perlopentut - tutorial on opening things in Perl
Perl has two simple, built-in ways to open files: the shell way for convenience, and the C way for precision. The shell way also has 2- and 3-argument forms, which have different semantics for handling the filename. The choice is yours.
Perl's open
function was designed to mimic the way command-line
redirection in the shell works. Here are some basic examples
from the shell:
- $ myprogram file1 file2 file3
- $ myprogram < inputfile
- $ myprogram > outputfile
- $ myprogram >> outputfile
- $ myprogram | otherprogram
- $ otherprogram | myprogram
And here are some more advanced examples:
- $ otherprogram | myprogram f1 - f2
- $ otherprogram 2>&1 | myprogram -
- $ myprogram <&3
- $ myprogram >&4
Programmers accustomed to constructs like those above can take comfort in learning that Perl directly supports these familiar constructs using virtually the same syntax as the shell.
The open
function takes two arguments: the first is a filehandle,
and the second is a single string comprising both what to open and how
to open it. open
returns true when it works, and when it fails,
returns a false value and sets the special variable $!
to reflect
the system error. If the filehandle was previously opened, it will
be implicitly closed first.
For example:
If you prefer the low-punctuation version, you could write that this way:
A few things to notice. First, the leading less-than is optional. If omitted, Perl assumes that you want to open the file for reading.
Note also that the first example uses the ||
logical operator, and the
second uses or
, which has lower precedence. Using ||
in the latter
examples would effectively mean
which is definitely not what you want.
The other important thing to notice is that, just as in the shell, any whitespace before or after the filename is ignored. This is good, because you wouldn't want these to do different things:
Ignoring surrounding whitespace also helps for when you read a filename in from a different file, and forget to trim it before opening:
This is not a bug, but a feature. Because open
mimics the shell in
its style of using redirection arrows to specify how to open the file, it
also does so with respect to extra whitespace around the filename itself
as well. For accessing files with naughty names, see
Dispelling the Dweomer.
There is also a 3-argument version of open
, which lets you put the
special redirection characters into their own argument:
In this case, the filename to open is the actual string in $datafile
,
so you don't have to worry about $datafile
containing characters
that might influence the open mode, or whitespace at the beginning of
the filename that would be absorbed in the 2-argument version. Also,
any reduction of unnecessary string interpolation is a good thing.
open
's first argument can be a reference to a filehandle. As of
perl 5.6.0, if the argument is uninitialized, Perl will automatically
create a filehandle and put a reference to it in the first argument,
like so:
Indirect filehandles make namespace management easier. Since filehandles
are global to the current package, two subroutines trying to open
INFILE
will clash. With two functions opening indirect filehandles
like my $infile
, there's no clash and no need to worry about future
conflicts.
Another convenient behavior is that an indirect filehandle automatically closes when it goes out of scope or when you undefine it:
In C, when you want to open a file using the standard I/O library,
you use the fopen
function, but when opening a pipe, you use the
popen
function. But in the shell, you just use a different redirection
character. That's also the case for Perl. The open
call
remains the same--just its argument differs.
If the leading character is a pipe symbol, open
starts up a new
command and opens a write-only filehandle leading into that command.
This lets you write into that handle and have what you write show up on
that command's standard input. For example:
If the trailing character is a pipe, you start up a new command and open a read-only filehandle leading out of that command. This lets whatever that command writes to its standard output show up on your handle for reading. For example:
What happens if you try to open a pipe to or from a non-existent
command? If possible, Perl will detect the failure and set $!
as
usual. But if the command contains special shell characters, such as
>
or *
, called 'metacharacters', Perl does not execute the
command directly. Instead, Perl runs the shell, which then tries to
run the command. This means that it's the shell that gets the error
indication. In such a case, the open
call will only indicate
failure if Perl can't even run the shell. See How can I capture STDERR from an external command? in perlfaq8 to see how to cope with
this. There's also an explanation in perlipc.
If you would like to open a bidirectional pipe, the IPC::Open2 library will handle this for you. Check out Bidirectional Communication with Another Process in perlipc
perl-5.6.x introduced a version of piped open that executes a process
based on its command line arguments without relying on the shell. (Similar
to the system(@LIST)
notation.) This is safer and faster than executing
a single argument pipe-command, but does not allow special shell
constructs. (It is also not supported on Microsoft Windows, Mac OS Classic
or RISC OS.)
