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Imager::IO(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Imager::IO(3) |
Imager::IO - Imager's io_layer object.
# Imager supplies Imager::IO objects to various callbacks
my $IO = ...;
my $count = $IO->write($data);
my $count = $IO->read($buffer, $max_count);
my $position = $IO->seek($offset, $whence);
my $status = $IO->close;
Imager uses an abstraction when dealing with image files to allow the same code
to work with disk files, in memory data and callbacks.
If you're writing an Imager file handler your code will be passed
an Imager::IO object to write to or read from.
Note that Imager::IO can only work with collections of bytes - if
you need to read UTF-8 data you will need to read the bytes and decode them.
If you want to write UTF-8 data you will need to encode your characters to
bytes and write the bytes.
- new_fd($fd)
- Create a new I/O layer based on a file descriptor.
my $io = Imager::IO->new(fileno($fh));
- new_buffer($data)
- Create a new I/O layer based on a memory buffer.
Buffer I/O layers are read only.
$data can either a simple octet
string, or a reference to an octet string. If
$data contains characters with a code point
above 0xFF an exception will be thrown.
- new_cb($writecb, $readcb, $seekcb, $closecb)
- Create a new I/O layer based on callbacks. See "I/O Callbacks"
in Imager::Files for details on the behavior of the callbacks.
- new_fh($fh)
- Create a new I/O layer based on a perl file handle.
- new_bufchain()
- Create a new "bufchain" based I/O layer.
This accumulates the file data as a chain of buffers starting from an
empty stream.
Use the "slurp()" method to retrieve the
accumulated content into a perl string.
These methods use buffered I/O to improve performance unless you call
set_buffered() to disable buffering.
Prior to Imager 0.86 the write and read methods performed raw
I/O.
- write($data)
- Call to write to the file. Returns the number of bytes written. The data
provided may contain only characters \x00 to \xFF - characters outside
this range will cause this method to croak().
If you supply a UTF-8 flagged string it will be converted to a
byte string, which may have a performance impact.
Returns -1 on error, though in most cases if the result of the
write isn't the number of bytes supplied you'll want to treat it as an
error anyway.
- read($buffer, $size)
-
my $buffer;
my $count = $io->read($buffer, $max_bytes);
Reads up to $max_bytes bytes from the
current position in the file and stores them in
$buffer. Returns the number of bytes read on
success or an empty list on failure. Note that a read of zero bytes is
not a failure, this indicates end of file.
- read2($size)
-
my $buffer = $io->read2($max_bytes);
An alternative interface to read, that might be simpler to use
in some cases.
Returns the data read or an empty list. At end of file the
data read will be an empty string.
- seek($offset, $whence)
-
my $new_position = $io->seek($offset, $whence);
Seek to a new position in the file. Possible values for
$whence are:
- "SEEK_SET" -
$offset is the new position in the file.
- "SEEK_CUR" -
$offset is the offset from the current position in
the file.
- "SEEK_END" -
$offset is the offset relative to the end of the
file.
Note that seeking past the end of the file may or may not result
in an error.
Any buffered output will be flushed, if flushing fails,
seek() will return -1.
Returns the new position in the file, or -1 on error.
- getc()
- Return the next byte from the stream.
Returns the ordinal of the byte or -1 on error or end of
file.
while ((my $c = $io->getc) != -1) {
print chr($c);
}
- nextc()
- Discard the next byte from the stream.
Returns nothing.
- gets()
- gets($max_size)
- gets($max_size, $end_of_line)
- Returns the next line of input from the stream, as terminated by
"end_of_line".
The default "max_size" is
8192.
The default "end_of_line" is
"ord "\n"".
Returns nothing if the stream is in error or at end of
file.
Returns the line as a string, including the line terminator
(if one was found) on success.
while (defined(my $line = $io->gets)) {
# do something with $line
}
- peekc()
- Return the buffered next character from the stream, loading the buffer if
necessary.
For an unbuffered stream a buffer will be setup and loaded
with a single character.
Returns the ordinal of the byte or -1 on error or end of
file.
my $c = $io->peekc;
- peekn($size)
- Returns up to the next "size" bytes from
the file as a string.
Only up to the stream buffer size bytes (currently 8192) can
be peeked.
This method ignores the buffering state of the stream.
Returns nothing on EOF.
my $s = $io->peekn(4);
if ($s =~ /^(II|MM)\*\0/) {
print "TIFF image";
}
- putc($code)
- Write a single character to the stream.
Returns "code" on success,
or -1 on failure.
- close()
-
my $result = $io->close;
Call when you're done with the file. If the IO object is
connected to a file this won't close the file handle, but buffers may be
flushed (if any).
Returns 0 on success, -1 on failure.
- eof()
-
$io->eof
Test if the stream is at end of file. No further read requests
will be passed to your read callback until you seek().
- error()
- Test if the stream has encountered a read or write error.
my $data = $io->read2(100);
$io->error
and die "Failed";
When the stream has the error flag set no further read or
write requests will be passed to your callbacks until you seek.
- flush()
-
$io->flush
or die "Flush error";
Flush any buffered output. This will not call lower write
layers when the stream has it's error flag set.
Returns a true value on success.
- is_buffered()
- Test if buffering is enabled for this stream.
Returns a true value if the stream is buffered.
- set_buffered($enabled)
- If $enabled is a non-zero integer, enable
buffering, other disable it.
Disabling buffering will flush any buffered output, but any
buffered input will be retained and consumed by input methods.
Returns true if any buffered output was flushed successfully,
false if there was an error flushing output.
These call the underlying I/O abstraction directly.
- raw_write()
- Call to write to the file. Returns the number of bytes written. The data
provided may contain only characters \x00 to \xFF - characters outside
this range will cause this method to croak().
If you supply a UTF-8 flagged string it will be converted to a
byte string, which may have a performance impact.
Returns -1 on error, though in most cases if the result of the
write isn't the number of bytes supplied you'll want to treat it as an
error anyway.
- raw_read()
-
my $buffer;
my $count = $io->raw_read($buffer, $max_bytes);
Reads up to $max_bytes bytes from the
current position in the file and stores them in
$buffer. Returns the number of bytes read on
success or an empty list on failure. Note that a read of zero bytes is
not a failure, this indicates end of file.
- raw_read2()
-
my $buffer = $io->raw_read2($max_bytes);
An alternative interface to raw_read, that might be simpler to
use in some cases.
Returns the data read or an empty list.
- raw_seek()
-
my $new_position = $io->raw_seek($offset, $whence);
Seek to a new position in the file. Possible values for
$whence are:
- "SEEK_SET" -
$offset is the new position in the file.
- "SEEK_CUR" -
$offset is the offset from the current position in
the file.
- "SEEK_END" -
$offset is the offset relative to the end of the
file.
Note that seeking past the end of the file may or may not result
in an error.
Returns the new position in the file, or -1 on error.
- raw_close()
-
my $result = $io->raw_close;
Call when you're done with the file. If the IO object is
connected to a file this won't close the file handle.
Returns 0 on success, -1 on failure.
- slurp()
- Retrieve the data accumulated from an I/O layer object created with the
new_bufchain() method.
my $data = $io->slurp;
- dump()
- Dump the internal buffering state of the I/O object to
"stderr".
$io->dump();
Tony Cook <tonyc@cpan.org>
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