NAME
perliol - C API for Perl's implementation of IO in Layers.
SYNOPSIS
/* Defining a layer ... */
#include <perliol.h>
DESCRIPTION
This document describes the behavior and implementation of the PerlIO
abstraction described in perlapio when CWUSE_PERLIO is defined (and
CWUSE_SFIO is not).
History and Background
The PerlIO abstraction was introduced in perl5.003_02 but languished as
just an abstraction until perl5.7.0. However during that time a number
of perl extensions switched to using it, so the \s-1API\s0 is mostly fixed to
maintain (source) compatibility.
The aim of the implementation is to provide the PerlIO \s-1API\s0 in a flexible
and platform neutral manner. It is also a trial of an Object Oriented
C, with vtables approach which may be applied to perl6.
Basic Structure
PerlIO is a stack of layers.
The low levels of the stack work with the low-level operating system
calls (file descriptors in C) getting bytes in and out, the higher
layers of the stack buffer, filter, and otherwise manipulate the I/O,
and return characters (or bytes) to Perl. Terms above and below
are used to refer to the relative positioning of the stack layers.
A layer contains a vtable, the table of I/O operations (at C level
a table of function pointers), and status flags. The functions in the
vtable implement operations like open, read, and write.
When I/O, for example read, is requested, the request goes from Perl
first down the stack using read functions of each layer, then at the
bottom the input is requested from the operating system services, then
the result is returned up the stack, finally being interpreted as Perl
data.
The requests do not necessarily go always all the way down to the
operating system: that's where PerlIO buffering comes into play.
When you do an open() and specify extra PerlIO layers to be deployed,
the layers you specify are pushed on top of the already existing
default stack. One way to see it is that operating system is
on the left and Perl is on the right.
What exact layers are in this default stack depends on a lot of
things: your operating system, Perl version, Perl compile time
configuration, and Perl runtime configuration. See PerlIO,
\s-1PERLIO\s0 in perlrun, and open for more information.
binmode() operates similarly to open(): by default the specified
layers are pushed on top of the existing stack.
However, note that even as the specified layers are pushed on top
for open() and binmode(), this doesn't mean that the effects are
limited to the top: PerlIO layers can be very 'active' and inspect
and affect layers also deeper in the stack. As an example there
is a layer called raw which repeatedly pops layers until
it reaches the first layer that has declared itself capable of
handling binary data. The pushed layers are processed in left-to-right
order.
sysopen() operates (unsurprisingly) at a lower level in the stack than
open(). For example in \s-1UNIX\s0 or UNIX-like systems sysopen() operates
directly at the level of file descriptors: in the terms of PerlIO
layers, it uses only the unix layer, which is a rather thin wrapper
on top of the \s-1UNIX\s0 file descriptors.
Layers vs Disciplines
Initial discussion of the ability to modify \s-1IO\s0 streams behaviour used
the term discipline for the entities which were added. This came (I
believe) from the use of the term in sfio, which in turn borrowed it
from line disciplines on Unix terminals. However, this document (and
the C code) uses the term layer.
This is, I hope, a natural term given the implementation, and should
avoid connotations that are inherent in earlier uses of discipline
for things which are rather different.
Data Structures
The basic data structure is a PerlIOl:
typedef struct _PerlIO PerlIOl;
typedef struct _PerlIO_funcs PerlIO_funcs;
typedef PerlIOl *PerlIO;
struct _PerlIO
{
PerlIOl * next; /* Lower layer */
PerlIO_funcs * tab; /* Functions for this layer */
IV flags; /* Various flags for state */
};
A CWPerlIOl * is a pointer to the struct, and the application
level CWPerlIO * is a pointer to a CWPerlIOl * - i.e. a pointer
to a pointer to the struct. This allows the application level CWPerlIO *
to remain constant while the actual CWPerlIOl * underneath
changes. (Compare perl's CWSV * which remains constant while its
CWsv_any field changes as the scalar's type changes.) An \s-1IO\s0 stream is
then in general represented as a pointer to this linked-list of
layers.