Here's an example of open '-|'
, which prints a random Unix
fortune cookie as uppercase:
And this open '|-'
pipes into lpr:
Again following the lead of the standard shell utilities, Perl's
open
function treats a file whose name is a single minus, "-", in a
special way. If you open minus for reading, it really means to access
the standard input. If you open minus for writing, it really means to
access the standard output.
If minus can be used as the default input or default output, what happens
if you open a pipe into or out of minus? What's the default command it
would run? The same script as you're currently running! This is actually
a stealth fork
hidden inside an open
call. See
Safe Pipe Opens in perlipc for details.
It is possible to specify both read and write access. All you do is add a "+" symbol in front of the redirection. But as in the shell, using a less-than on a file never creates a new file; it only opens an existing one. On the other hand, using a greater-than always clobbers (truncates to zero length) an existing file, or creates a brand-new one if there isn't an old one. Adding a "+" for read-write doesn't affect whether it only works on existing files or always clobbers existing ones.
The first one won't create a new file, and the second one will always
clobber an old one. The third one will create a new file if necessary
and not clobber an old one, and it will allow you to read at any point
in the file, but all writes will always go to the end. In short,
the first case is substantially more common than the second and third
cases, which are almost always wrong. (If you know C, the plus in
Perl's open
is historically derived from the one in C's fopen(3S),
which it ultimately calls.)
In fact, when it comes to updating a file, unless you're working on a binary file as in the WTMP case above, you probably don't want to use this approach for updating. Instead, Perl's -i flag comes to the rescue. The following command takes all the C, C++, or yacc source or header files and changes all their foo's to bar's, leaving the old version in the original filename with a ".orig" tacked on the end:
- $ perl -i.orig -pe 's/\bfoo\b/bar/g' *.[Cchy]
This is a short cut for some renaming games that are really the best way to update textfiles. See the second question in perlfaq5 for more details.
One of the most common uses for open
is one you never
even notice. When you process the ARGV filehandle using
<ARGV>
, Perl actually does an implicit open
on each file in @ARGV. Thus a program called like this:
- $ myprogram file1 file2 file3
can have all its files opened and processed one at a time using a construct no more complex than:
- while (<>) {
- # do something with $_
- }
If @ARGV is empty when the loop first begins, Perl pretends you've opened
up minus, that is, the standard input. In fact, $ARGV, the currently
open file during <ARGV>
processing, is even set to "-"
in these circumstances.
You are welcome to pre-process your @ARGV before starting the loop to make sure it's to your liking. One reason to do this might be to remove command options beginning with a minus. While you can always roll the simple ones by hand, the Getopts modules are good for this:
- use Getopt::Std;
- # -v, -D, -o ARG, sets $opt_v, $opt_D, $opt_o
- getopts("vDo:");
- # -v, -D, -o ARG, sets $args{v}, $args{D}, $args{o}
- getopts("vDo:", \%args);
Or the standard Getopt::Long module to permit named arguments:
- use Getopt::Long;
- GetOptions( "verbose" => \$verbose, # --verbose
- "Debug" => \$debug, # --Debug
- "output=s" => \$output );
- # --output=somestring or --output somestring
Another reason for preprocessing arguments is to make an empty argument list default to all files:
- @ARGV = glob("*") unless @ARGV;
You could even filter out all but plain, text files. This is a bit silent, of course, and you might prefer to mention them on the way.
- @ARGV = grep { -f && -T } @ARGV;
If you're using the -n or -p command-line options, you
should put changes to @ARGV in a BEGIN{}
block.
Remember that a normal open
has special properties, in that it might
call fopen(3S) or it might called popen(3S), depending on what its
argument looks like; that's why it's sometimes called "magic open".
Here's an example:
This sort of thing also comes into play in filter processing. Because
<ARGV>
processing employs the normal, shell-style Perl open
,
it respects all the special things we've already seen:
- $ myprogram f1 "cmd1|" - f2 "cmd2|" f3 < tmpfile
That program will read from the file f1, the process cmd1, standard input (tmpfile in this case), the f2 file, the cmd2 command, and finally the f3 file.
