() for IPC in the perlipc manpage
for more examples of this. (You are not allowed to open
to a command
that pipes both in and out, but see the IPC::Open2 manpage, the IPC::Open3 manpage,
and Bidirectional Communication with Another Process in the perlipc manpage
for alternatives.)
If MODE is '|-'
, the filename is interpreted as a
command to which output is to be piped, and if MODE is
'-|'
, the filename is interpreted as a command which pipes output to
us. In the 2-arguments (and 1-argument) form one should replace dash
('-'
) with the command. See Using open() for IPC in the perlipc manpage
for more examples of this. (You are not allowed to open
to a command
that pipes both in and out, but see the IPC::Open2 manpage, the IPC::Open3 manpage,
and Bidirectional Communication in the perlipc manpage for alternatives.)
In the 2-arguments (and 1-argument) form opening '-'
opens STDIN
and opening '>-'
opens STDOUT.
Open returns
nonzero upon success, the undefined value otherwise. If the open
involved a pipe, the return value happens to be the pid of the
subprocess.
If you're unfortunate enough to be running Perl on a system that
distinguishes between text files and binary files (modern operating
systems don't care), then you should check out binmode for tips for
dealing with this. The key distinction between systems that need binmode
and those that don't is their text file formats. Systems like Unix, MacOS, and
Plan9, which delimit lines with a single character, and which encode that
character in C as "\n"
, do not need binmode
. The rest need it.
When opening a file, it's usually a bad idea to continue normal execution
if the request failed, so open
is frequently used in connection with
die
. Even if die
won't do what you want (say, in a CGI script,
where you want to make a nicely formatted error message (but there are
modules that can help with that problem)) you should always check
the return value from opening a file. The infrequent exception is when
working with an unopened filehandle is actually what you want to do.
Examples:
$ARTICLE = 100; open ARTICLE or die "Can't find article $ARTICLE: $!\n"; while (<ARTICLE>) {...
open(LOG, '>>/usr/spool/news/twitlog'); # (log is reserved) # if the open fails, output is discarded
open(DBASE, '+<', 'dbase.mine') # open for update or die "Can't open 'dbase.mine' for update: $!";
open(DBASE, '+<dbase.mine') # ditto or die "Can't open 'dbase.mine' for update: $!";
open(ARTICLE, '-|', "caesar <$article") # decrypt article or die "Can't start caesar: $!";
open(ARTICLE, "caesar <$article |") # ditto or die "Can't start caesar: $!";
open(EXTRACT, "|sort >/tmp/Tmp$$") # $$ is our process id or die "Can't start sort: $!";
# process argument list of files along with any includes
foreach $file (@ARGV) { process($file, 'fh00'); }
sub process { my($filename, $input) = @_; $input++; # this is a string increment unless (open($input, $filename)) { print STDERR "Can't open $filename: $!\n"; return; }
local $_; while (<$input>) { # note use of indirection if (/^#include "(.*)"/) { process($1, $input); next; } #... # whatever } }
You may also, in the Bourne shell tradition, specify an EXPR beginning
with '>&'
, in which case the rest of the string is interpreted as the
name of a filehandle (or file descriptor, if numeric) to be
duped and opened. You may use &
after >
, >>
,
<
, +>
, +>>
, and +<
. The
mode you specify should match the mode of the original filehandle.
(Duping a filehandle does not take into account any existing contents of
stdio buffers.) Duping file handles is not yet supported for 3-argument
open().
Here is a script that saves, redirects, and restores STDOUT and STDERR:
#!/usr/bin/perl open(OLDOUT, ">&STDOUT"); open(OLDERR, ">&STDERR");
open(STDOUT, '>', "foo.out") || die "Can't redirect stdout"; open(STDERR, ">&STDOUT") || die "Can't dup stdout";
select(STDERR); $| = 1; # make unbuffered select(STDOUT); $| = 1; # make unbuffered
print STDOUT "stdout 1\n"; # this works for print STDERR "stderr 1\n"; # subprocesses too
close(STDOUT); close(STDERR);
open(STDOUT, ">&OLDOUT"); open(STDERR, ">&OLDERR");
print STDOUT "stdout 2\n"; print STDERR "stderr 2\n";
If you specify '<&=N'
, where N
is a number, then Perl will do an
equivalent of C's fdopen
of that file descriptor; this is more
parsimonious of file descriptors. For example:
open(FILEHANDLE, "<&=$fd")
Note that this feature depends on the fdopen()
C library function.
On many UNIX systems, fdopen()
is known to fail when file descriptors
exceed a certain value, typically 255. If you need more file
descriptors than that, consider rebuilding Perl to use the sfio
library.
If you open a pipe on the command '-'
, i.e., either '|-'
or '-|'
with 2-arguments (or 1-argument) form of open(), then
there is an implicit fork done, and the return value of open is the pid
of the child within the parent process, and 0
within the child
process. (Use defined($pid)
to determine whether the open was successful.)
The filehandle behaves normally for the parent, but i/o to that
filehandle is piped from/to the STDOUT/STDIN of the child process.
In the child process the filehandle isn't opened--i/o happens from/to
the new STDOUT or STDIN. Typically this is used like the normal
piped open when you want to exercise more control over just how the
pipe command gets executed, such as when you are running setuid, and
don't want to have to scan shell commands for metacharacters.
The following triples are more or less equivalent:
open(FOO, "|tr '[a-z]' '[A-Z]'"); open(FOO, '|-', "tr '[a-z]' '[A-Z]'"); open(FOO, '|-') || exec 'tr', '[a-z]', '[A-Z]';
open(FOO, "cat -n '$file'|"); open(FOO, '-|', "cat -n '$file'"); open(FOO, '-|') || exec 'cat', '-n', $file;
See Safe Pipe Opens in the perlipc manpage for more examples of this.
Beginning with v5.6.0, Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for
output before any operation that may do a fork, but this may not be
supported on some platforms (see the perlport manpage). To be safe, you may need
to set $|
($AUTOFLUSH in English) or call the autoflush()
method
of IO::Handle
on any open handles.
On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will be set for the newly opened file descriptor as determined by the value of $^F. See $^F in the perlvar manpage.
Closing any piped filehandle causes the parent process to wait for the
child to finish, and returns the status value in $?
.
The filename passed to 2-argument (or 1-argument) form of open()
will have leading and trailing
whitespace deleted, and the normal redirection characters
honored. This property, known as ``magic open'',
can often be used to good effect. A user could specify a filename of
``rsh cat file |'', or you could change certain filenames as needed:
$filename =~ s/(.*\.gz)\s*$/gzip -dc < $1|/; open(FH, $filename) or die "Can't open $filename: $!";
Use 3-argument form to open a file with arbitrary weird characters in it,
open(FOO, '<', $file);
otherwise it's necessary to protect any leading and trailing whitespace:
$file =~ s#^(\s)#./$1#; open(FOO, "< $file\0");
(this may not work on some bizarre filesystems). One should conscientiously choose between the magic and 3-arguments form of open():
open IN, $ARGV[0];
will allow the user to specify an argument of the form "rsh cat file |"
,
but will not work on a filename which happens to have a trailing space, while
open IN, '<', $ARGV[0];
will have exactly the opposite restrictions.
If you want a ``real'' C open
(see open(2) on your system), then you
should use the sysopen
function, which involves no such magic (but
may use subtly different filemodes than Perl open(), which is mapped
to C fopen()). This is
another way to protect your filenames from interpretation. For example:
use IO::Handle; sysopen(HANDLE, $path, O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_EXCL) or die "sysopen $path: $!"; $oldfh = select(HANDLE); $| = 1; select($oldfh); print HANDLE "stuff $$\n"; seek(HANDLE, 0, 0); print "File contains: ", <HANDLE>;
Using the constructor from the IO::Handle
package (or one of its
subclasses, such as IO::File
or IO::Socket
), you can generate anonymous
filehandles that have the scope of whatever variables hold references to
them, and automatically close whenever and however you leave that scope:
use IO::File; #... sub read_myfile_munged { my $ALL = shift; my $handle = new IO::File; open($handle, "myfile") or die "myfile: $!"; $first = <$handle> or return (); # Automatically closed here. mung $first or die "mung failed"; # Or here. return $first, <$handle> if $ALL; # Or here. $first; # Or here. }
See seek for some details about mixing reading and writing.
readdir
, telldir
,
seekdir
, rewinddir
, and closedir
. Returns true if successful.
DIRHANDLEs have their own namespace separate from FILEHANDLEs.
$_
. For the reverse, see chr.
See the utf8 manpage for more about Unicode.
our
declares the listed variables to be valid globals within
the enclosing block, file, or eval
. That is, it has the same
scoping rules as a ``my'' declaration, but does not create a local
variable. If more than one value is listed, the list must be placed
in parentheses. The our
declaration has no semantic effect unless
``use strict vars'' is in effect, in which case it lets you use the
declared global variable without qualifying it with a package name.
(But only within the lexical scope of the our
declaration. In this
it differs from ``use vars'', which is package scoped.)
An our
declaration declares a global variable that will be visible
across its entire lexical scope, even across package boundaries. The
package in which the variable is entered is determined at the point
of the declaration, not at the point of use. This means the following
behavior holds:
package Foo; our $bar; # declares $Foo::bar for rest of lexical scope $bar = 20;
package Bar; print $bar; # prints 20
Multiple our
declarations in the same lexical scope are allowed
if they are in different packages. If they happened to be in the same
package, Perl will emit warnings if you have asked for them.
use warnings; package Foo; our $bar; # declares $Foo::bar for rest of lexical scope $bar = 20;
package Bar; our $bar = 30; # declares $Bar::bar for rest of lexical scope print $bar; # prints 30
our $bar; # emits warning
The TEMPLATE is a sequence of characters that give the order and type of values, as follows:
a A string with arbitrary binary data, will be null padded. A An ASCII string, will be space padded. Z A null terminated (asciz) string, will be null padded.
b A bit string (ascending bit order inside each byte, like vec()). B A bit string (descending bit order inside each byte). h A hex string (low nybble first). H A hex string (high nybble first).
c A signed char value. C An unsigned char value. Only does bytes. See U for Unicode.
s A signed short value. S An unsigned short value. (This 'short' is _exactly_ 16 bits, which may differ from what a local C compiler calls 'short'. If you want native-length shorts, use the '!' suffix.)
i A signed integer value. I An unsigned integer value. (This 'integer' is _at_least_ 32 bits wide. Its exact size depends on what a local C compiler calls 'int', and may even be larger than the 'long' described in the next item.)
l A signed long value. L An unsigned long value. (This 'long' is _exactly_ 32 bits, which may differ from what a local C compiler calls 'long'. If you want native-length longs, use the '!' suffix.)
n An unsigned short in "network" (big-endian) order. N An unsigned long in "network" (big-endian) order. v An unsigned short in "VAX" (little-endian) order. V An unsigned long in "VAX" (little-endian) order. (These 'shorts' and 'longs' are _exactly_ 16 bits and _exactly_ 32 bits, respectively.)
q A signed quad (64-bit) value. Q An unsigned quad value. (Quads are available only if your system supports 64-bit integer values _and_ if Perl has been compiled to support those. Causes a fatal error otherwise.)
f A single-precision float in the native format. d A double-precision float in the native format.
p A pointer to a null-terminated string. P A pointer to a structure (fixed-length string).
u A uuencoded string. U A Unicode character number. Encodes to UTF-8 internally. Works even if C<use utf8> is not in effect.
w A BER compressed integer. Its bytes represent an unsigned integer in base 128, most significant digit first, with as few digits as possible. Bit eight (the high bit) is set on each byte except the last.
x A null byte. X Back up a byte. @ Null fill to absolute position.
