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.\"
.IX Title "IPC::Run::IO 3"
.TH IPC::Run::IO 3 "2018-05-23" "perl v5.16.3" "User Contributed Perl Documentation"
.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes
.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents.
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.nh
.SH "NAME"
IPC::Run::IO \-\- I/O channels for IPC::Run.
.SH "SYNOPSIS"
.IX Header "SYNOPSIS"
\&\fB\s-1NOT IMPLEMENTED YET ON\s0 Win32! Win32 does not allow \f(BIselect()\fB on
normal file descriptors; \s-1IPC::RUN::IO\s0 needs to use IPC::Run::Win32Helper
to do this.\fR
.PP
.Vb 1
\& use IPC::Run qw( io );
\&
\& ## The sense of \*(Aq>\*(Aq and \*(Aq<\*(Aq is opposite of perl\*(Aqs open(),
\& ## but agrees with IPC::Run.
\& $io = io( "filename", \*(Aq>\*(Aq, \e$recv );
\& $io = io( "filename", \*(Aqr\*(Aq, \e$recv );
\&
\& ## Append to $recv:
\& $io = io( "filename", \*(Aq>>\*(Aq, \e$recv );
\& $io = io( "filename", \*(Aqra\*(Aq, \e$recv );
\&
\& $io = io( "filename", \*(Aq<\*(Aq, \e$send );
\& $io = io( "filename", \*(Aqw\*(Aq, \e$send );
\&
\& $io = io( "filename", \*(Aq<<\*(Aq, \e$send );
\& $io = io( "filename", \*(Aqwa\*(Aq, \e$send );
\&
\& ## Handles / IO objects that the caller opens:
\& $io = io( \e*HANDLE, \*(Aq<\*(Aq, \e$send );
\&
\& $f = IO::Handle\->new( ... ); # Any subclass of IO::Handle
\& $io = io( $f, \*(Aq<\*(Aq, \e$send );
\&
\& require IPC::Run::IO;
\& $io = IPC::Run::IO\->new( ... );
\&
\& ## Then run(), harness(), or start():
\& run $io, ...;
\&
\& ## You can, of course, use io() or IPC::Run::IO\->new() as an
\& ## argument to run(), harness, or start():
\& run io( ... );
.Ve
.SH "DESCRIPTION"
.IX Header "DESCRIPTION"
This class and module allows filehandles and filenames to be harnessed for
I/O when used IPC::Run, independent of anything else IPC::Run is doing
(except that errors & exceptions can affect all things that IPC::Run is
doing).
.SH "SUBCLASSING"
.IX Header "SUBCLASSING"
\&\s-1INCOMPATIBLE CHANGE:\s0 due to the awkwardness introduced in ripping pseudohashes
out of Perl, this class \fIno longer\fR uses the fields pragma.
.SH "SUBROUTINES"
.IX Header "SUBROUTINES"
.IP "new" 4
.IX Item "new"
I think it takes >> or << along with some other data.
.Sp
\&\s-1TODO:\s0 Needs more thorough documentation. Patches welcome.
.IP "filename" 4
.IX Item "filename"
Gets/sets the filename. Returns the value after the name change, if
any.
.IP "init" 4
.IX Item "init"
Does initialization required before this can be run. This includes \fIopen()\fRing
the file, if necessary, and clearing the destination scalar if necessary.
.IP "open" 4
.IX Item "open"
If a filename was passed in, opens it. Determines if the handle is open
via \fIfileno()\fR. Throws an exception on error.
.IP "open_pipe" 4
.IX Item "open_pipe"
If this is a redirection \s-1IO\s0 object, this opens the pipe in a platform
independent manner.
.IP "close" 4
.IX Item "close"
Closes the handle. Throws an exception on failure.
.IP "fileno" 4
.IX Item "fileno"
Returns the fileno of the handle. Throws an exception on failure.
.IP "mode" 4
.IX Item "mode"
Returns the operator in terms of 'r', 'w', and 'a'. There is a state
\&'ra', unlike Perl's \fIopen()\fR, which indicates that data read from the
handle or file will be appended to the output if the output is a scalar.
This is only meaningful if the output is a scalar, it has no effect if
the output is a subroutine.
.Sp
The redirection operators can be a little confusing, so here's a reference
table:
.Sp
.Vb 6
\& > r Read from handle in to process
\& < w Write from process out to handle
\& >> ra Read from handle in to process, appending it to existing
\& data if the destination is a scalar.
\& << wa Write from process out to handle, appending to existing
\& data if IPC::Run::IO opened a named file.
.Ve
.IP "op" 4
.IX Item "op"
Returns the operation: '<', '>', '<<', '>>'. See \*(L"mode\*(R" if you want
to spell these 'r', 'w', etc.
.IP "binmode" 4
.IX Item "binmode"
Sets/gets whether this pipe is in binmode or not. No effect off of Win32
OSs, of course, and on Win32, no effect after the harness is \fIstart()\fRed.
.IP "dir" 4
.IX Item "dir"
Returns the first character of \f(CW$self\fR\->op. This is either \*(L"<\*(R" or \*(L">\*(R".
.IP "poll" 4
.IX Item "poll"
\&\s-1TODO:\s0 Needs confirmation that this is correct. Was previously undocumented.
.Sp
I believe this is polling the \s-1IO\s0 for new input and then returns undef if there will never be any more input, 0 if there is none now, but there might be in the future, and \s-1TRUE\s0 if more input was gotten.
.SH "AUTHOR"
.IX Header "AUTHOR"
Barrie Slaymaker <barries@slaysys.com>
.SH "TODO"
.IX Header "TODO"
Implement bidirectionality.