Yes, this also means that if you have files named "-" (and so on) in
your directory, they won't be processed as literal files by open
.
You'll need to pass them as "./-", much as you would for the rm program,
or you could use sysopen
as described below.
One of the more interesting applications is to change files of a certain name into pipes. For example, to autoprocess gzipped or compressed files by decompressing them with gzip:
- @ARGV = map { /\.(gz|Z)$/ ? "gzip -dc $_ |" : $_ } @ARGV;
Or, if you have the GET program installed from LWP, you can fetch URLs before processing them:
- @ARGV = map { m#^\w+://# ? "GET $_ |" : $_ } @ARGV;
It's not for nothing that this is called magic <ARGV>
.
Pretty nifty, eh?
If you want the convenience of the shell, then Perl's open
is
definitely the way to go. On the other hand, if you want finer precision
than C's simplistic fopen(3S) provides you should look to Perl's
sysopen
, which is a direct hook into the open(2) system call.
That does mean it's a bit more involved, but that's the price of
precision.
sysopen
takes 3 (or 4) arguments.
- sysopen HANDLE, PATH, FLAGS, [MASK]
The HANDLE argument is a filehandle just as with open
. The PATH is
a literal path, one that doesn't pay attention to any greater-thans or
less-thans or pipes or minuses, nor ignore whitespace. If it's there,
it's part of the path. The FLAGS argument contains one or more values
derived from the Fcntl module that have been or'd together using the
bitwise "|" operator. The final argument, the MASK, is optional; if
present, it is combined with the user's current umask for the creation
mode of the file. You should usually omit this.
Although the traditional values of read-only, write-only, and read-write are 0, 1, and 2 respectively, this is known not to hold true on some systems. Instead, it's best to load in the appropriate constants first from the Fcntl module, which supplies the following standard flags:
Less common flags that are sometimes available on some operating
systems include O_BINARY
, O_TEXT
, O_SHLOCK
, O_EXLOCK
,
O_DEFER
, O_SYNC
, O_ASYNC
, O_DSYNC
, O_RSYNC
,
O_NOCTTY
, O_NDELAY
and O_LARGEFILE
. Consult your open(2)
manpage or its local equivalent for details. (Note: starting from
Perl release 5.6 the O_LARGEFILE
flag, if available, is automatically
added to the sysopen() flags because large files are the default.)
Here's how to use sysopen
to emulate the simple open
calls we had
before. We'll omit the || die $!
checks for clarity, but make sure
you always check the return values in real code. These aren't quite
the same, since open
will trim leading and trailing whitespace,
but you'll get the idea.
To open a file for reading:
To open a file for writing, creating a new file if needed or else truncating an old file:
To open a file for appending, creating one if necessary:
To open a file for update, where the file must already exist:
And here are things you can do with sysopen
that you cannot do with
a regular open
. As you'll see, it's just a matter of controlling the
flags in the third argument.
To open a file for writing, creating a new file which must not previously exist:
- sysopen(FH, $path, O_WRONLY | O_EXCL | O_CREAT);
To open a file for appending, where that file must already exist:
- sysopen(FH, $path, O_WRONLY | O_APPEND);
To open a file for update, creating a new file if necessary:
- sysopen(FH, $path, O_RDWR | O_CREAT);
To open a file for update, where that file must not already exist:
- sysopen(FH, $path, O_RDWR | O_EXCL | O_CREAT);
To open a file without blocking, creating one if necessary:
- sysopen(FH, $path, O_WRONLY | O_NONBLOCK | O_CREAT);
If you omit the MASK argument to sysopen
, Perl uses the octal value
0666. The normal MASK to use for executables and directories should
be 0777, and for anything else, 0666.
Why so permissive? Well, it isn't really. The MASK will be modified
by your process's current umask
. A umask is a number representing
disabled permissions bits; that is, bits that will not be turned on
in the created files' permissions field.
For example, if your umask
were 027, then the 020 part would
disable the group from writing, and the 007 part would disable others
from reading, writing, or executing. Under these conditions, passing
sysopen
0666 would create a file with mode 0640, since 0666 & ~027
is 0640.
You should seldom use the MASK argument to sysopen()
. That takes
away the user's freedom to choose what permission new files will have.
