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1 =head1 NAME 2 3 POSIX - Perl interface to IEEE Std 1003.1 4 5 =head1 SYNOPSIS 6 7 use POSIX; 8 use POSIX qw(setsid); 9 use POSIX qw(:errno_h :fcntl_h); 10 11 printf "EINTR is %d\n", EINTR; 12 13 $sess_id = POSIX::setsid(); 14 15 $fd = POSIX::open($path, O_CREAT|O_EXCL|O_WRONLY, 0644); 16 # note: that's a filedescriptor, *NOT* a filehandle 17 18 =head1 DESCRIPTION 19 20 The POSIX module permits you to access all (or nearly all) the standard 21 POSIX 1003.1 identifiers. Many of these identifiers have been given Perl-ish 22 interfaces. 23 24 I<Everything is exported by default> with the exception of any POSIX 25 functions with the same name as a built-in Perl function, such as 26 C<abs>, C<alarm>, C<rmdir>, C<write>, etc.., which will be exported 27 only if you ask for them explicitly. This is an unfortunate backwards 28 compatibility feature. You can stop the exporting by saying C<use 29 POSIX ()> and then use the fully qualified names (ie. C<POSIX::SEEK_END>). 30 31 This document gives a condensed list of the features available in the POSIX 32 module. Consult your operating system's manpages for general information on 33 most features. Consult L<perlfunc> for functions which are noted as being 34 identical to Perl's builtin functions. 35 36 The first section describes POSIX functions from the 1003.1 specification. 37 The second section describes some classes for signal objects, TTY objects, 38 and other miscellaneous objects. The remaining sections list various 39 constants and macros in an organization which roughly follows IEEE Std 40 1003.1b-1993. 41 42 =head1 NOTE 43 44 The POSIX module is probably the most complex Perl module supplied with 45 the standard distribution. It incorporates autoloading, namespace games, 46 and dynamic loading of code that's in Perl, C, or both. It's a great 47 source of wisdom. 48 49 =head1 CAVEATS 50 51 A few functions are not implemented because they are C specific. If you 52 attempt to call these, they will print a message telling you that they 53 aren't implemented, and suggest using the Perl equivalent should one 54 exist. For example, trying to access the setjmp() call will elicit the 55 message "setjmp() is C-specific: use eval {} instead". 56 57 Furthermore, some evil vendors will claim 1003.1 compliance, but in fact 58 are not so: they will not pass the PCTS (POSIX Compliance Test Suites). 59 For example, one vendor may not define EDEADLK, or the semantics of the 60 errno values set by open(2) might not be quite right. Perl does not 61 attempt to verify POSIX compliance. That means you can currently 62 successfully say "use POSIX", and then later in your program you find 63 that your vendor has been lax and there's no usable ICANON macro after 64 all. This could be construed to be a bug. 65 66 =head1 FUNCTIONS 67 68 =over 8 69 70 =item _exit 71 72 This is identical to the C function C<_exit()>. It exits the program 73 immediately which means among other things buffered I/O is B<not> flushed. 74 75 Note that when using threads and in Linux this is B<not> a good way to 76 exit a thread because in Linux processes and threads are kind of the 77 same thing (Note: while this is the situation in early 2003 there are 78 projects under way to have threads with more POSIXly semantics in Linux). 79 If you want not to return from a thread, detach the thread. 80 81 =item abort 82 83 This is identical to the C function C<abort()>. It terminates the 84 process with a C<SIGABRT> signal unless caught by a signal handler or 85 if the handler does not return normally (it e.g. does a C<longjmp>). 86 87 =item abs 88 89 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<abs()> function, returning 90 the absolute value of its numerical argument. 91 92 =item access 93 94 Determines the accessibility of a file. 95 96 if( POSIX::access( "/", &POSIX::R_OK ) ){ 97 print "have read permission\n"; 98 } 99 100 Returns C<undef> on failure. Note: do not use C<access()> for 101 security purposes. Between the C<access()> call and the operation 102 you are preparing for the permissions might change: a classic 103 I<race condition>. 