It should be noted that because of the double indirection in a CWPerlIO *,
a CW&(perlio->next) is a CWPerlIO *, and so to some degree
at least one layer can use the standard \s-1API\s0 on the next layer down.
A layer is composed of two parts:
"1."
The functions and attributes of the layer class.
"2."
The per-instance data for a particular handle.
Functions and Attributes
The functions and attributes are accessed via the tab (for table)
member of CWPerlIOl. The functions (methods of the layer class) are
fixed, and are defined by the CWPerlIO_funcs type. They are broadly the
same as the public CWPerlIO_xxxxx functions:
struct _PerlIO_funcs
{
Size_t fsize;
char * name;
Size_t size;
IV kind;
IV (*Pushed)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f,const char *mode,SV *arg, PerlIO_funcs *tab);
IV (*Popped)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
PerlIO * (*Open)(pTHX_ PerlIO_funcs *tab,
AV *layers, IV n,
const char *mode,
int fd, int imode, int perm,
PerlIO *old,
int narg, SV **args);
IV (*Binmode)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
SV * (*Getarg)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f, CLONE_PARAMS *param, int flags)
IV (*Fileno)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
PerlIO * (*Dup)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f, PerlIO *o, CLONE_PARAMS *param, int flags)
/* Unix-like functions - cf sfio line disciplines */
SSize_t (*Read)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f, void *vbuf, Size_t count);
SSize_t (*Unread)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f, const void *vbuf, Size_t count);
SSize_t (*Write)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f, const void *vbuf, Size_t count);
IV (*Seek)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f, Off_t offset, int whence);
Off_t (*Tell)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
IV (*Close)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
/* Stdio-like buffered IO functions */
IV (*Flush)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
IV (*Fill)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
IV (*Eof)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
IV (*Error)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
void (*Clearerr)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
void (*Setlinebuf)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
/* Perl's snooping functions */
STDCHAR * (*Get_base)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Size_t (*Get_bufsiz)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
STDCHAR * (*Get_ptr)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
SSize_t (*Get_cnt)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
void (*Set_ptrcnt)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f,STDCHAR *ptr,SSize_t cnt);
};
The first few members of the struct give a function table size for
compatibility check name for the layer, the size to CWmalloc for the per-instance data,
and some flags which are attributes of the class as whole (such as whether it is a buffering
layer), then follow the functions which fall into four basic groups:
"1."
Opening and setup functions
"2."
Basic \s-1IO\s0 operations
"3."
Stdio class buffering options.
"4."
Functions to support Perl's traditional fast access to the buffer.
A layer does not have to implement all the functions, but the whole
table has to be present. Unimplemented slots can be \s-1NULL\s0 (which will
result in an error when called) or can be filled in with stubs to
inherit behaviour from a base class. This inheritance is fixed
for all instances of the layer, but as the layer chooses which stubs
to populate the table, limited multiple inheritance is possible.
Per-instance Data
The per-instance data are held in memory beyond the basic PerlIOl
struct, by making a PerlIOl the first member of the layer's struct
thus:
typedef struct
{
struct _PerlIO base; /* Base "class" info */
STDCHAR * buf; /* Start of buffer */
STDCHAR * end; /* End of valid part of buffer */
STDCHAR * ptr; /* Current position in buffer */
Off_t posn; /* Offset of buf into the file */
Size_t bufsiz; /* Real size of buffer */
IV oneword; /* Emergency buffer */
} PerlIOBuf;
In this way (as for perl's scalars) a pointer to a PerlIOBuf can be
treated as a pointer to a PerlIOl.
Layers in action.
table perlio unix
| |
+-----------+ +----------+ +--------+
PerlIO ->| |--->| next |--->| NULL |
+-----------+ +----------+ +--------+
| | | buffer | | fd |
+-----------+ | | +--------+
| | +----------+
The above attempts to show how the layer scheme works in a simple case.