The following rules apply:
a
, A
, Z
, b
, B
, h
,
H
, and P
the pack function will gobble up that many values from
the LIST. A *
for the repeat count means to use however many items are
left, except for @
, x
, X
, where it is equivalent
to 0
, and u
, where it is equivalent to 1 (or 45, what is the
same).
When used with Z
, *
results in the addition of a trailing null
byte (so the packed result will be one longer than the byte length
of the item).
The repeat count for u
is interpreted as the maximal number of bytes
to encode per line of output, with 0 and 1 replaced by 45.
a
, A
, and Z
types gobble just one value, but pack it as a
string of length count, padding with nulls or spaces as necessary. When
unpacking, A
strips trailing spaces and nulls, Z
strips everything
after the first null, and a
returns data verbatim. When packing,
a
, and Z
are equivalent.
If the value-to-pack is too long, it is truncated. If too long and an
explicit count is provided, Z
packs only $count-1
bytes, followed
by a null byte. Thus Z
always packs a trailing null byte under
all circumstances.
b
and B
fields pack a string that many bits long.
Each byte of the input field of pack()
generates 1 bit of the result.
Each result bit is based on the least-significant bit of the corresponding
input byte, i.e., on ord($byte)%2
. In particular, bytes "0"
and
"1"
generate bits 0 and 1, as do bytes "\0"
and "\1"
.
Starting from the beginning of the input string of pack(), each 8-tuple
of bytes is converted to 1 byte of output. With format b
the first byte of the 8-tuple determines the least-significant bit of a
byte, and with format B
it determines the most-significant bit of
a byte.
If the length of the input string is not exactly divisible by 8, the remainder is packed as if the input string were padded by null bytes at the end. Similarly, during unpack()ing the ``extra'' bits are ignored.
If the input string of pack()
is longer than needed, extra bytes are ignored.
A *
for the repeat count of pack()
means to use all the bytes of
the input field. On unpack()ing the bits are converted to a string
of "0"
s and "1"
s.
h
and H
fields pack a string that many nybbles (4-bit groups,
representable as hexadecimal digits, 0-9a-f) long.
Each byte of the input field of pack()
generates 4 bits of the result.
For non-alphabetical bytes the result is based on the 4 least-significant
bits of the input byte, i.e., on ord($byte)%16
. In particular,
bytes "0"
and "1"
generate nybbles 0 and 1, as do bytes
"\0"
and "\1"
. For bytes "a".."f"
and "A".."F"
the result
is compatible with the usual hexadecimal digits, so that "a"
and
"A"
both generate the nybble 0xa==10
. The result for bytes
"g".."z"
and "G".."Z"
is not well-defined.
Starting from the beginning of the input string of pack(), each pair
of bytes is converted to 1 byte of output. With format h
the
first byte of the pair determines the least-significant nybble of the
output byte, and with format H
it determines the most-significant
nybble.
If the length of the input string is not even, it behaves as if padded by a null byte at the end. Similarly, during unpack()ing the ``extra'' nybbles are ignored.
If the input string of pack()
is longer than needed, extra bytes are ignored.
A *
for the repeat count of pack()
means to use all the bytes of
the input field. On unpack()ing the bits are converted to a string
of hexadecimal digits.
p
type packs a pointer to a null-terminated string. You are
responsible for ensuring the string is not a temporary value (which can
potentially get deallocated before you get around to using the packed result).
The P
type packs a pointer to a structure of the size indicated by the
length. A NULL pointer is created if the corresponding value for p
or
P
is undef
, similarly for unpack().
/
template character allows packing and unpacking of strings where
the packed structure contains a byte count followed by the string itself.
You write length-item/
string-item.
The length-item can be any pack
template letter,
and describes how the length value is packed.
The ones likely to be of most use are integer-packing ones like
n
(for Java strings), w
(for ASN.1 or SNMP)
and N
(for Sun XDR).
The string-item must, at present, be "A*"
, "a*"
or "Z*"
.
For unpack
the length of the string is obtained from the length-item,
but if you put in the '*' it will be ignored.
unpack 'C/a', "\04Gurusamy"; gives 'Guru' unpack 'a3/A* A*', '007 Bond J '; gives (' Bond','J') pack 'n/a* w/a*','hello,','world'; gives "\000\006hello,\005world"
The length-item is not returned explicitly from unpack
.
Adding a count to the length-item letter is unlikely to do anything
useful, unless that letter is A
, a
or Z
. Packing with a
length-item of a
or Z
may introduce "\000"
characters,
which Perl does not regard as legal in numeric strings.
s
, S
, l
, and L
may be
immediately followed by a !
suffix to signify native shorts or
longs--as you can see from above for example a bare l
does mean
exactly 32 bits, the native long
(as seen by the local C compiler)
may be larger. This is an issue mainly in 64-bit platforms. You can
see whether using !
makes any difference by
print length(pack("s")), " ", length(pack("s!")), "\n"; print length(pack("l")), " ", length(pack("l!")), "\n";
i!
and I!
also work but only because of completeness;
they are identical to i
and I
.
The actual sizes (in bytes) of native shorts, ints, longs, and long longs on the platform where Perl was built are also available via the Config manpage:
use Config; print $Config{shortsize}, "\n"; print $Config{intsize}, "\n"; print $Config{longsize}, "\n"; print $Config{longlongsize}, "\n";
(The $Config{longlongsize}
will be undefine if your system does
not support long longs.)
s
, S
, i
, I
, l
, and L
are inherently non-portable between processors and operating systems
because they obey the native byteorder and endianness. For example a
4-byte integer 0x12345678 (305419896 decimal) be ordered natively
(arranged in and handled by the CPU registers) into bytes as
0x12 0x34 0x56 0x78 # big-endian 0x78 0x56 0x34 0x12 # little-endian
Basically, the Intel and VAX CPUs are little-endian, while everybody else, for example Motorola m68k/88k, PPC, Sparc, HP PA, Power, and Cray are big-endian. Alpha and MIPS can be either: Digital/Compaq used/uses them in little-endian mode; SGI/Cray uses them in big-endian mode.
The names `big-endian' and `little-endian' are comic references to the classic ``Gulliver's Travels'' (via the paper ``On Holy Wars and a Plea for Peace'' by Danny Cohen, USC/ISI IEN 137, April 1, 1980) and the egg-eating habits of the Lilliputians.
Some systems may have even weirder byte orders such as
0x56 0x78 0x12 0x34 0x34 0x12 0x78 0x56
You can see your system's preference with
print join(" ", map { sprintf "%#02x", $_ } unpack("C*",pack("L",0x12345678))), "\n";
The byteorder on the platform where Perl was built is also available via the Config manpage:
use Config; print $Config{byteorder}, "\n";
Byteorders '1234'
and '12345678'
are little-endian, '4321'
and '87654321'
are big-endian.
If you want portable packed integers use the formats n
, N
,
v
, and V
, their byte endianness and size is known.
See also the perlport manpage.
Note that Perl uses doubles internally for all numeric calculation, and
converting from double into float and thence back to double again will
lose precision (i.e., unpack("f", pack("f", $foo)
) will not in general
equal $foo).
U
, the resulting string will be treated
as Unicode-encoded. You can force UTF8 encoding on in a string with an
initial U0
, and the bytes that follow will be interpreted as Unicode
characters. If you don't want this to happen, you can begin your pattern
with C0
(or anything else) to force Perl not to UTF8 encode your
string, and then follow this with a U*
somewhere in your pattern.
'x'
es while packing. There is no way to pack()
and unpack()
could know where the bytes are going to or coming from. Therefore
pack
(and unpack
) handle their output and input as flat
sequences of bytes.
#
and goes to the end of line.
pack()
than actually given, pack()
assumes additional ""
arguments. If TEMPLATE requires less arguments
to pack()
than actually given, extra arguments are ignored.
Examples:
$foo = pack("CCCC",65,66,67,68); # foo eq "ABCD" $foo = pack("C4",65,66,67,68); # same thing $foo = pack("U4",0x24b6,0x24b7,0x24b8,0x24b9); # same thing with Unicode circled letters
$foo = pack("ccxxcc",65,66,67,68); # foo eq "AB\0\0CD"
# note: the above examples featuring "C" and "c" are true # only on ASCII and ASCII-derived systems such as ISO Latin 1 # and UTF-8. In EBCDIC the first example would be # $foo = pack("CCCC",193,194,195,196);
$foo = pack("s2",1,2); # "\1\0\2\0" on little-endian # "\0\1\0\2" on big-endian
$foo = pack("a4","abcd","x","y","z"); # "abcd"
$foo = pack("aaaa","abcd","x","y","z"); # "axyz"
$foo = pack("a14","abcdefg"); # "abcdefg\0\0\0\0\0\0\0"
$foo = pack("i9pl", gmtime); # a real struct tm (on my system anyway)
$utmp_template = "Z8 Z8 Z16 L"; $utmp = pack($utmp_template, @utmp1); # a struct utmp (BSDish)
@utmp2 = unpack($utmp_template, $utmp); # "@utmp1" eq "@utmp2"
sub bintodec { unpack("N", pack("B32", substr("0" x 32 . shift, -32))); }
$foo = pack('sx2l', 12, 34); # short 12, two zero bytes padding, long 34 $bar = pack('s@4l', 12, 34); # short 12, zero fill to position 4, long 34 # $foo eq $bar
The same template may generally also be used in unpack().
my
operator).
All further unqualified dynamic identifiers will be in this namespace.
A package statement affects only dynamic variables--including those
you've used local
on--but not lexical variables, which are created
with my
. Typically it would be the first declaration in a file to
be included by the require
or use
operator. You can switch into a
package in more than one place; it merely influences which symbol table
is used by the compiler for the rest of that block. You can refer to
variables and filehandles in other packages by prefixing the identifier
with the package name and a double colon: $Package::Variable
.
If the package name is null, the main
package as assumed. That is,
$::sail
is equivalent to $main::sail
(as well as to $main'sail
,
still seen in older code).
If NAMESPACE is omitted, then there is no current package, and all
identifiers must be fully qualified or lexicals. This is stricter
than use strict
, since it also extends to function names.
See Packages in the perlmod manpage for more information about packages, modules, and classes. See the perlsub manpage for other scoping issues.
$|
to flush your WRITEHANDLE
after each command, depending on the application.
See the IPC::Open2 manpage, the IPC::Open3 manpage, and Bidirectional Communication in the perlipc manpage for examples of such things.
On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will be set for the newly opened file descriptors as determined by the value of $^F. See $^F in the perlvar manpage.
$ARRAY[$#ARRAY--]
If there are no elements in the array, returns the undefined value
(although this may happen at other times as well). If ARRAY is
omitted, pops the @ARGV
array in the main program, and the @_
array in subroutines, just like shift
.
m//g
search left off for the variable
in question ($_
is used when the variable is not specified). May be
modified to change that offset. Such modification will also influence
the \G
zero-width assertion in regular expressions. See the perlre manpage and
the perlop manpage.
+
or put parentheses around the arguments.)
If FILEHANDLE is omitted, prints by default to standard output (or
to the last selected output channel--see select). If LIST is
also omitted, prints $_
to the currently selected output channel.
To set the default output channel to something other than STDOUT
use the select operation. The current value of $,
(if any) is
printed between each LIST item. The current value of $\
(if
any) is printed after the entire LIST has been printed. Because
print takes a LIST, anything in the LIST is evaluated in list
context, and any subroutine that you call will have one or more of
its expressions evaluated in list context. Also be careful not to
follow the print keyword with a left parenthesis unless you want
the corresponding right parenthesis to terminate the arguments to
the print--interpose a +
or put parentheses around all the
arguments.
Note that if you're storing FILEHANDLES in an array or other expression, you will have to use a block returning its value instead:
print { $files[$i] } "stuff\n"; print { $OK ? STDOUT : STDERR } "stuff\n";
print FILEHANDLE sprintf(FORMAT, LIST)
, except that $\
(the output record separator) is not appended. The first argument
of the list will be interpreted as the printf
format. If use locale
is
in effect, the character used for the decimal point in formatted real numbers
is affected by the LC_NUMERIC locale. See the perllocale manpage.
