FileCache - keep more files open than the system permits
The cacheout
function will make sure that there's a filehandle open
for reading or writing available as the pathname you give it. It
automatically closes and re-opens files if you exceed your system's
maximum number of file descriptors, or the suggested maximum maxopen.
The 1-argument form of cacheout will open a file for writing ('>'
)
on it's first use, and appending ('>>'
) thereafter.
Returns EXPR on success for convenience. You may neglect the return value and manipulate EXPR as the filehandle directly if you prefer.
The 2-argument form of cacheout will use the supplied mode for the initial
and subsequent openings. Most valid modes for 3-argument open
are supported
namely; '>'
, '+>'
, '<'
, '<+'
, '>>'
,
'|-'
and '-|'
To pass supplemental arguments to a program opened with '|-'
or '-|'
append them to the command string as you would system EXPR.
Returns EXPR on success for convenience. You may neglect the return value and manipulate EXPR as the filehandle directly if you prefer.
While it is permissible to close
a FileCache managed file,
do not do so if you are calling FileCache::cacheout
from a package other
than which it was imported, or with another module which overrides close
.
If you must, use FileCache::cacheout_close
.
Although FileCache can be used with piped opens ('-|' or '|-') doing so is strongly discouraged. If FileCache finds it necessary to close and then reopen a pipe, the command at the far end of the pipe will be reexecuted - the results of performing IO on FileCache'd pipes is unlikely to be what you expect. The ability to use FileCache on pipes may be removed in a future release.
FileCache does not store the current file offset if it finds it necessary to
close a file. When the file is reopened, the offset will be as specified by the
original open
file mode. This could be construed to be a bug.
The module functionality relies on symbolic references, so things will break under 'use strict' unless 'no strict "refs"' is also specified.
sys/param.h lies with its NOFILE
define on some systems,
so you may have to set maxopen yourself.