The application's CWPerlIO * points to an entry in the table(s)
representing open (allocated) handles. For example the first three slots
in the table correspond to CWstdin,CWstdout and CWstderr. The table
in turn points to the current top layer for the handle - in this case
an instance of the generic buffering layer perlio. That layer in turn
points to the next layer down - in this case the lowlevel unix layer.
The above is roughly equivalent to a stdio buffered stream, but with
much more flexibility:
""
If Unix level CWread/CWwrite/CWlseek is not appropriate for (say)
sockets then the unix layer can be replaced (at open time or even
dynamically) with a socket layer.
""
Different handles can have different buffering schemes. The top
layer could be the mmap layer if reading disk files was quicker
using CWmmap than CWread. An unbuffered stream can be implemented
simply by not having a buffer layer.
""
Extra layers can be inserted to process the data as it flows through.
This was the driving need for including the scheme in perl 5.7.0+ - we
needed a mechanism to allow data to be translated between perl's
internal encoding (conceptually at least Unicode as \s-1UTF-8\s0), and the
native format used by the system. This is provided by the
:encoding(xxxx) layer which typically sits above the buffering layer.
""
A layer can be added that does \n to \s-1CRLF\s0 translation. This layer
can be used on any platform, not just those that normally do such
things.
Per-instance flag bits
The generic flag bits are a hybrid of CWO_XXXXX style flags deduced
from the mode string passed to CWPerlIO_open(), and state bits for
typical buffer layers.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_EOF\s0"
End of file.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_CANWRITE\s0"
Writes are permitted, i.e. opened as w or r+ or a, etc.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_CANREAD\s0"
Reads are permitted i.e. opened r or w+ (or even a+ - ick).
"\s-1PERLIO_F_ERROR\s0"
An error has occurred (for CWPerlIO_error()).
"\s-1PERLIO_F_TRUNCATE\s0"
Truncate file suggested by open mode.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_APPEND\s0"
All writes should be appends.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_CRLF\s0"
Layer is performing Win32-like \n mapped to \s-1CR\s0,LF for output and \s-1CR\s0,LF
mapped to \n for input. Normally the provided crlf layer is the only
layer that need bother about this. CWPerlIO_binmode() will mess with this
flag rather than add/remove layers if the CWPERLIO_K_CANCRLF bit is set
for the layers class.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_UTF8\s0"
Data written to this layer should be \s-1UTF-8\s0 encoded; data provided
by this layer should be considered \s-1UTF-8\s0 encoded. Can be set on any layer
by :utf8 dummy layer. Also set on :encoding layer.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_UNBUF\s0"
Layer is unbuffered - i.e. write to next layer down should occur for
each write to this layer.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_WRBUF\s0"
The buffer for this layer currently holds data written to it but not sent
to next layer.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_RDBUF\s0"
The buffer for this layer currently holds unconsumed data read from
layer below.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_LINEBUF\s0"
Layer is line buffered. Write data should be passed to next layer down
whenever a \n is seen. Any data beyond the \n should then be
processed.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_TEMP\s0"
File has been CWunlink()ed, or should be deleted on CWclose().
"\s-1PERLIO_F_OPEN\s0"
Handle is open.
"\s-1PERLIO_F_FASTGETS\s0"
This instance of this layer supports the "fast CWgets" interface.
Normally set based on CWPERLIO_K_FASTGETS for the class and by the
existence of the function(s) in the table. However a class that
normally provides that interface may need to avoid it on a
particular instance. The pending layer needs to do this when
it is pushed above a layer which does not support the interface.
(Perl's CWsv_gets() does not expect the streams fast CWgets behaviour
to change during one get.)
Methods in Detail
"fsize"
Size_t fsize;
Size of the function table. This is compared against the value PerlIO
code knows as a compatibility check. Future versions may be able
to tolerate layers compiled against an old version of the headers.