Don't fall into the trap of using a printf
when a simple
print
would do. The print
is more efficient and less
error prone.
undef
if the
function has no prototype). FUNCTION is a reference to, or the name of,
the function whose prototype you want to retrieve.
If FUNCTION is a string starting with CORE::
, the rest is taken as a
name for Perl builtin. If the builtin is not overridable (such as
qw//
) or its arguments cannot be expressed by a prototype (such as
system
) returns undef
because the builtin does not really behave
like a Perl function. Otherwise, the string describing the equivalent
prototype is returned.
for $value (LIST) { $ARRAY[++$#ARRAY] = $value; }
but is more efficient. Returns the new number of elements in the array.
/[A-Za-z_0-9]/
will be preceded by a backslash in the
returned string, regardless of any locale settings.)
This is the internal function implementing
the \Q
escape in double-quoted strings.
If EXPR is omitted, uses $_
.
0
and less
than the value of EXPR. (EXPR should be positive.) If EXPR is
omitted, the value 1
is used. Automatically calls srand
unless
srand
has already been called. See also srand
.
(Note: If your rand function consistently returns numbers that are too large or too small, then your version of Perl was probably compiled with the wrong number of RANDBITS.)
0
at end of file, or undef if there was an error. SCALAR will be grown
or shrunk to the length actually read. If SCALAR needs growing, the
new bytes will be zero bytes. An OFFSET may be specified to place
the read data into some other place in SCALAR than the beginning.
The call is actually implemented in terms of stdio's fread(3)
call.
To get a true read(2)
system call, see sysread
.
opendir
.
If used in list context, returns all the rest of the entries in the
directory. If there are no more entries, returns an undefined value in
scalar context or a null list in list context.
If you're planning to filetest the return values out of a readdir
, you'd
better prepend the directory in question. Otherwise, because we didn't
chdir
there, it would have been testing the wrong file.
opendir(DIR, $some_dir) || die "can't opendir $some_dir: $!"; @dots = grep { /^\./ && -f "$some_dir/$_" } readdir(DIR); closedir DIR;
$/
or $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR
). See $/ in the perlvar manpage.
When $/
is set to undef
, when readline()
is in scalar
context (i.e. file slurp mode), and when an empty file is read, it
returns ''
the first time, followed by undef
subsequently.
This is the internal function implementing the <EXPR>
operator, but you can use it directly. The <EXPR>
operator is discussed in more detail in I/O Operators in the perlop manpage.
$line = <STDIN>; $line = readline(*STDIN); # same thing
$!
(errno). If EXPR is
omitted, uses $_
.
$/
or $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR
).
This is the internal function implementing the qx/EXPR/
operator, but you can use it directly. The qx/EXPR/
operator is discussed in more detail in I/O Operators in the perlop manpage.
recvfrom(2)
system call. See
UDP: Message Passing in the perlipc manpage for examples.
redo
command restarts the loop block without evaluating the
conditional again. The continue
block, if any, is not executed. If
the LABEL is omitted, the command refers to the innermost enclosing
loop. This command is normally used by programs that want to lie to
themselves about what was just input:
# a simpleminded Pascal comment stripper # (warning: assumes no { or } in strings) LINE: while (<STDIN>) { while (s|({.*}.*){.*}|$1 |) {} s|{.*}| |; if (s|{.*| |) { $front = $_; while (<STDIN>) { if (/}/) { # end of comment? s|^|$front\{|; redo LINE; } } } print; }
redo
cannot be used to retry a block which returns a value such as
eval {}
, sub {}
or do {}
, and should not be used to exit
a grep()
or map()
operation.
Note that a block by itself is semantically identical to a loop
that executes once. Thus redo
inside such a block will effectively
turn it into a looping construct.
See also continue for an illustration of how last
, next
, and
redo
work.
$_
will be used. The value returned depends on the
type of thing the reference is a reference to.
Builtin types include:
SCALAR ARRAY HASH CODE REF GLOB LVALUE
If the referenced object has been blessed into a package, then that package
name is returned instead. You can think of ref
as a typeof
operator.
if (ref($r) eq "HASH") { print "r is a reference to a hash.\n"; } unless (ref($r)) { print "r is not a reference at all.\n"; } if (UNIVERSAL::isa($r, "HASH")) { # for subclassing print "r is a reference to something that isa hash.\n"; }
See also the perlref manpage.
Behavior of this function varies wildly depending on your system
implementation. For example, it will usually not work across file system
boundaries, even though the system mv command sometimes compensates
for this. Other restrictions include whether it works on directories,
open files, or pre-existing files. Check the perlport manpage and either the
rename(2)
manpage or equivalent system documentation for details.
$_
if EXPR is not
supplied.
If a VERSION is specified as a literal of the form v5.6.1,
demands that the current version of Perl ($^V
or $PERL_VERSION) be
at least as recent as that version, at run time. (For compatibility
with older versions of Perl, a numeric argument will also be interpreted
as VERSION.) Compare with use, which can do a similar check at
compile time.
require v5.6.1; # run time version check require 5.6.1; # ditto require 5.005_03; # float version allowed for compatibility
Otherwise, demands that a library file be included if it hasn't already
been included. The file is included via the do-FILE mechanism, which is
essentially just a variety of eval
. Has semantics similar to the following
subroutine:
sub require { my($filename) = @_; return 1 if $INC{$filename}; my($realfilename,$result); ITER: { foreach $prefix (@INC) { $realfilename = "$prefix/$filename"; if (-f $realfilename) { $INC{$filename} = $realfilename; $result = do $realfilename; last ITER; } } die "Can't find $filename in \@INC"; } delete $INC{$filename} if $@ || !$result; die $@ if $@; die "$filename did not return true value" unless $result; return $result; }
Note that the file will not be included twice under the same specified
name. The file must return true as the last statement to indicate
successful execution of any initialization code, so it's customary to
end such a file with 1;
unless you're sure it'll return true
otherwise. But it's better just to put the 1;
, in case you add more
statements.
If EXPR is a bareword, the require assumes a ``.pm'' extension and replaces ``::'' with ``/'' in the filename for you, to make it easy to load standard modules. This form of loading of modules does not risk altering your namespace.
In other words, if you try this:
require Foo::Bar; # a splendid bareword
The require function will actually look for the ``Foo/Bar.pm'' file in the
directories specified in the @INC
array.
But if you try this:
$class = 'Foo::Bar'; require $class; # $class is not a bareword #or require "Foo::Bar"; # not a bareword because of the ""
The require function will look for the ``Foo::Bar'' file in the @INC array and will complain about not finding ``Foo::Bar'' there. In this case you can do:
eval "require $class";
For a yet-more-powerful import facility, see use and the perlmod manpage.
continue
block at the end of a loop to clear
variables and reset ??
searches so that they work again. The
expression is interpreted as a list of single characters (hyphens
allowed for ranges). All variables and arrays beginning with one of
those letters are reset to their pristine state. If the expression is
omitted, one-match searches (?pattern?
) are reset to match again. Resets
only variables or searches in the current package. Always returns
1. Examples:
reset 'X'; # reset all X variables reset 'a-z'; # reset lower case variables reset; # just reset ?one-time? searches
Resetting "A-Z"
is not recommended because you'll wipe out your
@ARGV
and @INC
arrays and your %ENV
hash. Resets only package
variables--lexical variables are unaffected, but they clean themselves
up on scope exit anyway, so you'll probably want to use them instead.
See my.
eval
, or do FILE
with the value
given in EXPR. Evaluation of EXPR may be in list, scalar, or void
context, depending on how the return value will be used, and the context
may vary from one execution to the next (see wantarray
). If no EXPR
is given, returns an empty list in list context, the undefined value in
scalar context, and (of course) nothing at all in a void context.
(Note that in the absence of a explicit return
, a subroutine, eval,
or do FILE will automatically return the value of the last expression
evaluated.)
print reverse <>; # line tac, last line first
undef $/; # for efficiency of <> print scalar reverse <>; # character tac, last line tsrif
This operator is also handy for inverting a hash, although there are some caveats. If a value is duplicated in the original hash, only one of those can be represented as a key in the inverted hash. Also, this has to unwind one hash and build a whole new one, which may take some time on a large hash, such as from a DBM file.
%by_name = reverse %by_address; # Invert the hash
readdir
routine on DIRHANDLE.
index()
except that it returns the position of the LAST
occurrence of SUBSTR in STR. If POSITION is specified, returns the
last occurrence at or before that position.
$!
(errno). If
FILENAME is omitted, uses $_
.
@counts = ( scalar @a, scalar @b, scalar @c );
There is no equivalent operator to force an expression to
be interpolated in list context because in practice, this is never
needed. If you really wanted to do so, however, you could use
the construction @{[ (some expression) ]}
, but usually a simple
(some expression)
suffices.
Because scalar
is unary operator, if you accidentally use for EXPR a
parenthesized list, this behaves as a scalar comma expression, evaluating
all but the last element in void context and returning the final element
evaluated in scalar context. This is seldom what you want.
The following single statement:
print uc(scalar(&foo,$bar)),$baz;
is the moral equivalent of these two:
&foo; print(uc($bar),$baz);
See the perlop manpage for more details on unary operators and the comma operator.
fseek
call of stdio
.
FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value gives the name of the
filehandle. The values for WHENCE are 0
to set the new position to
POSITION, 1
to set it to the current position plus POSITION, and
2
to set it to EOF plus POSITION (typically negative). For WHENCE
you may use the constants SEEK_SET
, SEEK_CUR
, and SEEK_END
(start of the file, current position, end of the file) from the Fcntl
module. Returns 1
upon success, 0
otherwise.
If you want to position file for sysread
or syswrite
, don't use
seek
--buffering makes its effect on the file's system position
unpredictable and non-portable. Use sysseek
instead.
Due to the rules and rigors of ANSI C, on some systems you have to do a
seek whenever you switch between reading and writing. Amongst other
things, this may have the effect of calling stdio's clearerr(3).
A WHENCE of 1
(SEEK_CUR
) is useful for not moving the file position:
seek(TEST,0,1);
This is also useful for applications emulating tail -f
. Once you hit
EOF on your read, and then sleep for a while, you might have to stick in a
seek()
to reset things. The seek
doesn't change the current position,
but it does clear the end-of-file condition on the handle, so that the
next <FILE>
makes Perl try again to read something. We hope.
If that doesn't work (some stdios are particularly cantankerous), then you may need something more like this:
for (;;) { for ($curpos = tell(FILE); $_ = <FILE>; $curpos = tell(FILE)) { # search for some stuff and put it into files } sleep($for_a_while); seek(FILE, $curpos, 0); }
readdir
routine on DIRHANDLE. POS
must be a value returned by telldir
. Has the same caveats about
possible directory compaction as the corresponding system library
routine.
write
or a print
without a filehandle will
default to this FILEHANDLE. Second, references to variables related to
output will refer to this output channel. For example, if you have to
set the top of form format for more than one output channel, you might
do the following:
select(REPORT1); $^ = 'report1_top'; select(REPORT2); $^ = 'report2_top';
FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value gives the name of the actual filehandle. Thus:
$oldfh = select(STDERR); $| = 1; select($oldfh);
Some programmers may prefer to think of filehandles as objects with methods, preferring to write the last example as:
use IO::Handle; STDERR->autoflush(1);
select(2)
system call with the bit masks specified, which
can be constructed using fileno
and vec
, along these lines:
$rin = $win = $ein = ''; vec($rin,fileno(STDIN),1) = 1; vec($win,fileno(STDOUT),1) = 1; $ein = $rin | $win;
If you want to select on many filehandles you might wish to write a subroutine:
sub fhbits { my(@fhlist) = split(' ',$_[0]); my($bits); for (@fhlist) { vec($bits,fileno($_),1) = 1; } $bits; } $rin = fhbits('STDIN TTY SOCK');
The usual idiom is:
($nfound,$timeleft) = select($rout=$rin, $wout=$win, $eout=$ein, $timeout);
or to block until something becomes ready just do this
$nfound = select($rout=$rin, $wout=$win, $eout=$ein, undef);
Most systems do not bother to return anything useful in $timeleft, so
calling select()
in scalar context just returns $nfound.
