NAME
File::Open - wrap open/sysopen and give them a nice and simple interface
SYNOPSIS
use File::Open qw(fopen fopen_nothrow fsysopen fsysopen_nothrow);
my $fh = fopen $file;
my $fh = fopen $file, $mode;
my $fh = fopen $file, $mode, $layers;
my $fh = fopen_nothrow $file or die "$0: $file: $!\n";
my $fh = fopen_nothrow $file, $mode or die "$0: $file: $!\n";
my $fh = fopen_nothrow $file, $mode, $layers or die "$0: $file: $!\n";
my $fh = fsysopen $file, $mode;
my $fh = fsysopen $file, $mode, \%flags;
my $fh = fsysopen_nothrow $file, $mode or die "$0: $file: $!\n";
my $fh = fsysopen_nothrow $file, $mode, \%flags or die "$0: $file: $!\n";
EXAMPLES
sub slurp {
local $/;
readline $_[0]
}
my $contents = slurp fopen 'input.txt';
print { fopen 'output.txt', 'w' } "hello, world!\n";
fopen('output.txt', 'a')->print("mtfnpy\n"); # handles are IO::Handle objects
my $lock_file = 'my.lock';
my $lock_fh = fsysopen $lock_file, 'w', { creat => 0644 };
flock $lock_fh, LOCK_EX or die "$0: $lock_file: $!\n";
DESCRIPTION
This module provides convenience wrappers around open and sysopen for opening simple files. Nothing is exported by default; you have to specify every function you want to import explicitly.
Functions
- fopen FILE
- fopen FILE, MODE
- fopen FILE, MODE, LAYERS
-
Opens FILE and returns a filehandle. If the open fails, it throws an exception of the form
"$program: $filename: $!\n"
.MODE is a string specifying how the file should be opened. The following values are supported:
'r'
,'<'
-
Open the file for reading.
'w'
,'>'
-
Open the file for writing. If the file exists, wipe out its contents and make it empty; if it doesn't exist, create it.
'a'
,'>>'
-
Open the file for appending. If the file doesn't exist, create it. All writes will go to the end of the file.
'r+'
,'+<'
-
Open the file for reading (like
'r'
) but also allow writes. 'w+'
,'+>'
-
Open the file for writing (like
'w'
) but also allow reads. 'a+'
,'+>>'
-
Open the file for appending (like
'a'
) but also allow reads.
In addition you can append a
'b'
to each of the mode strings listed above. This will cause binmode to be called on the filehandle.If you don't specify a MODE, it defaults to
'r'
.If you pass LAYERS,
fopen
will combine it with the open mode in the underlying open call. This gives you greater control than the simple'b'
in MODE (which is equivalent to passing:raw
as LAYERS). For example, to read from a UTF-8 file:my $fh = fopen $file, 'r', ':encoding(UTF-8)'; # does # open my $fh, '<:encoding(UTF-8)', $file # under the covers while (my $line = readline $fh) { ... }
See PerlIO and Encode::Supported for a list of available layers and encoding names, respectively.
If you don't pass LAYERS,
fopen
will use the default layers set viause open ...
, if any (see open). Default layers aren't supported on old perls (i.e. anything before 5.10.0); on those you'll have to pass an explicit LAYERS argument. - fopen_nothrow FILE
- fopen_nothrow FILE, MODE
- fopen_nothrow FILE, MODE, LAYERS
-
Works exactly like fopen but if the open fails it simply returns
undef
. - fsysopen FILE, MODE
- fsysopen FILE, MODE, FLAGS
-
Uses the more low-level interface of sysopen to open FILE. If it succeeds, it returns a filehandle; if it fails, it throws an exception of the form
"$program: $filename: $!\n"
.MODE must be
'r'
,'w'
, or'rw'
to open the file for reading, writing, or both reading and writing, respectively (this corresponds to the open flagsO_RDONLY
,O_WRONLY
, andO_RDWR
).You can pass additional flags in FLAGS, which must be a hash reference. The hash keys are strings (specifying the flag) and the values are booleans (indicating whether the flag should be off (default) or on) - with one exception. The exception is the
'creat'
flag; if set, its value must be a number that specifies the permissions of the newly created file. See "umask" in perlfunc for details.The following flags are recognized:
'append'
- setsO_APPEND
'async'
- setsO_ASYNC
'creat'
- setsO_CREAT
and specifies file permissions'direct'
- setsO_DIRECT
'directory'
- setsO_DIRECTORY
'excl'
- setsO_EXCL
'noatime'
- setsO_NOATIME
'noctty'
- setsO_NOCTTY
'nofollow'
- setsO_NOFOLLOW
'nonblock'
- setsO_NONBLOCK
'sync'
- setsO_SYNC
'trunc'
- setsO_TRUNC
See Fcntl and open(2) for the meaning of these flags. Some of them may not exist on your system; in that case you'll get a runtime exception when you try to specify a non-existent flag.
- fsysopen_nothrow FILE, MODE
- fsysopen_nothrow FILE, MODE, FLAGS
-
Works exactly like fsysopen but if the sysopen fails it simply returns
undef
.
Methods
The returned filehandles behave like IO::Handle objects (actually IO::File objects, which is a subclass of IO::Handle). However, on perl versions before 5.14.0 you have to use IO::Handle;
manually before you can call any methods on them. (Current perl versions will do this for you automatically but it doesn't hurt to load IO::Handle anyway.)
Here is a toy example that copies all lines from one file to another, using method calls instead of functions:
use File::Open qw(fopen);
use IO::Handle; # not needed on 5.14+
my $fh_in = fopen $file_in, 'r';
my $fh_out = fopen $file_out, 'w';
while (defined(my $line = $fh_in->getline)) {
$fh_out->print($line) or die "$0: $file_out: $!\n";
}
$fh_out->close or die "$0: $file_out: $!\n";
$fh_in->close;
SEE ALSO
"open" in perlfunc, "binmode" in perlfunc, "sysopen" in perlfunc, perlopentut, IO::Handle, Fcntl, open(2)
AUTHOR
Lukas Mai, <l.mai at web.de>
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2011, 2013 Lukas Mai.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either: the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License.
See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.