Denying choice is almost always a bad thing. One exception would be for
cases where sensitive or private data is being stored, such as with mail
folders, cookie files, and internal temporary files.
Sometimes you already have a filehandle open, and want to make another
handle that's a duplicate of the first one. In the shell, we place an
ampersand in front of a file descriptor number when doing redirections.
For example, 2>&1
makes descriptor 2 (that's STDERR in Perl)
be redirected into descriptor 1 (which is usually Perl's STDOUT).
The same is essentially true in Perl: a filename that begins with an
ampersand is treated instead as a file descriptor if a number, or as a
filehandle if a string.
That means that if a function is expecting a filename, but you don't want to give it a filename because you already have the file open, you can just pass the filehandle with a leading ampersand. It's best to use a fully qualified handle though, just in case the function happens to be in a different package:
- somefunction("&main::LOGFILE");
This way if somefunction() is planning on opening its argument, it can just use the already opened handle. This differs from passing a handle, because with a handle, you don't open the file. Here you have something you can pass to open.
If you have one of those tricky, newfangled I/O objects that the C++ folks are raving about, then this doesn't work because those aren't a proper filehandle in the native Perl sense. You'll have to use fileno() to pull out the proper descriptor number, assuming you can:
- use IO::Socket;
- $handle = IO::Socket::INET->new("www.perl.com:80");
- $fd = $handle->fileno;
- somefunction("&$fd"); # not an indirect function call
It can be easier (and certainly will be faster) just to use real filehandles though:
If the filehandle or descriptor number is preceded not just with a simple "&" but rather with a "&=" combination, then Perl will not create a completely new descriptor opened to the same place using the dup(2) system call. Instead, it will just make something of an alias to the existing one using the fdopen(3S) library call. This is slightly more parsimonious of systems resources, although this is less a concern these days. Here's an example of that:
If you're using magic <ARGV>
, you could even pass in as a
command line argument in @ARGV something like "<&=$MHCONTEXTFD"
,
but we've never seen anyone actually do this.
Perl is more of a DWIMmer language than something like Java--where DWIM is an acronym for "do what I mean". But this principle sometimes leads to more hidden magic than one knows what to do with. In this way, Perl is also filled with dweomer, an obscure word meaning an enchantment. Sometimes, Perl's DWIMmer is just too much like dweomer for comfort.
If magic open
is a bit too magical for you, you don't have to turn
to sysopen
. To open a file with arbitrary weird characters in
it, it's necessary to protect any leading and trailing whitespace.
Leading whitespace is protected by inserting a "./"
in front of a
filename that starts with whitespace. Trailing whitespace is protected
by appending an ASCII NUL byte ("\0"
) at the end of the string.
This assumes, of course, that your system considers dot the current
working directory, slash the directory separator, and disallows ASCII
NULs within a valid filename. Most systems follow these conventions,
including all POSIX systems as well as proprietary Microsoft systems.
The only vaguely popular system that doesn't work this way is the
"Classic" Macintosh system, which uses a colon where the rest of us
use a slash. Maybe sysopen
isn't such a bad idea after all.
If you want to use <ARGV>
processing in a totally boring
and non-magical way, you could do this first:
- # "Sam sat on the ground and put his head in his hands.
- # 'I wish I had never come here, and I don't want to see
- # no more magic,' he said, and fell silent."
- for (@ARGV) {
- s#^([^./])#./$1#;
- $_ .= "\0";
- }
- while (<>) {
- # now process $_
- }
But be warned that users will not appreciate being unable to use "-" to mean standard input, per the standard convention.
You've probably noticed how Perl's warn
and die
functions can
produce messages like:
- Some warning at scriptname line 29, <FH> line 7.
That's because you opened a filehandle FH, and had read in seven records from it. But what was the name of the file, rather than the handle?
If you aren't running with strict refs
, or if you've turned them off
temporarily, then all you have to do is this:
Since you're using the pathname of the file as its handle, you'll get warnings more like
- Some warning at scriptname line 29, </etc/motd> line 7.
Remember how we said that Perl's open took two arguments? That was a
passive prevarication. You see, it can also take just one argument.
If and only if the variable is a global variable, not a lexical, you
can pass open
just one argument, the filehandle, and it will
get the path from the global scalar variable of the same name.