Any of the bit masks can also be undef. The timeout, if specified, is in seconds, which may be fractional. Note: not all implementations are capable of returning the$timeleft. If not, they always return $timeleft equal to the supplied $timeout.
You can effect a sleep of 250 milliseconds this way:
select(undef, undef, undef, 0.25);
WARNING: One should not attempt to mix buffered I/O (like read
or <FH>) with select
, except as permitted by POSIX, and even
then only on POSIX systems. You have to use sysread
instead.
semctl
. You'll probably have to say
use IPC::SysV;
first to get the correct constant definitions. If CMD is IPC_STAT or
GETALL, then ARG must be a variable which will hold the returned
semid_ds structure or semaphore value array. Returns like ioctl
:
the undefined value for error, ``0 but true
'' for zero, or the actual
return value otherwise. The ARG must consist of a vector of native
short integers, which may be created with pack("s!",(0)x$nsem)
.
See also SysV IPC in the perlipc manpage, IPC::SysV
, IPC::Semaphore
documentation.
IPC::SysV
, IPC::SysV::Semaphore
documentation.
pack("sss", $semnum, $semop, $semflag)
. The number of semaphore
operations is implied by the length of OPSTRING. Returns true if
successful, or false if there is an error. As an example, the
following code waits on semaphore $semnum of semaphore id $semid:
$semop = pack("sss", $semnum, -1, 0); die "Semaphore trouble: $!\n" unless semop($semid, $semop);
To signal the semaphore, replace -1
with 1
. See also
SysV IPC in the perlipc manpage, IPC::SysV
, and IPC::SysV::Semaphore
documentation.
sendto
. Returns
the number of characters sent, or the undefined value if there is an
error. The C system call sendmsg(2)
is currently unimplemented.
See UDP: Message Passing in the perlipc manpage for examples.
0
for the current
process. Will produce a fatal error if used on a machine that doesn't
implement POSIX setpgid(2)
or BSD setpgrp(2). If the arguments are omitted,
it defaults to 0,0
. Note that the BSD 4.2 version of setpgrp
does not
accept any arguments, so only setpgrp(0,0)
is portable. See also
POSIX::setsid()
.
setpriority(2).)
Will produce a fatal error if used on a machine
that doesn't implement setpriority(2).
undef
if you don't want to pass an
argument.
@_
array within the lexical scope of subroutines and formats, and the
@ARGV
array at file scopes or within the lexical scopes established by
the eval ''
, BEGIN {}
, INIT {}
, CHECK {}
, and END {}
constructs.
See also unshift
, push
, and pop
. shift
and unshift
do the
same thing to the left end of an array that pop
and push
do to the
right end.
use IPC::SysV;
first to get the correct constant definitions. If CMD is IPC_STAT
,
then ARG must be a variable which will hold the returned shmid_ds
structure. Returns like ioctl: the undefined value for error, ``0
but
true'' for zero, or the actual return value otherwise.
See also SysV IPC in the perlipc manpage and IPC::SysV
documentation.
IPC::SysV
documentation.
shmread()
taints the variable. See also SysV IPC in the perlipc manpage,
IPC::SysV
documentation, and the IPC::Shareable
module from CPAN.
shutdown(SOCKET, 0); # I/we have stopped reading data shutdown(SOCKET, 1); # I/we have stopped writing data shutdown(SOCKET, 2); # I/we have stopped using this socket
This is useful with sockets when you want to tell the other side you're done writing but not done reading, or vice versa. It's also a more insistent form of close because it also disables the file descriptor in any forked copies in other processes.
$_
.
For the inverse sine operation, you may use the Math::Trig::asin
function, or use this relation:
sub asin { atan2($_[0], sqrt(1 - $_[0] * $_[0])) }
SIGALRM
.
Returns the number of seconds actually slept. You probably cannot
mix alarm
and sleep
calls, because sleep
is often implemented
using alarm
.
On some older systems, it may sleep up to a full second less than what you requested, depending on how it counts seconds. Most modern systems always sleep the full amount. They may appear to sleep longer than that, however, because your process might not be scheduled right away in a busy multitasking system.
For delays of finer granularity than one second, you may use Perl's
syscall
interface to access setitimer(2)
if your system supports
it, or else see select above. The Time::HiRes module from CPAN
may also help.
See also the POSIX module's pause
function.
use Socket
first
to get the proper definitions imported. See the examples in
Sockets: Client/Server Communication in the perlipc manpage.
On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will be set for the newly opened file descriptor, as determined by the value of $^F. See $^F in the perlvar manpage.
On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will be set for the newly opened file descriptors, as determined by the value of $^F. See $^F in the perlvar manpage.
Some systems defined pipe
in terms of socketpair
, in which a call
to pipe(Rdr, Wtr)
is essentially:
use Socket; socketpair(Rdr, Wtr, AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, PF_UNSPEC); shutdown(Rdr, 1); # no more writing for reader shutdown(Wtr, 0); # no more reading for writer
See the perlipc manpage for an example of socketpair use.
sort
s in standard string comparison order. If SUBNAME is
specified, it gives the name of a subroutine that returns an integer
less than, equal to, or greater than 0
, depending on how the elements
of the list are to be ordered. (The <=>
and cmp
operators are extremely useful in such routines.) SUBNAME may be a
scalar variable name (unsubscripted), in which case the value provides
the name of (or a reference to) the actual subroutine to use. In place
of a SUBNAME, you can provide a BLOCK as an anonymous, in-line sort
subroutine.
If the subroutine's prototype is ($$)
, the elements to be compared
are passed by reference in @_
, as for a normal subroutine. This is
slower than unprototyped subroutines, where the elements to be
compared are passed into the subroutine
as the package global variables $a and $b (see example below). Note that
in the latter case, it is usually counter-productive to declare $a and
$b as lexicals.
In either case, the subroutine may not be recursive. The values to be compared are always passed by reference, so don't modify them.
You also cannot exit out of the sort block or subroutine using any of the
loop control operators described in the perlsyn manpage or with goto
.
When use locale
is in effect, sort LIST
sorts LIST according to the
current collation locale. See the perllocale manpage.
Examples:
# sort lexically @articles = sort @files;
# same thing, but with explicit sort routine @articles = sort {$a cmp $b} @files;
# now case-insensitively @articles = sort {uc($a) cmp uc($b)} @files;
# same thing in reversed order @articles = sort {$b cmp $a} @files;
# sort numerically ascending @articles = sort {$a <=> $b} @files;
# sort numerically descending @articles = sort {$b <=> $a} @files;
# this sorts the %age hash by value instead of key # using an in-line function @eldest = sort { $age{$b} <=> $age{$a} } keys %age;
# sort using explicit subroutine name sub byage { $age{$a} <=> $age{$b}; # presuming numeric } @sortedclass = sort byage @class;
sub backwards { $b cmp $a } @harry = qw(dog cat x Cain Abel); @george = qw(gone chased yz Punished Axed); print sort @harry; # prints AbelCaincatdogx print sort backwards @harry; # prints xdogcatCainAbel print sort @george, 'to', @harry; # prints AbelAxedCainPunishedcatchaseddoggonetoxyz
# inefficiently sort by descending numeric compare using # the first integer after the first = sign, or the # whole record case-insensitively otherwise
@new = sort { ($b =~ /=(\d+)/)[0] <=> ($a =~ /=(\d+)/)[0] || uc($a) cmp uc($b) } @old;
# same thing, but much more efficiently; # we'll build auxiliary indices instead # for speed @nums = @caps = (); for (@old) { push @nums, /=(\d+)/; push @caps, uc($_); }
@new = @old[ sort { $nums[$b] <=> $nums[$a] || $caps[$a] cmp $caps[$b] } 0..$#old ];
# same thing, but without any temps @new = map { $_->[0] } sort { $b->[1] <=> $a->[1] || $a->[2] cmp $b->[2] } map { [$_, /=(\d+)/, uc($_)] } @old;
# using a prototype allows you to use any comparison subroutine # as a sort subroutine (including other package's subroutines) package other; sub backwards ($$) { $_[1] cmp $_[0]; } # $a and $b are not set here
package main; @new = sort other::backwards @old;
If you're using strict, you must not declare $a
and $b as lexicals. They are package globals. That means
if you're in the main
package and type
@articles = sort {$b <=> $a} @files;
then $a
and $b
are $main::a
and $main::b
(or $::a
and $::b
),
but if you're in the FooPack
package, it's the same as typing
@articles = sort {$FooPack::b <=> $FooPack::a} @files;
The comparison function is required to behave. If it returns
inconsistent results (sometimes saying $x[1]
is less than $x[2]
and
sometimes saying the opposite, for example) the results are not
well-defined.
undef
if no elements are
removed. The array grows or shrinks as necessary.
If OFFSET is negative then it starts that far from the end of the array.
If LENGTH is omitted, removes everything from OFFSET onward.
If LENGTH is negative, leaves that many elements off the end of the array.
If both OFFSET and LENGTH are omitted, removes everything.
The following equivalences hold (assuming $[ == 0
):
push(@a,$x,$y) splice(@a,@a,0,$x,$y) pop(@a) splice(@a,-1) shift(@a) splice(@a,0,1) unshift(@a,$x,$y) splice(@a,0,0,$x,$y) $a[$x] = $y splice(@a,$x,1,$y)
Example, assuming array lengths are passed before arrays:
sub aeq { # compare two list values my(@a) = splice(@_,0,shift); my(@b) = splice(@_,0,shift); return 0 unless @a == @b; # same len? while (@a) { return 0 if pop(@a) ne pop(@b); } return 1; } if (&aeq($len,@foo[1..$len],0+@bar,@bar)) { ... }
In scalar context, returns the number of fields found and splits into
the @_
array. Use of split in scalar context is deprecated, however,
because it clobbers your subroutine arguments.
If EXPR is omitted, splits the $_
string. If PATTERN is also omitted,
splits on whitespace (after skipping any leading whitespace). Anything
matching PATTERN is taken to be a delimiter separating the fields. (Note
that the delimiter may be longer than one character.)
If LIMIT is specified and positive, splits into no more than that
many fields (though it may split into fewer). If LIMIT is unspecified
or zero, trailing null fields are stripped (which potential users
of pop
would do well to remember). If LIMIT is negative, it is
treated as if an arbitrarily large LIMIT had been specified.
A pattern matching the null string (not to be confused with
a null pattern //
, which is just one member of the set of patterns
matching a null string) will split the value of EXPR into separate
characters at each point it matches that way. For example:
print join(':', split(/ */, 'hi there'));
produces the output 'h:i:t:h:e:r:e'.
Empty leading (or trailing) fields are produced when there positive width matches at the beginning (or end) of the string; a zero-width match at the beginning (or end) of the string does not produce an empty field. For example:
print join(':', split(/(?=\w)/, 'hi there!'));
produces the output 'h:i :t:h:e:r:e!'.
The LIMIT parameter can be used to split a line partially
($login, $passwd, $remainder) = split(/:/, $_, 3);
When assigning to a list, if LIMIT is omitted, Perl supplies a LIMIT one larger than the number of variables in the list, to avoid unnecessary work. For the list above LIMIT would have been 4 by default. In time critical applications it behooves you not to split into more fields than you really need.