"name"
char * name;
The name of the layer whose open() method Perl should invoke on
open(). For example if the layer is called \s-1APR\s0, you will call:
open $fh, ">:APR", ...
and Perl knows that it has to invoke the PerlIOAPR_open() method
implemented by the \s-1APR\s0 layer.
"size"
Size_t size;
The size of the per-instance data structure, e.g.:
sizeof(PerlIOAPR)
If this field is zero then CWPerlIO_pushed does not malloc anything
and assumes layer's Pushed function will do any required layer stack
manipulation - used to avoid malloc/free overhead for dummy layers.
If the field is non-zero it must be at least the size of CWPerlIOl,
CWPerlIO_pushed will allocate memory for the layer's data structures
and link new layer onto the stream's stack. (If the layer's Pushed
method returns an error indication the layer is popped again.)
"*
The layer is buffered.
"*
The layer is acceptable to have in a binmode(\s-1FH\s0) stack - i.e. it does not
(or will configure itself not to) transform bytes passing through it.
"*
Layer can translate between \n and \s-1CRLF\s0 line ends.
"*
Layer allows buffer snooping.
"*
Used when the layer's
open() accepts more arguments than usual. The
extra arguments should come not before the CWMODE
argument. When this
flag is used it's up to the layer to validate the args.
"Pushed"
IV (*Pushed)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f,const char *mode, SV *arg);
The only absolutely mandatory method. Called when the layer is pushed
onto the stack. The CWmode argument may be \s-1NULL\s0 if this occurs
post-open. The CWarg will be non-CWNULL if an argument string was
passed. In most cases this should call CWPerlIOBase_pushed() to
convert CWmode into the appropriate CWPERLIO_F_XXXXX flags in
addition to any actions the layer itself takes. If a layer is not
expecting an argument it need neither save the one passed to it, nor
provide CWGetarg() (it could perhaps CWPerl_warn that the argument
was un-expected).
Returns 0 on success. On failure returns -1 and should set errno.
"Popped"
IV (*Popped)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Called when the layer is popped from the stack. A layer will normally
be popped after CWClose() is called. But a layer can be popped
without being closed if the program is dynamically managing layers on
the stream. In such cases CWPopped() should free any resources
(buffers, translation tables, ...) not held directly in the layer's
struct. It should also CWUnread() any unconsumed data that has been
read and buffered from the layer below back to that layer, so that it
can be re-provided to what ever is now above.
Returns 0 on success and failure. If CWPopped() returns true then
perlio.c assumes that either the layer has popped itself, or the
layer is super special and needs to be retained for other reasons.
In most cases it should return false.
"Open"
PerlIO * (*Open)(...);
The CWOpen() method has lots of arguments because it combines the
functions of perl's CWopen, CWPerlIO_open, perl's CWsysopen,
CWPerlIO_fdopen and CWPerlIO_reopen. The full prototype is as
follows:
PerlIO * (*Open)(pTHX_ PerlIO_funcs *tab,
AV *layers, IV n,
const char *mode,
int fd, int imode, int perm,
PerlIO *old,
int narg, SV **args);
Open should (perhaps indirectly) call CWPerlIO_allocate() to allocate
a slot in the table and associate it with the layers information for
the opened file, by calling CWPerlIO_push. The layers \s-1AV\s0 is an
array of all the layers destined for the CWPerlIO *, and any
arguments passed to them, n is the index into that array of the
layer being called. The macro CWPerlIOArg will return a (possibly
CWNULL) \s-1SV\s0 * for the argument passed to the layer.
The mode string is an "CWfopen()-like" string which would match
the regular expression CW/^[I#]?[rwa]\+?[bt]?$/.