Why is this here? Someone has to cater to the hysterical porpoises. It's something that's been in Perl since the very beginning, if not before.
One clever move with STDOUT is to explicitly close it when you're done with the program.
If you don't do this, and your program fills up the disk partition due to a command line redirection, it won't report the error exit with a failure status.
You don't have to accept the STDIN and STDOUT you were given. You are welcome to reopen them if you'd like.
And then these can be accessed directly or passed on to subprocesses. This makes it look as though the program were initially invoked with those redirections from the command line.
It's probably more interesting to connect these to pipes. For example:
This makes it appear as though your program were called with its stdout already piped into your pager. You can also use this kind of thing in conjunction with an implicit fork to yourself. You might do this if you would rather handle the post processing in your own program, just in a different process:
This technique can be applied to repeatedly push as many filters on your output stream as you wish.
These topics aren't really arguments related to open
or sysopen
,
but they do affect what you do with your open files.
When is a file not a file? Well, you could say when it exists but isn't a plain file. We'll check whether it's a symbolic link first, just in case.
- if (-l $file || ! -f _) {
- print "$file is not a plain file\n";
- }
What other kinds of files are there than, well, files? Directories,
symbolic links, named pipes, Unix-domain sockets, and block and character
devices. Those are all files, too--just not plain files. This isn't
the same issue as being a text file. Not all text files are plain files.
Not all plain files are text files. That's why there are separate -f
and -T
file tests.
To open a directory, you should use the opendir
function, then
process it with readdir
, carefully restoring the directory
name if necessary:
If you want to process directories recursively, it's better to use the File::Find module. For example, this prints out all files recursively and adds a slash to their names if the file is a directory.
This finds all bogus symbolic links beneath a particular directory:
As you see, with symbolic links, you can just pretend that it is
what it points to. Or, if you want to know what it points to, then
readlink
is called for:
Named pipes are a different matter. You pretend they're regular files, but their opens will normally block until there is both a reader and a writer. You can read more about them in Named Pipes in perlipc. Unix-domain sockets are rather different beasts as well; they're described in Unix-Domain TCP Clients and Servers in perlipc.
When it comes to opening devices, it can be easy and it can be tricky. We'll assume that if you're opening up a block device, you know what you're doing. The character devices are more interesting. These are typically used for modems, mice, and some kinds of printers. This is described in How do I read and write the serial port? in perlfaq8 It's often enough to open them carefully:
With descriptors that you haven't opened using sysopen
, such as
sockets, you can set them to be non-blocking using fcntl
:
Rather than losing yourself in a morass of twisting, turning ioctl
s,
all dissimilar, if you're going to manipulate ttys, it's best to
make calls out to the stty(1) program if you have it, or else use the
portable POSIX interface. To figure this all out, you'll need to read the
termios(3) manpage, which describes the POSIX interface to tty devices,
and then POSIX, which describes Perl's interface to POSIX. There are
also some high-level modules on CPAN that can help you with these games.
Check out Term::ReadKey and Term::ReadLine.
What else can you open? To open a connection using sockets, you won't use one of Perl's two open functions. See Sockets: Client/Server Communication in perlipc for that. Here's an example. Once you have it, you can use FH as a bidirectional filehandle.
For opening up a URL, the LWP modules from CPAN are just what the doctor ordered. There's no filehandle interface, but it's still easy to get the contents of a document:
- use LWP::Simple;
- $doc = get('http://www.linpro.no/lwp/');
On certain legacy systems with what could charitably be called terminally convoluted (some would say broken) I/O models, a file isn't a file--at least, not with respect to the C standard I/O library. On these old systems whose libraries (but not kernels) distinguish between text and binary streams, to get files to behave properly you'll have to bend over backwards to avoid nasty problems. On such infelicitous systems, sockets and pipes are already opened in binary mode, and there is currently no way to turn that off. With files, you have more options.
Another option is to use the binmode
function on the appropriate
handles before doing regular I/O on them:
Passing sysopen
a non-standard flag option will also open the file in
binary mode on those systems that support it. This is the equivalent of
opening the file normally, then calling binmode
on the handle.