If the PATTERN contains parentheses, additional list elements are created from each matching substring in the delimiter.
split(/([,-])/, "1-10,20", 3);
produces the list value
(1, '-', 10, ',', 20)
If you had the entire header of a normal Unix email message in $header, you could split it up into fields and their values this way:
$header =~ s/\n\s+/ /g; # fix continuation lines %hdrs = (UNIX_FROM => split /^(\S*?):\s*/m, $header);
The pattern /PATTERN/
may be replaced with an expression to specify
patterns that vary at runtime. (To do runtime compilation only once,
use /$variable/o
.)
As a special case, specifying a PATTERN of space (' '
) will split on
white space just as split
with no arguments does. Thus, split(' ')
can
be used to emulate awk's default behavior, whereas split(/ /)
will give you as many null initial fields as there are leading spaces.
A split
on /\s+/
is like a split(' ')
except that any leading
whitespace produces a null first field. A split
with no arguments
really does a split(' ', $_)
internally.
A PATTERN of /^/
is treated as if it were /^/m
, since it isn't
much use otherwise.
Example:
open(PASSWD, '/etc/passwd'); while (<PASSWD>) { chomp; ($login, $passwd, $uid, $gid, $gcos, $home, $shell) = split(/:/); #... }
printf
conventions of the C
library function sprintf
. See below for more details
and see sprintf(3) or printf(3) on your system for an explanation of
the general principles.
For example:
# Format number with up to 8 leading zeroes $result = sprintf("%08d", $number);
# Round number to 3 digits after decimal point $rounded = sprintf("%.3f", $number);
Perl does its own sprintf
formatting--it emulates the C
function sprintf
, but it doesn't use it (except for floating-point
numbers, and even then only the standard modifiers are allowed). As a
result, any non-standard extensions in your local sprintf
are not
available from Perl.
Unlike printf
, sprintf
does not do what you probably mean when you
pass it an array as your first argument. The array is given scalar context,
and instead of using the 0th element of the array as the format, Perl will
use the count of elements in the array as the format, which is almost never
useful.
Perl's sprintf
permits the following universally-known conversions:
%% a percent sign %c a character with the given number %s a string %d a signed integer, in decimal %u an unsigned integer, in decimal %o an unsigned integer, in octal %x an unsigned integer, in hexadecimal %e a floating-point number, in scientific notation %f a floating-point number, in fixed decimal notation %g a floating-point number, in %e or %f notation
In addition, Perl permits the following widely-supported conversions:
%X like %x, but using upper-case letters %E like %e, but using an upper-case "E" %G like %g, but with an upper-case "E" (if applicable) %b an unsigned integer, in binary %p a pointer (outputs the Perl value's address in hexadecimal) %n special: *stores* the number of characters output so far into the next variable in the parameter list
Finally, for backward (and we do mean ``backward'') compatibility, Perl permits these unnecessary but widely-supported conversions:
%i a synonym for %d %D a synonym for %ld %U a synonym for %lu %O a synonym for %lo %F a synonym for %f
Note that the number of exponent digits in the scientific notation by
%e
, %E
, %g
and %G
for numbers with the modulus of the
exponent less than 100 is system-dependent: it may be three or less
(zero-padded as necessary). In other words, 1.23 times ten to the
99th may be either ``1.23e99'' or ``1.23e099''.
Perl permits the following universally-known flags between the %
and the conversion letter:
space prefix positive number with a space + prefix positive number with a plus sign - left-justify within the field 0 use zeros, not spaces, to right-justify # prefix non-zero octal with "0", non-zero hex with "0x" number minimum field width .number "precision": digits after decimal point for floating-point, max length for string, minimum length for integer l interpret integer as C type "long" or "unsigned long" h interpret integer as C type "short" or "unsigned short" If no flags, interpret integer as C type "int" or "unsigned"
There are also two Perl-specific flags:
V interpret integer as Perl's standard integer type v interpret string as a vector of integers, output as numbers separated either by dots, or by an arbitrary string received from the argument list when the flag is preceded by C<*>
Where a number would appear in the flags, an asterisk (*
) may be
used instead, in which case Perl uses the next item in the parameter
list as the given number (that is, as the field width or precision).
If a field width obtained through *
is negative, it has the same
effect as the -
flag: left-justification.
The v
flag is useful for displaying ordinal values of characters
in arbitrary strings:
printf "version is v%vd\n", $^V; # Perl's version printf "address is %*vX\n", ":", $addr; # IPv6 address printf "bits are %*vb\n", " ", $bits; # random bitstring
If use locale
is in effect, the character used for the decimal
point in formatted real numbers is affected by the LC_NUMERIC locale.
See the perllocale manpage.
If Perl understands ``quads'' (64-bit integers) (this requires either that the platform natively support quads or that Perl be specifically compiled to support quads), the characters
d u o x X b i D U O
print quads, and they may optionally be preceded by
ll L q
For example
%lld %16LX %qo
You can find out whether your Perl supports quads via the Config manpage:
use Config; ($Config{use64bitint} eq 'define' || $Config{longsize} == 8) && print "quads\n";
If Perl understands ``long doubles'' (this requires that the platform support long doubles), the flags
e f g E F G
may optionally be preceded by
ll L
For example
%llf %Lg
You can find out whether your Perl supports long doubles via the Config manpage:
use Config; $Config{d_longdbl} eq 'define' && print "long doubles\n";
$_
. Only works on non-negative operands, unless you've
loaded the standard Math::Complex module.
use Math::Complex; print sqrt(-2); # prints 1.4142135623731i
rand
operator. If EXPR is
omitted, uses a semi-random value supplied by the kernel (if it supports
the /dev/urandom device) or based on the current time and process
ID, among other things. In versions of Perl prior to 5.004 the default
seed was just the current time
. This isn't a particularly good seed,
so many old programs supply their own seed value (often time ^ $$
or
time ^ ($$ + ($$ << 15))
), but that isn't necessary any more.
In fact, it's usually not necessary to call srand
at all, because if
it is not called explicitly, it is called implicitly at the first use of
the rand
operator. However, this was not the case in version of Perl
before 5.004, so if your script will run under older Perl versions, it
should call srand
.
Note that you need something much more random than the default seed for cryptographic purposes. Checksumming the compressed output of one or more rapidly changing operating system status programs is the usual method. For example:
srand (time ^ $$ ^ unpack "%L*", `ps axww | gzip`);
If you're particularly concerned with this, see the Math::TrulyRandom
module in CPAN.
Do not call srand
multiple times in your program unless you know
exactly what you're doing and why you're doing it. The point of the
function is to ``seed'' the rand
function so that rand
can produce
a different sequence each time you run your program. Just do it once at the
top of your program, or you won't get random numbers out of rand
!
Frequently called programs (like CGI scripts) that simply use
time ^ $$
for a seed can fall prey to the mathematical property that
a^b == (a+1)^(b+1)
one-third of the time. So don't do that.
$_
. Returns a null list if the stat fails. Typically used
as follows:
($dev,$ino,$mode,$nlink,$uid,$gid,$rdev,$size, $atime,$mtime,$ctime,$blksize,$blocks) = stat($filename);
Not all fields are supported on all filesystem types. Here are the meaning of the fields:
0 dev device number of filesystem 1 ino inode number 2 mode file mode (type and permissions) 3 nlink number of (hard) links to the file 4 uid numeric user ID of file's owner 5 gid numeric group ID of file's owner 6 rdev the device identifier (special files only) 7 size total size of file, in bytes 8 atime last access time in seconds since the epoch 9 mtime last modify time in seconds since the epoch 10 ctime inode change time (NOT creation time!) in seconds since the epoch 11 blksize preferred block size for file system I/O 12 blocks actual number of blocks allocated
(The epoch was at 00:00 January 1, 1970 GMT.)
If stat is passed the special filehandle consisting of an underline, no stat is done, but the current contents of the stat structure from the last stat or filetest are returned. Example:
if (-x $file && (($d) = stat(_)) && $d < 0) { print "$file is executable NFS file\n"; }
(This works on machines only for which the device number is negative under NFS.)
Because the mode contains both the file type and its permissions, you
should mask off the file type portion and (s)printf using a "%o"
if you want to see the real permissions.
$mode = (stat($filename))[2]; printf "Permissions are %04o\n", $mode & 07777;
In scalar context, stat
returns a boolean value indicating success
or failure, and, if successful, sets the information associated with
the special filehandle _
.
The File::stat module provides a convenient, by-name access mechanism:
use File::stat; $sb = stat($filename); printf "File is %s, size is %s, perm %04o, mtime %s\n", $filename, $sb->size, $sb->mode & 07777, scalar localtime $sb->mtime;
You can import symbolic mode constants (S_IF*
) and functions
(S_IS*
) from the Fcntl module:
use Fcntl ':mode';
$mode = (stat($filename))[2];
$user_rwx = ($mode & S_IRWXU) >> 6; $group_read = ($mode & S_IRGRP) >> 3; $other_execute = $mode & S_IXOTH;
printf "Permissions are %04o\n", S_ISMODE($mode), "\n";
$is_setuid = $mode & S_ISUID; $is_setgid = S_ISDIR($mode);
You could write the last two using the -u
and -d
operators.
The commonly available S_IF* constants are
# Permissions: read, write, execute, for user, group, others.
S_IRWXU S_IRUSR S_IWUSR S_IXUSR S_IRWXG S_IRGRP S_IWGRP S_IXGRP S_IRWXO S_IROTH S_IWOTH S_IXOTH
# Setuid/Setgid/Stickiness.
S_ISUID S_ISGID S_ISVTX S_ISTXT
# File types. Not necessarily all are available on your system.
S_IFREG S_IFDIR S_IFLNK S_IFBLK S_ISCHR S_IFIFO S_IFSOCK S_IFWHT S_ENFMT
# The following are compatibility aliases for S_IRUSR, S_IWUSR, S_IXUSR.
S_IREAD S_IWRITE S_IEXEC
and the S_IF* functions are
S_IFMODE($mode) the part of $mode containing the permission bits and the setuid/setgid/sticky bits
S_IFMT($mode) the part of $mode containing the file type which can be bit-anded with e.g. S_IFREG or with the following functions
# The operators -f, -d, -l, -b, -c, -p, and -s.
S_ISREG($mode) S_ISDIR($mode) S_ISLNK($mode) S_ISBLK($mode) S_ISCHR($mode) S_ISFIFO($mode) S_ISSOCK($mode)
# No direct -X operator counterpart, but for the first one # the -g operator is often equivalent. The ENFMT stands for # record flocking enforcement, a platform-dependent feature.
S_ISENFMT($mode) S_ISWHT($mode)
See your native chmod(2)
and stat(2)
documentation for more details
about the S_* constants.
$_
if unspecified) in anticipation of
doing many pattern matches on the string before it is next modified.
This may or may not save time, depending on the nature and number of
patterns you are searching on, and on the distribution of character
frequencies in the string to be searched--you probably want to compare
run times with and without it to see which runs faster. Those loops
which scan for many short constant strings (including the constant
parts of more complex patterns) will benefit most. You may have only
one study
active at a time--if you study a different scalar the first
is ``unstudied''. (The way study
works is this: a linked list of every
character in the string to be searched is made, so we know, for
example, where all the 'k'
characters are. From each search string,
the rarest character is selected, based on some static frequency tables
constructed from some C programs and English text. Only those places
that contain this ``rarest'' character are examined.)
For example, here is a loop that inserts index producing entries before any line containing a certain pattern:
while (<>) { study; print ".IX foo\n" if /\bfoo\b/; print ".IX bar\n" if /\bbar\b/; print ".IX blurfl\n" if /\bblurfl\b/; # ... print; }
In searching for /\bfoo\b/
, only those locations in $_
that contain f
will be looked at, because f
is rarer than o
. In general, this is
a big win except in pathological cases. The only question is whether
it saves you more time than it took to build the linked list in the
first place.