The CW'I' prefix is used during creation of CWstdin..CWstderr via
special CWPerlIO_fdopen calls; the CW'#' prefix means that this is
CWsysopen and that imode and perm should be passed to
CWPerlLIO_open3; CW'r' means read, CW'w' means write and
CW'a' means append. The CW'+' suffix means that both reading and
writing/appending are permitted. The CW'b' suffix means file should
be binary, and CW't' means it is text. (Almost all layers should do
the \s-1IO\s0 in binary mode, and ignore the b/t bits. The CW:crlf layer
should be pushed to handle the distinction.)
If old is not CWNULL then this is a CWPerlIO_reopen. Perl itself
does not use this (yet?) and semantics are a little vague.
If fd not negative then it is the numeric file descriptor fd,
which will be open in a manner compatible with the supplied mode
string, the call is thus equivalent to CWPerlIO_fdopen. In this case
nargs will be zero.
If nargs is greater than zero then it gives the number of arguments
passed to CWopen, otherwise it will be 1 if for example
CWPerlIO_open was called. In simple cases SvPV_nolen(*args) is the
pathname to open.
Having said all that translation-only layers do not need to provide
CWOpen() at all, but rather leave the opening to a lower level layer
and wait to be pushed. If a layer does provide CWOpen() it should
normally call the CWOpen() method of next layer down (if any) and
then push itself on top if that succeeds.
If CWPerlIO_push was performed and open has failed, it must
CWPerlIO_pop itself, since if it's not, the layer won't be removed
and may cause bad problems.
Returns CWNULL on failure.
"Binmode"
IV (*Binmode)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Optional. Used when CW:raw layer is pushed (explicitly or as a result
of binmode(\s-1FH\s0)). If not present layer will be popped. If present
should configure layer as binary (or pop itself) and return 0.
If it returns -1 for error CWbinmode will fail with layer
still on the stack.
"Getarg"
SV * (*Getarg)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f,
CLONE_PARAMS *param, int flags);
Optional. If present should return an \s-1SV\s0 * representing the string
argument passed to the layer when it was
pushed. e.g. :encoding(ascii) would return an SvPV with value
ascii. (param and flags arguments can be ignored in most
cases)
CWDup uses CWGetarg to retrieve the argument originally passed to
CWPushed, so you must implement this function if your layer has an
extra argument to CWPushed and will ever be CWDuped.
"Fileno"
IV (*Fileno)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Returns the Unix/Posix numeric file descriptor for the handle. Normally
CWPerlIOBase_fileno() (which just asks next layer down) will suffice
for this.
Returns -1 on error, which is considered to include the case where the
layer cannot provide such a file descriptor.
"Dup"
PerlIO * (*Dup)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f, PerlIO *o,
CLONE_PARAMS *param, int flags);
\s-1XXX:\s0 Needs more docs.
Used as part of the clone process when a thread is spawned (in which
case param will be non-NULL) and when a stream is being duplicated via
'&' in the CWopen.
Similar to CWOpen, returns PerlIO* on success, CWNULL on failure.
"Read"
SSize_t (*Read)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f, void *vbuf, Size_t count);
Basic read operation.
Typically will call CWFill and manipulate pointers (possibly via the
\s-1API\s0). CWPerlIOBuf_read() may be suitable for derived classes which
provide fast gets methods.
Returns actual bytes read, or -1 on an error.
"Unread"
SSize_t (*Unread)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f,
const void *vbuf, Size_t count);
A superset of stdio's CWungetc(). Should arrange for future reads to
see the bytes in CWvbuf. If there is no obviously better implementation
then CWPerlIOBase_unread() provides the function by pushing a fake
pending layer above the calling layer.
Returns the number of unread chars.
"Write"
SSize_t (*Write)(PerlIO *f, const void *vbuf, Size_t count);
Basic write operation.
Returns bytes written or -1 on an error.
"Seek"
IV (*Seek)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f, Off_t offset, int whence);
Position the file pointer. Should normally call its own CWFlush
method and then the CWSeek method of next layer down.
Returns 0 on success, -1 on failure.
"Tell"
Off_t (*Tell)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Return the file pointer. May be based on layers cached concept of
position to avoid overhead.
