NAME

Net::Cmd - Network Command class (as used by FTP, SMTP etc)

SYNOPSIS

use Net::Cmd;

@ISA = qw(Net::Cmd);

DESCRIPTION

Net::Cmd is a collection of methods that can be inherited by a sub class of IO::Handle. These methods implement the functionality required for a command based protocol, for example FTP and SMTP.

USER METHODS

These methods provide a user interface to the Net::Cmd object.

debug ( VALUE )

Set the level of debug information for this object. If VALUE is not given then the current state is returned. Otherwise the state is changed to VALUE and the previous state returned.

Different packages may implement different levels of debug but a non-zero value results in copies of all commands and responses also being sent to STDERR.

If VALUE is undef then the debug level will be set to the default debug level for the class.

This method can also be called as a static method to set/get the default debug level for a given class.

message ()

Returns the text message returned from the last command. In a scalar context it returns a single string, in a list context it will return each line as a separate element. (See "PSEUDO RESPONSES" below.)

code ()

Returns the 3-digit code from the last command. If a command is pending then the value 0 is returned. (See "PSEUDO RESPONSES" below.)

ok ()

Returns non-zero if the last code value was greater than zero and less than 400. This holds true for most command servers. Servers where this does not hold may override this method.

status ()

Returns the most significant digit of the current status code. If a command is pending then CMD_PENDING is returned.

datasend ( DATA )

Send data to the remote server, converting LF to CRLF. Any line starting with a '.' will be prefixed with another '.'. DATA may be an array or a reference to an array.

dataend ()

End the sending of data to the remote server. This is done by ensuring that the data already sent ends with CRLF then sending '.CRLF' to end the transmission. Once this data has been sent dataend calls response and returns true if response returns CMD_OK.

CLASS METHODS

These methods are not intended to be called by the user, but used or over-ridden by a sub-class of Net::Cmd

debug_print ( DIR, TEXT )

Print debugging information. DIR denotes the direction true being data being sent to the server. Calls debug_text before printing to STDERR.

debug_text ( DIR, TEXT )

This method is called to print debugging information. TEXT is the text being sent. The method should return the text to be printed.

This is primarily meant for the use of modules such as FTP where passwords are sent, but we do not want to display them in the debugging information.

command ( CMD [, ARGS, ... ])

Send a command to the command server. All arguments are first joined with a space character and CRLF is appended, this string is then sent to the command server.

Returns undef upon failure.

unsupported ()

Sets the status code to 580 and the response text to 'Unsupported command'. Returns zero.

response ()

Obtain a response from the server. Upon success the most significant digit of the status code is returned. Upon failure, timeout etc., CMD_ERROR is returned.

parse_response ( TEXT )

This method is called by response as a method with one argument. It should return an array of 2 values, the 3-digit status code and a flag which is true when this is part of a multi-line response and this line is not the last.

getline ()

Retrieve one line, delimited by CRLF, from the remote server. Returns undef upon failure.

NOTE: If you do use this method for any reason, please remember to add some debug_print calls into your method.

ungetline ( TEXT )

Unget a line of text from the server.

rawdatasend ( DATA )

Send data to the remote server without performing any conversions. DATA is a scalar.

read_until_dot ()

Read data from the remote server until a line consisting of a single '.'. Any lines starting with '..' will have one of the '.'s removed.

Returns a reference to a list containing the lines, or undef upon failure.

tied_fh ()

Returns a filehandle tied to the Net::Cmd object. After issuing a command, you may read from this filehandle using read() or <>. The filehandle will return EOF when the final dot is encountered. Similarly, you may write to the filehandle in order to send data to the server after issuing a command that expects data to be written.

See the Net::POP3 and Net::SMTP modules for examples of this.

PSEUDO RESPONSES

Normally the values returned by message() and code() are obtained from the remote server, but in a few circumstances, as detailed below, Net::Cmd will return values that it sets. You can alter this behavior by overriding DEF_REPLY_CODE() to specify a different default reply code, or overriding one of the specific error handling methods below.

Initial value

Before any command has executed or if an unexpected error occurs code() will return "421" (temporary connection failure) and message() will return undef.

Connection closed

If the underlying IO::Handle is closed, or if there are any read or write failures, the file handle will be forced closed, and code() will return "421" (temporary connection failure) and message() will return "[$pkg] Connection closed" (where $pkg is the name of the class that subclassed Net::Cmd). The _set_status_closed() method can be overridden to set a different message (by calling set_status()) or otherwise trap this error.

Timeout

If there is a read or write timeout code() will return "421" (temporary connection failure) and message() will return "[$pkg] Timeout" (where $pkg is the name of the class that subclassed Net::Cmd). The _set_status_timeout() method can be overridden to set a different message (by calling set_status()) or otherwise trap this error.

EXPORTS

Net::Cmd exports six subroutines, five of these, CMD_INFO, CMD_OK, CMD_MORE, CMD_REJECT and CMD_ERROR, correspond to possible results of response and status. The sixth is CMD_PENDING.

AUTHOR

Graham Barr <gbarr@pobox.com>

Steve Hay <shay@cpan.org> is now maintaining libnet as of version 1.22_02

COPYRIGHT

Versions up to 2.29_1 Copyright (c) 1995-2006 Graham Barr. All rights reserved. Changes in Version 2.29_2 onwards Copyright (C) 2013-2014 Steve Hay. All rights reserved.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.