Note that if you have to look for strings that you don't know till
runtime, you can build an entire loop as a string and eval
that to
avoid recompiling all your patterns all the time. Together with
undefining $/
to input entire files as one record, this can be very
fast, often faster than specialized programs like fgrep(1). The following
scans a list of files (@files
) for a list of words (@words
), and prints
out the names of those files that contain a match:
$search = 'while (<>) { study;'; foreach $word (@words) { $search .= "++\$seen{\$ARGV} if /\\b$word\\b/;\n"; } $search .= "}"; @ARGV = @files; undef $/; eval $search; # this screams $/ = "\n"; # put back to normal input delimiter foreach $file (sort keys(%seen)) { print $file, "\n"; }
0
, or whatever you've set $[
to (but don't do that).
If OFFSET is negative (or more precisely, less than $[
), starts
that far from the end of the string. If LENGTH is omitted, returns
everything to the end of the string. If LENGTH is negative, leaves that
many characters off the end of the string.
You can use the substr()
function as an lvalue, in which case EXPR
must itself be an lvalue. If you assign something shorter than LENGTH,
the string will shrink, and if you assign something longer than LENGTH,
the string will grow to accommodate it. To keep the string the same
length you may need to pad or chop your value using sprintf
.
If OFFSET and LENGTH specify a substring that is partly outside the
string, only the part within the string is returned. If the substring
is beyond either end of the string, substr()
returns the undefined
value and produces a warning. When used as an lvalue, specifying a
substring that is entirely outside the string is a fatal error.
Here's an example showing the behavior for boundary cases:
my $name = 'fred'; substr($name, 4) = 'dy'; # $name is now 'freddy' my $null = substr $name, 6, 2; # returns '' (no warning) my $oops = substr $name, 7; # returns undef, with warning substr($name, 7) = 'gap'; # fatal error
An alternative to using substr()
as an lvalue is to specify the
replacement string as the 4th argument. This allows you to replace
parts of the EXPR and return what was there before in one operation,
just as you can with splice().
1
for success, 0
otherwise. On systems that don't support
symbolic links, produces a fatal error at run time. To check for that,
use eval:
$symlink_exists = eval { symlink("",""); 1 };
syscall
because Perl has to assume that any string pointer might be written
through. If your
integer arguments are not literals and have never been interpreted in a
numeric context, you may need to add 0
to them to force them to look
like numbers. This emulates the syswrite
function (or vice versa):
require 'syscall.ph'; # may need to run h2ph $s = "hi there\n"; syscall(&SYS_write, fileno(STDOUT), $s, length $s);
Note that Perl supports passing of up to only 14 arguments to your system call, which in practice should usually suffice.
Syscall returns whatever value returned by the system call it calls.
If the system call fails, syscall
returns -1
and sets $!
(errno).
Note that some system calls can legitimately return -1
. The proper
way to handle such calls is to assign $!=0;
before the call and
check the value of $!
if syscall returns -1
.
There's a problem with syscall(&SYS_pipe)
: it returns the file
number of the read end of the pipe it creates. There is no way
to retrieve the file number of the other end. You can avoid this
problem by using pipe
instead.
open
function with the parameters
FILENAME, MODE, PERMS.
The possible values and flag bits of the MODE parameter are
system-dependent; they are available via the standard module Fcntl
.
See the documentation of your operating system's open
to see which
values and flag bits are available. You may combine several flags
using the |
-operator.
Some of the most common values are O_RDONLY
for opening the file in
read-only mode, O_WRONLY
for opening the file in write-only mode,
and O_RDWR
for opening the file in read-write mode, and.
For historical reasons, some values work on almost every system supported by perl: zero means read-only, one means write-only, and two means read/write. We know that these values do not work under OS/390 & VM/ESA Unix and on the Macintosh; you probably don't want to use them in new code.
If the file named by FILENAME does not exist and the open
call creates
it (typically because MODE includes the O_CREAT
flag), then the value of
PERMS specifies the permissions of the newly created file. If you omit
the PERMS argument to sysopen
, Perl uses the octal value 0666
.
These permission values need to be in octal, and are modified by your
process's current umask
.
In many systems the O_EXCL
flag is available for opening files in
exclusive mode. This is not locking: exclusiveness means here that
if the file already exists, sysopen()
fails. The O_EXCL
wins
O_TRUNC
.
Sometimes you may want to truncate an already-existing file: O_TRUNC
.
You should seldom if ever use 0644
as argument to sysopen
, because
that takes away the user's option to have a more permissive umask.
Better to omit it. See the perlfunc(1)
entry on umask
for more
on this.
Note that sysopen
depends on the fdopen()
C library function.
On many UNIX systems, fdopen()
is known to fail when file descriptors
exceed a certain value, typically 255. If you need more file
descriptors than that, consider rebuilding Perl to use the sfio
library, or perhaps using the POSIX::open() function.
See the perlopentut manpage for a kinder, gentler explanation of opening files.
print
, write
,
seek
, tell
, or eof
can cause confusion because stdio
usually buffers data. Returns the number of bytes actually read, 0
at end of file, or undef if there was an error. SCALAR will be grown or
shrunk so that the last byte actually read is the last byte of the
scalar after the read.
An OFFSET may be specified to place the read data at some place in the
string other than the beginning. A negative OFFSET specifies
placement at that many bytes counting backwards from the end of the
string. A positive OFFSET greater than the length of SCALAR results
in the string being padded to the required size with "\0"
bytes before
the result of the read is appended.
There is no syseof()
function, which is ok, since eof()
doesn't work
very well on device files (like ttys) anyway. Use sysread()
and check
for a return value for 0 to decide whether you're done.
sysread
),
print
, write
, seek
, tell
, or eof
may cause confusion.
FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value gives the name of the
filehandle. The values for WHENCE are 0
to set the new position to
POSITION, 1
to set the it to the current position plus POSITION,
and 2
to set it to EOF plus POSITION (typically negative). For
WHENCE, you may also use the constants SEEK_SET
, SEEK_CUR
, and
SEEK_END
(start of the file, current position, end of the file)
from the Fcntl module.
Returns the new position, or the undefined value on failure. A position
of zero is returned as the string "0 but true"
; thus sysseek
returns
true on success and false on failure, yet you can still easily determine
the new position.
exec LIST
, except that a fork is
done first, and the parent process waits for the child process to
complete. Note that argument processing varies depending on the
number of arguments. If there is more than one argument in LIST,
or if LIST is an array with more than one value, starts the program
given by the first element of the list with arguments given by the
rest of the list. If there is only one scalar argument, the argument
is checked for shell metacharacters, and if there are any, the
entire argument is passed to the system's command shell for parsing
(this is /bin/sh -c
on Unix platforms, but varies on other
platforms). If there are no shell metacharacters in the argument,
it is split into words and passed directly to execvp
, which is
more efficient.
Beginning with v5.6.0, Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for
output before any operation that may do a fork, but this may not be
supported on some platforms (see the perlport manpage). To be safe, you may need
to set $|
($AUTOFLUSH in English) or call the autoflush()
method
of IO::Handle
on any open handles.
The return value is the exit status of the program as
returned by the wait
call. To get the actual exit value divide by
256. See also exec. This is not what you want to use to capture
the output from a command, for that you should use merely backticks or
qx//
, as described in `STRING` in the perlop manpage. Return value of -1
indicates a failure to start the program (inspect $! for the reason).
Like exec
, system
allows you to lie to a program about its name if
you use the system PROGRAM LIST
syntax. Again, see exec.
Because system
and backticks block SIGINT
and SIGQUIT
, killing the
program they're running doesn't actually interrupt your program.
@args = ("command", "arg1", "arg2"); system(@args) == 0 or die "system @args failed: $?"
You can check all the failure possibilities by inspecting
$?
like this:
$exit_value = $? >> 8; $signal_num = $? & 127; $dumped_core = $? & 128;
When the arguments get executed via the system shell, results and return codes will be subject to its quirks and capabilities. See `STRING` in the perlop manpage and exec for details.
sysread())
, print
, write
,
seek
, tell
, or eof
may cause confusion because stdio
usually buffers data. Returns the number of bytes actually written,
or undef
if there was an error. If the LENGTH is greater than
the available data in the SCALAR after the OFFSET, only as much
data as is available will be written.
An OFFSET may be specified to write the data from some part of the string other than the beginning. A negative OFFSET specifies writing that many bytes counting backwards from the end of the string. In the case the SCALAR is empty you can use OFFSET but only zero offset.
The return value of tell()
for the standard streams like the STDIN
depends on the operating system: it may return -1 or something else.
tell()
on pipes, fifos, and sockets usually returns -1.
There is no systell
function. Use sysseek(FH, 0, 1)
for that.
readdir
routines on DIRHANDLE.
Value may be given to seekdir
to access a particular location in a
directory. Has the same caveats about possible directory compaction as
the corresponding system library routine.
new
method of the class (meaning TIESCALAR
, TIEHANDLE
, TIEARRAY
,
or TIEHASH
). Typically these are arguments such as might be passed
to the dbm_open()
function of C. The object returned by the new
method is also returned by the tie
function, which would be useful
if you want to access other methods in CLASSNAME.
Note that functions such as keys
and values
may return huge lists
when used on large objects, like DBM files. You may prefer to use the
each
function to iterate over such. Example:
# print out history file offsets use NDBM_File; tie(%HIST, 'NDBM_File', '/usr/lib/news/history', 1, 0); while (($key,$val) = each %HIST) { print $key, ' = ', unpack('L',$val), "\n"; } untie(%HIST);
A class implementing a hash should have the following methods:
TIEHASH classname, LIST FETCH this, key STORE this, key, value DELETE this, key CLEAR this EXISTS this, key FIRSTKEY this NEXTKEY this, lastkey DESTROY this UNTIE this
A class implementing an ordinary array should have the following methods:
TIEARRAY classname, LIST FETCH this, key STORE this, key, value FETCHSIZE this STORESIZE this, count CLEAR this PUSH this, LIST POP this SHIFT this UNSHIFT this, LIST SPLICE this, offset, length, LIST EXTEND this, count DESTROY this UNTIE this
A class implementing a file handle should have the following methods:
TIEHANDLE classname, LIST READ this, scalar, length, offset READLINE this GETC this WRITE this, scalar, length, offset PRINT this, LIST PRINTF this, format, LIST BINMODE this EOF this FILENO this SEEK this, position, whence TELL this OPEN this, mode, LIST CLOSE this DESTROY this UNTIE this
A class implementing a scalar should have the following methods:
TIESCALAR classname, LIST FETCH this, STORE this, value DESTROY this UNTIE this
Not all methods indicated above need be implemented. See the perltie manpage, the Tie::Hash manpage, the Tie::Array manpage, the Tie::Scalar manpage, and the Tie::Handle manpage.
Unlike dbmopen
, the tie
function will not use or require a module
for you--you need to do that explicitly yourself. See the DB_File manpage
or the Config module for interesting tie
implementations.
For further details see the perltie manpage, tied VARIABLE.
tie
call that bound the variable
to a package.) Returns the undefined value if VARIABLE isn't tied to a
package.
gmtime
and localtime
.
For measuring time in better granularity than one second,
you may use either the Time::HiRes module from CPAN, or
if you have gettimeofday(2), you may be able to use the
syscall
interface of Perl, see the perlfaq8 manpage for details.
($user,$system,$cuser,$csystem) = times;
y///
. See the perlop manpage.
\U
escape in double-quoted strings.
Respects current LC_CTYPE locale if use locale
in force. See the perllocale manpage.
Under Unicode (use utf8
) it uses the standard Unicode uppercase mappings. (It
does not attempt to do titlecase mapping on initial letters. See ucfirst
for that.)
If EXPR is omitted, uses $_
.
\u
escape in double-quoted strings.
Respects current LC_CTYPE locale if use locale
in force. See the perllocale manpage
and the utf8 manpage.