Returns -1 on failure to get the file pointer.
"Close"
IV (*Close)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Close the stream. Should normally call CWPerlIOBase_close() to flush
itself and close layers below, and then deallocate any data structures
(buffers, translation tables, ...) not held directly in the data
structure.
Returns 0 on success, -1 on failure.
"Flush"
IV (*Flush)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Should make stream's state consistent with layers below. That is, any
buffered write data should be written, and file position of lower layers
adjusted for data read from below but not actually consumed.
(Should perhaps CWUnread() such data to the lower layer.)
Returns 0 on success, -1 on failure.
"Fill"
IV (*Fill)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
The buffer for this layer should be filled (for read) from layer
below. When you subclass PerlIOBuf layer, you want to use its
_read method and to supply your own fill method, which fills the
PerlIOBuf's buffer.
Returns 0 on success, -1 on failure.
"Eof"
IV (*Eof)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Return end-of-file indicator. CWPerlIOBase_eof() is normally sufficient.
Returns 0 on end-of-file, 1 if not end-of-file, -1 on error.
"Error"
IV (*Error)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Return error indicator. CWPerlIOBase_error() is normally sufficient.
Returns 1 if there is an error (usually when CWPERLIO_F_ERROR is set,
0 otherwise.
"Clearerr"
void (*Clearerr)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Clear end-of-file and error indicators. Should call CWPerlIOBase_clearerr()
to set the CWPERLIO_F_XXXXX flags, which may suffice.
"Setlinebuf"
void (*Setlinebuf)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Mark the stream as line buffered. CWPerlIOBase_setlinebuf() sets the
\s-1PERLIO_F_LINEBUF\s0 flag and is normally sufficient.
"Get_base"
STDCHAR * (*Get_base)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Allocate (if not already done so) the read buffer for this layer and
return pointer to it. Return \s-1NULL\s0 on failure.
"Get_bufsiz"
Size_t (*Get_bufsiz)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Return the number of bytes that last CWFill() put in the buffer.
"Get_ptr"
STDCHAR * (*Get_ptr)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Return the current read pointer relative to this layer's buffer.
"Get_cnt"
SSize_t (*Get_cnt)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f);
Return the number of bytes left to be read in the current buffer.
"Set_ptrcnt"
void (*Set_ptrcnt)(pTHX_ PerlIO *f,
STDCHAR *ptr, SSize_t cnt);
Adjust the read pointer and count of bytes to match CWptr and/or CWcnt.
The application (or layer above) must ensure they are consistent.
(Checking is allowed by the paranoid.)
Utilities
To ask for the next layer down use PerlIONext(PerlIO *f).
To check that a PerlIO* is valid use PerlIOValid(PerlIO *f). (All
this does is really just to check that the pointer is non-NULL and
that the pointer behind that is non-NULL.)
PerlIOBase(PerlIO *f) returns the Base pointer, or in other words,
the CWPerlIOl* pointer.
PerlIOSelf(PerlIO* f, type) return the PerlIOBase cast to a type.
Perl_PerlIO_or_Base(PerlIO* f, callback, base, failure, args) either
calls the callback from the functions of the layer f (just by
the name of the \s-1IO\s0 function, like Read) with the args, or if
there is no such callback, calls the base version of the callback
with the same args, or if the f is invalid, set errno to \s-1EBADF\s0 and
return failure.
Perl_PerlIO_or_fail(PerlIO* f, callback, failure, args) either calls
the callback of the functions of the layer f with the args,
or if there is no such callback, set errno to \s-1EINVAL\s0. Or if the f is
invalid, set errno to \s-1EBADF\s0 and return failure.
Perl_PerlIO_or_Base_void(PerlIO* f, callback, base, args) either calls
the callback of the functions of the layer f with the args,
or if there is no such callback, calls the base version of the
callback with the same args, or if the f is invalid, set errno to
\s-1EBADF\s0.