Now you can use read
and print
on that handle without worrying
about the non-standard system I/O library breaking your data. It's not
a pretty picture, but then, legacy systems seldom are. CP/M will be
with us until the end of days, and after.
On systems with exotic I/O systems, it turns out that, astonishingly
enough, even unbuffered I/O using sysread
and syswrite
might do
sneaky data mutilation behind your back.
Depending on the vicissitudes of your runtime system, even these calls
may need binmode
or O_BINARY
first. Systems known to be free of
such difficulties include Unix, the Mac OS, Plan 9, and Inferno.
In a multitasking environment, you may need to be careful not to collide with other processes who want to do I/O on the same files as you are working on. You'll often need shared or exclusive locks on files for reading and writing respectively. You might just pretend that only exclusive locks exist.
Never use the existence of a file -e $file
as a locking indication,
because there is a race condition between the test for the existence of
the file and its creation. It's possible for another process to create
a file in the slice of time between your existence check and your attempt
to create the file. Atomicity is critical.
Perl's most portable locking interface is via the flock
function,
whose simplicity is emulated on systems that don't directly support it
such as SysV or Windows. The underlying semantics may affect how
it all works, so you should learn how flock
is implemented on your
system's port of Perl.
File locking does not lock out another process that would like to do I/O. A file lock only locks out others trying to get a lock, not processes trying to do I/O. Because locks are advisory, if one process uses locking and another doesn't, all bets are off.
By default, the flock
call will block until a lock is granted.
A request for a shared lock will be granted as soon as there is no
exclusive locker. A request for an exclusive lock will be granted as
soon as there is no locker of any kind. Locks are on file descriptors,
not file names. You can't lock a file until you open it, and you can't
hold on to a lock once the file has been closed.
Here's how to get a blocking shared lock on a file, typically used for reading:
You can get a non-blocking lock by using LOCK_NB
.
This can be useful for producing more user-friendly behaviour by warning if you're going to be blocking:
To get an exclusive lock, typically used for writing, you have to be
careful. We sysopen
the file so it can be locked before it gets
emptied. You can get a nonblocking version using LOCK_EX | LOCK_NB
.
Finally, due to the uncounted millions who cannot be dissuaded from wasting cycles on useless vanity devices called hit counters, here's how to increment a number in a file safely:
- use Fcntl qw(:DEFAULT :flock);
- sysopen(FH, "numfile", O_RDWR | O_CREAT)
- or die "can't open numfile: $!";
- # autoflush FH
- $ofh = select(FH); $| = 1; select ($ofh);
- flock(FH, LOCK_EX)
- or die "can't write-lock numfile: $!";
- $num = <FH> || 0;
- seek(FH, 0, 0)
- or die "can't rewind numfile : $!";
- print FH $num+1, "\n"
- or die "can't write numfile: $!";
- truncate(FH, tell(FH))
- or die "can't truncate numfile: $!";
- close(FH)
- or die "can't close numfile: $!";
In Perl 5.8.0 a new I/O framework called "PerlIO" was introduced. This is a new "plumbing" for all the I/O happening in Perl; for the most part everything will work just as it did, but PerlIO also brought in some new features such as the ability to think of I/O as "layers". One I/O layer may in addition to just moving the data also do transformations on the data. Such transformations may include compression and decompression, encryption and decryption, and transforming between various character encodings.
Full discussion about the features of PerlIO is out of scope for this tutorial, but here is how to recognize the layers being used:
The three-(or more)-argument form of open
is being used and the
second argument contains something else in addition to the usual
'<'
, '>'
, '>>'
, '|'
and their variants,
for example:
The two-argument form of binmode
is being used, for example
- binmode($fh, ":encoding(utf16)");
For more detailed discussion about PerlIO see PerlIO; for more detailed discussion about Unicode and I/O see perluniintro.
The open
and sysopen
functions in perlfunc(1);
the system open(2), dup(2), fopen(3), and fdopen(3) manpages;
the POSIX documentation.
Copyright 1998 Tom Christiansen.
This documentation is free; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Irrespective of its distribution, all code examples in these files are hereby placed into the public domain. You are permitted and encouraged to use this code in your own programs for fun or for profit as you see fit. A simple comment in the code giving credit would be courteous but is not required.
First release: Sat Jan 9 08:09:11 MST 1999