If EXPR is omitted, uses $_
.
The Unix permission rwxr-x---
is represented as three sets of three
bits, or three octal digits: 0750
(the leading 0 indicates octal
and isn't one of the digits). The umask
value is such a number
representing disabled permissions bits. The permission (or ``mode'')
values you pass mkdir
or sysopen
are modified by your umask, so
even if you tell sysopen
to create a file with permissions 0777
,
if your umask is 0022
then the file will actually be created with
permissions 0755
. If your umask
were 0027
(group can't
write; others can't read, write, or execute), then passing
sysopen
0666
would create a file with mode 0640
(0666 &~
027
is 0640
).
Here's some advice: supply a creation mode of 0666
for regular
files (in sysopen
) and one of 0777
for directories (in
mkdir
) and executable files. This gives users the freedom of
choice: if they want protected files, they might choose process umasks
of 022
, 027
, or even the particularly antisocial mask of 077
.
Programs should rarely if ever make policy decisions better left to
the user. The exception to this is when writing files that should be
kept private: mail files, web browser cookies, .rhosts files, and
so on.
If umask(2)
is not implemented on your system and you are trying to
restrict access for yourself (i.e., (EXPR & 0700) > 0), produces a
fatal error at run time. If umask(2)
is not implemented and you are
not trying to restrict access for yourself, returns undef
.
Remember that a umask is a number, usually given in octal; it is not a string of octal digits. See also oct, if all you have is a string.
@
), a hash (using %
), a subroutine
(using &
), or a typeglob (using <*>). (Saying undef $hash{$key}
will probably not do what you expect on most predefined variables or
DBM list values, so don't do that; see the delete manpage.) Always returns the
undefined value. You can omit the EXPR, in which case nothing is
undefined, but you still get an undefined value that you could, for
instance, return from a subroutine, assign to a variable or pass as a
parameter. Examples:
undef $foo; undef $bar{'blurfl'}; # Compare to: delete $bar{'blurfl'}; undef @ary; undef %hash; undef &mysub; undef *xyz; # destroys $xyz, @xyz, %xyz, &xyz, etc. return (wantarray ? (undef, $errmsg) : undef) if $they_blew_it; select undef, undef, undef, 0.25; ($a, $b, undef, $c) = &foo; # Ignore third value returned
Note that this is a unary operator, not a list operator.
$cnt = unlink 'a', 'b', 'c'; unlink @goners; unlink <*.bak>;
Note: unlink
will not delete directories unless you are superuser and
the -U flag is supplied to Perl. Even if these conditions are
met, be warned that unlinking a directory can inflict damage on your
filesystem. Use rmdir
instead.
If LIST is omitted, uses $_
.
unpack
does the reverse of pack
: it takes a string
and expands it out into a list of values.
(In scalar context, it returns merely the first value produced.)
The string is broken into chunks described by the TEMPLATE. Each chunk
is converted separately to a value. Typically, either the string is a result
of pack
, or the bytes of the string represent a C structure of some
kind.
The TEMPLATE has the same format as in the pack
function.
Here's a subroutine that does substring:
sub substr { my($what,$where,$howmuch) = @_; unpack("x$where a$howmuch", $what); }
and then there's
sub ordinal { unpack("c",$_[0]); } # same as ord()
In addition to fields allowed in pack(), you may prefix a field with
a %<number> to indicate that
you want a <number>-bit checksum of the items instead of the items
themselves. Default is a 16-bit checksum. Checksum is calculated by
summing numeric values of expanded values (for string fields the sum of
ord($char)
is taken, for bit fields the sum of zeroes and ones).
For example, the following computes the same number as the System V sum program:
$checksum = do { local $/; # slurp! unpack("%32C*",<>) % 65535; };
The following efficiently counts the number of set bits in a bit vector:
$setbits = unpack("%32b*", $selectmask);
The p
and P
formats should be used with care. Since Perl
has no way of checking whether the value passed to unpack()
corresponds to a valid memory location, passing a pointer value that's
not known to be valid is likely to have disastrous consequences.
If the repeat count of a field is larger than what the remainder of the input string allows, repeat count is decreased. If the input string is longer than one described by the TEMPLATE, the rest is ignored.
See pack for more examples and notes.
tie
.)
shift
. Or the opposite of a push
,
depending on how you look at it. Prepends list to the front of the
array, and returns the new number of elements in the array.
unshift(ARGV, '-e') unless $ARGV[0] =~ /^-/;
Note the LIST is prepended whole, not one element at a time, so the
prepended elements stay in the same order. Use reverse
to do the
reverse.
BEGIN { require Module; import Module LIST; }
except that Module must be a bareword.
VERSION, which can be specified as a literal of the form v5.6.1, demands
that the current version of Perl ($^V
or $PERL_VERSION) be at least
as recent as that version. (For compatibility with older versions of Perl,
a numeric literal will also be interpreted as VERSION.) If the version
of the running Perl interpreter is less than VERSION, then an error
message is printed and Perl exits immediately without attempting to
parse the rest of the file. Compare with require, which can do a
similar check at run time.
use v5.6.1; # compile time version check use 5.6.1; # ditto use 5.005_03; # float version allowed for compatibility
This is often useful if you need to check the current Perl version before
use
ing library modules that have changed in incompatible ways from
older versions of Perl. (We try not to do this more than we have to.)
The BEGIN
forces the require
and import
to happen at compile time. The
require
makes sure the module is loaded into memory if it hasn't been
yet. The import
is not a builtin--it's just an ordinary static method
call into the Module
package to tell the module to import the list of
features back into the current package. The module can implement its
import
method any way it likes, though most modules just choose to
derive their import
method via inheritance from the Exporter
class that
is defined in the Exporter
module. See the Exporter manpage. If no import
method can be found then the call is skipped.
If you do not want to call the package's import
method (for instance,
to stop your namespace from being altered), explicitly supply the empty list:
use Module ();
That is exactly equivalent to
BEGIN { require Module }
If the VERSION argument is present between Module and LIST, then the
use
will call the VERSION method in class Module with the given
version as an argument. The default VERSION method, inherited from
the UNIVERSAL class, croaks if the given version is larger than the
value of the variable $Module::VERSION
.
Again, there is a distinction between omitting LIST (import
called
with no arguments) and an explicit empty LIST ()
(import
not
called). Note that there is no comma after VERSION!
Because this is a wide-open interface, pragmas (compiler directives) are also implemented this way. Currently implemented pragmas are:
use constant; use diagnostics; use integer; use sigtrap qw(SEGV BUS); use strict qw(subs vars refs); use subs qw(afunc blurfl); use warnings qw(all);
Some of these pseudo-modules import semantics into the current
block scope (like strict
or integer
, unlike ordinary modules,
which import symbols into the current package (which are effective
through the end of the file).
There's a corresponding no
command that unimports meanings imported
by use
, i.e., it calls unimport Module LIST
instead of import
.
no integer; no strict 'refs'; no warnings;
If no unimport
method can be found the call fails with a fatal error.
See the perlmodlib manpage for a list of standard modules and pragmas. See the perlrun manpage
for the -M
and -m
command-line options to perl that give use
functionality from the command-line.
touch
command if the files already exist:
#!/usr/bin/perl $now = time; utime $now, $now, @ARGV;
keys
or each
function would
produce on the same (unmodified) hash.
Note that the values are not copied, which means modifying them will modify the contents of the hash:
for (values %hash) { s/foo/bar/g } # modifies %hash values for (@hash{keys %hash}) { s/foo/bar/g } # same
As a side effect, calling values()
resets the HASH's internal iterator.
See also keys
, each
, and sort
.
If BITS is 8, ``elements'' coincide with bytes of the input string.
If BITS is 16 or more, bytes of the input string are grouped into chunks
of size BITS/8, and each group is converted to a number as with
pack()/unpack()
with big-endian formats n
/N
(and analogously
for BITS==64). See pack for details.
If bits is 4 or less, the string is broken into bytes, then the bits
of each byte are broken into 8/BITS groups. Bits of a byte are
numbered in a little-endian-ish way, as in 0x01
, 0x02
,
0x04
, 0x08
, 0x10
, 0x20
, 0x40
, 0x80
. For example,
breaking the single input byte chr(0x36)
into two groups gives a list
(0x6, 0x3)
; breaking it into 4 groups gives (0x2, 0x1, 0x3, 0x0)
.
vec
may also be assigned to, in which case parentheses are needed
to give the expression the correct precedence as in
vec($image, $max_x * $x + $y, 8) = 3;
If the selected element is outside the string, the value 0 is returned. If an element off the end of the string is written to, Perl will first extend the string with sufficiently many zero bytes. It is an error to try to write off the beginning of the string (i.e. negative OFFSET).
The string should not contain any character with the value > 255 (which
can only happen if you're using UTF8 encoding). If it does, it will be
treated as something which is not UTF8 encoded. When the vec
was
assigned to, other parts of your program will also no longer consider the
string to be UTF8 encoded. In other words, if you do have such characters
in your string, vec()
will operate on the actual byte string, and not the
conceptual character string.
Strings created with vec
can also be manipulated with the logical
operators |
, &
, ^
, and ~
. These operators will assume a bit
vector operation is desired when both operands are strings.
See Bitwise String Operators in the perlop manpage.
The following code will build up an ASCII string saying 'PerlPerlPerl'
.
The comments show the string after each step. Note that this code works
in the same way on big-endian or little-endian machines.
my $foo = ''; vec($foo, 0, 32) = 0x5065726C; # 'Perl'
# $foo eq "Perl" eq "\x50\x65\x72\x6C", 32 bits print vec($foo, 0, 8); # prints 80 == 0x50 == ord('P')
vec($foo, 2, 16) = 0x5065; # 'PerlPe' vec($foo, 3, 16) = 0x726C; # 'PerlPerl' vec($foo, 8, 8) = 0x50; # 'PerlPerlP' vec($foo, 9, 8) = 0x65; # 'PerlPerlPe' vec($foo, 20, 4) = 2; # 'PerlPerlPe' . "\x02" vec($foo, 21, 4) = 7; # 'PerlPerlPer' # 'r' is "\x72" vec($foo, 45, 2) = 3; # 'PerlPerlPer' . "\x0c" vec($foo, 93, 1) = 1; # 'PerlPerlPer' . "\x2c" vec($foo, 94, 1) = 1; # 'PerlPerlPerl' # 'l' is "\x6c"
To transform a bit vector into a string or list of 0's and 1's, use these:
$bits = unpack("b*", $vector); @bits = split(//, unpack("b*", $vector));
If you know the exact length in bits, it can be used in place of the *
.