Perl_PerlIO_or_fail_void(PerlIO* f, callback, args) either calls the
callback of the functions of the layer f with the args, or if
there is no such callback, set errno to \s-1EINVAL\s0. Or if the f is
invalid, set errno to \s-1EBADF\s0.
Implementing PerlIO Layers
If you find the implementation document unclear or not sufficient,
look at the existing PerlIO layer implementations, which include:
"*
The perlio.c and perliol.h in the Perl core implement the
unix, perlio, stdio, crlf, utf8, byte, raw, pending
layers, and also the mmap and win32 layers if applicable.
(The win32 is currently unfinished and unused, to see what is used
instead in Win32, see Querying the layers of filehandles in PerlIO .)
PerlIO::encoding, PerlIO::scalar, PerlIO::via in the Perl core.
PerlIO::gzip and APR::PerlIO (mod_perl 2.0) on \s-1CPAN\s0.
"*
PerlIO::via::QuotedPrint in the Perl core and PerlIO::via::* on \s-1CPAN\s0.
If you are creating a PerlIO layer, you may want to be lazy, in other
words, implement only the methods that interest you. The other methods
you can either replace with the blank methods
PerlIOBase_noop_ok
PerlIOBase_noop_fail
(which do nothing, and return zero and -1, respectively) or for
certain methods you may assume a default behaviour by using a \s-1NULL\s0
method. The Open method looks for help in the 'parent' layer.
The following table summarizes the behaviour:
method behaviour with NULL
Clearerr PerlIOBase_clearerr
Close PerlIOBase_close
Dup PerlIOBase_dup
Eof PerlIOBase_eof
Error PerlIOBase_error
Fileno PerlIOBase_fileno
Fill FAILURE
Flush SUCCESS
Getarg SUCCESS
Get_base FAILURE
Get_bufsiz FAILURE
Get_cnt FAILURE
Get_ptr FAILURE
Open INHERITED
Popped SUCCESS
Pushed SUCCESS
Read PerlIOBase_read
Seek FAILURE
Set_cnt FAILURE
Set_ptrcnt FAILURE
Setlinebuf PerlIOBase_setlinebuf
Tell FAILURE
Unread PerlIOBase_unread
Write FAILURE
FAILURE Set errno (to EINVAL in UNIXish, to LIB$_INVARG in VMS) and
return -1 (for numeric return values) or NULL (for pointers)
INHERITED Inherited from the layer below
SUCCESS Return 0 (for numeric return values) or a pointer
Core Layers
The file CWperlio.c provides the following layers:
A basic non-buffered layer which calls Unix/POSIX CWread(), CWwrite(),
CWlseek(), CWclose(). No buffering. Even on platforms that distinguish
between O_TEXT and O_BINARY this layer is always O_BINARY.
A very complete generic buffering layer which provides the whole of
PerlIO \s-1API\s0. It is also intended to be used as a base class for other
layers. (For example its CWRead() method is implemented in terms of
the CWGet_cnt()/CWGet_ptr()/CWSet_ptrcnt() methods).
perlio over unix provides a complete replacement for stdio as seen
via PerlIO \s-1API\s0. This is the default for \s-1USE_PERLIO\s0 when system's stdio
does not permit perl's fast gets access, and which do not
distinguish between CWO_TEXT and CWO_BINARY.
A layer which provides the PerlIO \s-1API\s0 via the layer scheme, but
implements it by calling system's stdio. This is (currently) the default
if system's stdio provides sufficient access to allow perl's fast gets
access and which do not distinguish between CWO_TEXT and CWO_BINARY.
A layer derived using perlio as a base class. It provides Win32-like
\n to \s-1CR\s0,LF translation. Can either be applied above perlio or serve
as the buffer layer itself. crlf over unix is the default if system
distinguishes between CWO_TEXT and CWO_BINARY opens. (At some point
unix will be replaced by a native Win32 \s-1IO\s0 layer on that platform,
as Win32's read/write layer has various drawbacks.) The crlf layer is
a reasonable model for a layer which transforms data in some way.
If Configure detects CWmmap() functions this layer is provided (with
perlio as a base) which does read operations by mmap()ing the
file. Performance improvement is marginal on modern systems, so it is
mainly there as a proof of concept. It is likely to be unbundled from
the core at some point. The mmap layer is a reasonable model for a
minimalist derived layer.
An internal derivative of perlio which can be used to provide
Unread() function for layers which have no buffer or cannot be
bothered. (Basically this layer's CWFill() pops itself off the stack
and so resumes reading from layer below.)
A dummy layer which never exists on the layer stack. Instead when
pushed it actually pops the stack removing itself, it then calls
Binmode function table entry on all the layers in the stack - normally
this (via PerlIOBase_binmode) removes any layers which do not have
CWPERLIO_K_RAW bit set. Layers can modify that behaviour by defining
their own Binmode entry.
Another dummy layer. When pushed it pops itself and sets the
CWPERLIO_F_UTF8 flag on the layer which was (and now is once more)
the top of the stack.
In addition perlio.c also provides a number of CWPerlIOBase_xxxx()
functions which are intended to be used in the table slots of classes
which do not need to do anything special for a particular method.
Extension Layers
Layers can made available by extension modules. When an unknown layer
is encountered the PerlIO code will perform the equivalent of :
use PerlIO 'layer';
Where layer is the unknown layer. PerlIO.pm will then attempt to:
require PerlIO::layer;
If after that process the layer is still not defined then the CWopen
will fail.
The following extension layers are bundled with perl:
use Encoding;
makes this layer available, although PerlIO.pm knows where to
find it. It is an example of a layer which takes an argument as it is
called thus:
open( $fh, "<:encoding(iso-8859-7)", $pathname );
Provides support for reading data from and writing data to a scalar.
open( $fh, "+<:scalar", \$scalar );
When a handle is so opened, then reads get bytes from the string value
of $scalar, and writes change the value. In both cases the position
in $scalar starts as zero but can be altered via CWseek, and
determined via CWtell.
Please note that this layer is implied when calling open() thus:
open( $fh, "+<", \$scalar );
Provided to allow layers to be implemented as Perl code. For instance:
use PerlIO::via::StripHTML;
open( my $fh, "<:via(StripHTML)", "index.html" );
See PerlIO::via for details.
TODO
Things that need to be done to improve this document.
""
Explain how to make a valid fh without going through open()(i.e. apply
a layer). For example if the file is not opened through perl, but we
want to get back a fh, like it was opened by Perl.
How PerlIO_apply_layera fits in, where its docs, was it made public?
Currently the example could be something like this:
PerlIO *foo_to_PerlIO(pTHX_ char *mode, ...)
{
char *mode; /* "w", "r", etc */
const char *layers = ":APR"; /* the layer name */
PerlIO *f = PerlIO_allocate(aTHX);
if (!f) {
return NULL;
}
PerlIO_apply_layers(aTHX_ f, mode, layers);
if (f) {
PerlIOAPR *st = PerlIOSelf(f, PerlIOAPR);
/* fill in the st struct, as in _open() */
st->file = file;
PerlIOBase(f)->flags |= PERLIO_F_OPEN;
return f;
}
return NULL;
}
""
fix/add the documentation in places marked as \s-1XXX\s0.
""
The handling of errors by the layer is not specified. e.g. when $!
should be set explicitly, when the error handling should be just
delegated to the top layer.
Probably give some hints on using \s-1SETERRNO\s0() or pointers to where they
can be found.
""
I think it would help to give some concrete examples to make it easier
to understand the \s-1API\s0. Of course I agree that the \s-1API\s0 has to be
concise, but since there is no second document that is more of a
guide, I think that it'd make it easier to start with the doc which is
an \s-1API\s0, but has examples in it in places where things are unclear, to
a person who is not a PerlIO guru (yet).