Here is an example to illustrate how the bits actually fall in place:
#!/usr/bin/perl -wl
print <<'EOT'; 0 1 2 3 unpack("V",$_) 01234567890123456789012345678901 ------------------------------------------------------------------ EOT
for $w (0..3) { $width = 2**$w; for ($shift=0; $shift < $width; ++$shift) { for ($off=0; $off < 32/$width; ++$off) { $str = pack("B*", "0"x32); $bits = (1<<$shift); vec($str, $off, $width) = $bits; $res = unpack("b*",$str); $val = unpack("V", $str); write; } } }
format STDOUT = vec($_,@#,@#) = @<< == @######### @>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> $off, $width, $bits, $val, $res . __END__
Regardless of the machine architecture on which it is run, the above example should print the following table:
0 1 2 3 unpack("V",$_) 01234567890123456789012345678901 ------------------------------------------------------------------ vec($_, 0, 1) = 1 == 1 10000000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 1) = 1 == 2 01000000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 1) = 1 == 4 00100000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 3, 1) = 1 == 8 00010000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 4, 1) = 1 == 16 00001000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 5, 1) = 1 == 32 00000100000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 6, 1) = 1 == 64 00000010000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 7, 1) = 1 == 128 00000001000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 8, 1) = 1 == 256 00000000100000000000000000000000 vec($_, 9, 1) = 1 == 512 00000000010000000000000000000000 vec($_,10, 1) = 1 == 1024 00000000001000000000000000000000 vec($_,11, 1) = 1 == 2048 00000000000100000000000000000000 vec($_,12, 1) = 1 == 4096 00000000000010000000000000000000 vec($_,13, 1) = 1 == 8192 00000000000001000000000000000000 vec($_,14, 1) = 1 == 16384 00000000000000100000000000000000 vec($_,15, 1) = 1 == 32768 00000000000000010000000000000000 vec($_,16, 1) = 1 == 65536 00000000000000001000000000000000 vec($_,17, 1) = 1 == 131072 00000000000000000100000000000000 vec($_,18, 1) = 1 == 262144 00000000000000000010000000000000 vec($_,19, 1) = 1 == 524288 00000000000000000001000000000000 vec($_,20, 1) = 1 == 1048576 00000000000000000000100000000000 vec($_,21, 1) = 1 == 2097152 00000000000000000000010000000000 vec($_,22, 1) = 1 == 4194304 00000000000000000000001000000000 vec($_,23, 1) = 1 == 8388608 00000000000000000000000100000000 vec($_,24, 1) = 1 == 16777216 00000000000000000000000010000000 vec($_,25, 1) = 1 == 33554432 00000000000000000000000001000000 vec($_,26, 1) = 1 == 67108864 00000000000000000000000000100000 vec($_,27, 1) = 1 == 134217728 00000000000000000000000000010000 vec($_,28, 1) = 1 == 268435456 00000000000000000000000000001000 vec($_,29, 1) = 1 == 536870912 00000000000000000000000000000100 vec($_,30, 1) = 1 == 1073741824 00000000000000000000000000000010 vec($_,31, 1) = 1 == 2147483648 00000000000000000000000000000001 vec($_, 0, 2) = 1 == 1 10000000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 2) = 1 == 4 00100000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 2) = 1 == 16 00001000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 3, 2) = 1 == 64 00000010000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 4, 2) = 1 == 256 00000000100000000000000000000000 vec($_, 5, 2) = 1 == 1024 00000000001000000000000000000000 vec($_, 6, 2) = 1 == 4096 00000000000010000000000000000000 vec($_, 7, 2) = 1 == 16384 00000000000000100000000000000000 vec($_, 8, 2) = 1 == 65536 00000000000000001000000000000000 vec($_, 9, 2) = 1 == 262144 00000000000000000010000000000000 vec($_,10, 2) = 1 == 1048576 00000000000000000000100000000000 vec($_,11, 2) = 1 == 4194304 00000000000000000000001000000000 vec($_,12, 2) = 1 == 16777216 00000000000000000000000010000000 vec($_,13, 2) = 1 == 67108864 00000000000000000000000000100000 vec($_,14, 2) = 1 == 268435456 00000000000000000000000000001000 vec($_,15, 2) = 1 == 1073741824 00000000000000000000000000000010 vec($_, 0, 2) = 2 == 2 01000000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 2) = 2 == 8 00010000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 2) = 2 == 32 00000100000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 3, 2) = 2 == 128 00000001000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 4, 2) = 2 == 512 00000000010000000000000000000000 vec($_, 5, 2) = 2 == 2048 00000000000100000000000000000000 vec($_, 6, 2) = 2 == 8192 00000000000001000000000000000000 vec($_, 7, 2) = 2 == 32768 00000000000000010000000000000000 vec($_, 8, 2) = 2 == 131072 00000000000000000100000000000000 vec($_, 9, 2) = 2 == 524288 00000000000000000001000000000000 vec($_,10, 2) = 2 == 2097152 00000000000000000000010000000000 vec($_,11, 2) = 2 == 8388608 00000000000000000000000100000000 vec($_,12, 2) = 2 == 33554432 00000000000000000000000001000000 vec($_,13, 2) = 2 == 134217728 00000000000000000000000000010000 vec($_,14, 2) = 2 == 536870912 00000000000000000000000000000100 vec($_,15, 2) = 2 == 2147483648 00000000000000000000000000000001 vec($_, 0, 4) = 1 == 1 10000000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 4) = 1 == 16 00001000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 4) = 1 == 256 00000000100000000000000000000000 vec($_, 3, 4) = 1 == 4096 00000000000010000000000000000000 vec($_, 4, 4) = 1 == 65536 00000000000000001000000000000000 vec($_, 5, 4) = 1 == 1048576 00000000000000000000100000000000 vec($_, 6, 4) = 1 == 16777216 00000000000000000000000010000000 vec($_, 7, 4) = 1 == 268435456 00000000000000000000000000001000 vec($_, 0, 4) = 2 == 2 01000000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 4) = 2 == 32 00000100000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 4) = 2 == 512 00000000010000000000000000000000 vec($_, 3, 4) = 2 == 8192 00000000000001000000000000000000 vec($_, 4, 4) = 2 == 131072 00000000000000000100000000000000 vec($_, 5, 4) = 2 == 2097152 00000000000000000000010000000000 vec($_, 6, 4) = 2 == 33554432 00000000000000000000000001000000 vec($_, 7, 4) = 2 == 536870912 00000000000000000000000000000100 vec($_, 0, 4) = 4 == 4 00100000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 4) = 4 == 64 00000010000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 4) = 4 == 1024 00000000001000000000000000000000 vec($_, 3, 4) = 4 == 16384 00000000000000100000000000000000 vec($_, 4, 4) = 4 == 262144 00000000000000000010000000000000 vec($_, 5, 4) = 4 == 4194304 00000000000000000000001000000000 vec($_, 6, 4) = 4 == 67108864 00000000000000000000000000100000 vec($_, 7, 4) = 4 == 1073741824 00000000000000000000000000000010 vec($_, 0, 4) = 8 == 8 00010000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 4) = 8 == 128 00000001000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 4) = 8 == 2048 00000000000100000000000000000000 vec($_, 3, 4) = 8 == 32768 00000000000000010000000000000000 vec($_, 4, 4) = 8 == 524288 00000000000000000001000000000000 vec($_, 5, 4) = 8 == 8388608 00000000000000000000000100000000 vec($_, 6, 4) = 8 == 134217728 00000000000000000000000000010000 vec($_, 7, 4) = 8 == 2147483648 00000000000000000000000000000001 vec($_, 0, 8) = 1 == 1 10000000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 8) = 1 == 256 00000000100000000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 8) = 1 == 65536 00000000000000001000000000000000 vec($_, 3, 8) = 1 == 16777216 00000000000000000000000010000000 vec($_, 0, 8) = 2 == 2 01000000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 8) = 2 == 512 00000000010000000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 8) = 2 == 131072 00000000000000000100000000000000 vec($_, 3, 8) = 2 == 33554432 00000000000000000000000001000000 vec($_, 0, 8) = 4 == 4 00100000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 8) = 4 == 1024 00000000001000000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 8) = 4 == 262144 00000000000000000010000000000000 vec($_, 3, 8) = 4 == 67108864 00000000000000000000000000100000 vec($_, 0, 8) = 8 == 8 00010000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 8) = 8 == 2048 00000000000100000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 8) = 8 == 524288 00000000000000000001000000000000 vec($_, 3, 8) = 8 == 134217728 00000000000000000000000000010000 vec($_, 0, 8) = 16 == 16 00001000000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 8) = 16 == 4096 00000000000010000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 8) = 16 == 1048576 00000000000000000000100000000000 vec($_, 3, 8) = 16 == 268435456 00000000000000000000000000001000 vec($_, 0, 8) = 32 == 32 00000100000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 8) = 32 == 8192 00000000000001000000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 8) = 32 == 2097152 00000000000000000000010000000000 vec($_, 3, 8) = 32 == 536870912 00000000000000000000000000000100 vec($_, 0, 8) = 64 == 64 00000010000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 8) = 64 == 16384 00000000000000100000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 8) = 64 == 4194304 00000000000000000000001000000000 vec($_, 3, 8) = 64 == 1073741824 00000000000000000000000000000010 vec($_, 0, 8) = 128 == 128 00000001000000000000000000000000 vec($_, 1, 8) = 128 == 32768 00000000000000010000000000000000 vec($_, 2, 8) = 128 == 8388608 00000000000000000000000100000000 vec($_, 3, 8) = 128 == 2147483648 00000000000000000000000000000001
wait(2)
system call on your system: it waits for a child
process to terminate and returns the pid of the deceased process, or
-1
if there are no child processes. The status is returned in $?
.
Note that a return value of -1
could mean that child processes are
being automatically reaped, as described in the perlipc manpage.
-1
if there is no such child process. On some
systems, a value of 0 indicates that there are processes still running.
The status is returned in $?
. If you say
use POSIX ":sys_wait_h"; #... do { $kid = waitpid(-1,&WNOHANG); } until $kid == -1;
then you can do a non-blocking wait for all pending zombie processes.
Non-blocking wait is available on machines supporting either the
waitpid(2)
or wait4(2)
system calls. However, waiting for a particular
pid with FLAGS of 0
is implemented everywhere. (Perl emulates the
system call by remembering the status values of processes that have
exited but have not been harvested by the Perl script yet.)
Note that on some systems, a return value of -1
could mean that child
processes are being automatically reaped. See the perlipc manpage for details,
and for other examples.
return unless defined wantarray; # don't bother doing more my @a = complex_calculation(); return wantarray ? @a : "@a";
This function should have been named wantlist()
instead.
die
, but doesn't exit or throw
an exception.
If LIST is empty and $@
already contains a value (typically from a
previous eval) that value is used after appending "\t...caught"
to $@
. This is useful for staying almost, but not entirely similar to
die
.
If $@
is empty then the string "Warning: Something's wrong"
is used.
No message is printed if there is a $SIG{__WARN__}
handler
installed. It is the handler's responsibility to deal with the message
as it sees fit (like, for instance, converting it into a die
). Most
handlers must therefore make arrangements to actually display the
warnings that they are not prepared to deal with, by calling warn
again in the handler. Note that this is quite safe and will not
produce an endless loop, since __WARN__
hooks are not called from
inside one.
You will find this behavior is slightly different from that of
$SIG{__DIE__}
handlers (which don't suppress the error text, but can
instead call die
again to change it).
Using a __WARN__
handler provides a powerful way to silence all
warnings (even the so-called mandatory ones). An example:
# wipe out *all* compile-time warnings BEGIN { $SIG{'__WARN__'} = sub { warn $_[0] if $DOWARN } } my $foo = 10; my $foo = 20; # no warning about duplicate my $foo, # but hey, you asked for it! # no compile-time or run-time warnings before here $DOWARN = 1;
# run-time warnings enabled after here warn "\$foo is alive and $foo!"; # does show up
See the perlvar manpage for details on setting %SIG
entries, and for more
examples. See the Carp module for other kinds of warnings using its
carp()
and cluck()
functions.
select
function) may be set
explicitly by assigning the name of the format to the $~
variable.
Top of form processing is handled automatically: if there is
insufficient room on the current page for the formatted record, the
page is advanced by writing a form feed, a special top-of-page format
is used to format the new page header, and then the record is written.
By default the top-of-page format is the name of the filehandle with
``_TOP'' appended, but it may be dynamically set to the format of your
choice by assigning the name to the $^
variable while the filehandle is
selected. The number of lines remaining on the current page is in
variable $-
, which can be set to 0
to force a new page.
If FILEHANDLE is unspecified, output goes to the current default output
channel, which starts out as STDOUT but may be changed by the
select
operator. If the FILEHANDLE is an EXPR, then the expression
is evaluated and the resulting string is used to look up the name of
the FILEHANDLE at run time. For more on formats, see the perlform manpage.
Note that write is not the opposite of read
. Unfortunately.
tr///
. See the perlop manpage.
perlfunc - Perl builtin functions |