104 105 =item acos 106 107 This is identical to the C function C<acos()>, returning 108 the arcus cosine of its numerical argument. See also L<Math::Trig>. 109 110 =item alarm 111 112 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<alarm()> function, 113 either for arming or disarming the C<SIGARLM> timer. 114 115 =item asctime 116 117 This is identical to the C function C<asctime()>. It returns 118 a string of the form 119 120 "Fri Jun 2 18:22:13 2000\n\0" 121 122 and it is called thusly 123 124 $asctime = asctime($sec, $min, $hour, $mday, $mon, $year, 125 $wday, $yday, $isdst); 126 127 The C<$mon> is zero-based: January equals C<0>. The C<$year> is 128 1900-based: 2001 equals C<101>. C<$wday> and C<$yday> default to zero 129 (and are usually ignored anyway), and C<$isdst> defaults to -1. 130 131 =item asin 132 133 This is identical to the C function C<asin()>, returning 134 the arcus sine of its numerical argument. See also L<Math::Trig>. 135 136 =item assert 137 138 Unimplemented, but you can use L<perlfunc/die> and the L<Carp> module 139 to achieve similar things. 140 141 =item atan 142 143 This is identical to the C function C<atan()>, returning the 144 arcus tangent of its numerical argument. See also L<Math::Trig>. 145 146 =item atan2 147 148 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<atan2()> function, returning 149 the arcus tangent defined by its two numerical arguments, the I<y> 150 coordinate and the I<x> coordinate. See also L<Math::Trig>. 151 152 =item atexit 153 154 atexit() is C-specific: use C<END {}> instead, see L<perlsub>. 155 156 =item atof 157 158 atof() is C-specific. Perl converts strings to numbers transparently. 159 If you need to force a scalar to a number, add a zero to it. 160 161 =item atoi 162 163 atoi() is C-specific. Perl converts strings to numbers transparently. 164 If you need to force a scalar to a number, add a zero to it. 165 If you need to have just the integer part, see L<perlfunc/int>. 166 167 =item atol 168 169 atol() is C-specific. Perl converts strings to numbers transparently. 170 If you need to force a scalar to a number, add a zero to it. 171 If you need to have just the integer part, see L<perlfunc/int>. 172 173 =item bsearch 174 175 bsearch() not supplied. For doing binary search on wordlists, 176 see L<Search::Dict>. 177 178 =item calloc 179 180 calloc() is C-specific. Perl does memory management transparently. 181 182 =item ceil 183 184 This is identical to the C function C<ceil()>, returning the smallest 185 integer value greater than or equal to the given numerical argument. 186 187 =item chdir 188 189 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<chdir()> function, allowing 190 one to change the working (default) directory, see L<perlfunc/chdir>. 191 192 =item chmod 193 194 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<chmod()> function, allowing 195 one to change file and directory permissions, see L<perlfunc/chmod>. 196 197 =item chown 198 199 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<chown()> function, allowing one 200 to change file and directory owners and groups, see L<perlfunc/chown>. 201 202 =item clearerr 203 204 Use the method C<IO::Handle::clearerr()> instead, to reset the error 205 state (if any) and EOF state (if any) of the given stream. 206 207 =item clock 208 209 This is identical to the C function C<clock()>, returning the 210 amount of spent processor time in microseconds. 211 212 =item close 213 214 Close the file. This uses file descriptors such as those obtained by calling 215 C<POSIX::open>. 216 217 $fd = POSIX::open( "foo", &POSIX::O_RDONLY ); 218 POSIX::close( $fd ); 219 220 Returns C<undef> on failure. 221 222 See also L<perlfunc/close>. 223 224 =item closedir 225 226 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<closedir()> function for closing 227 a directory handle, see L<perlfunc/closedir>. 228 229 =item cos 230 231 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<cos()> function, for returning 232 the cosine of its numerical argument, see L<perlfunc/cos>. 233 See also L<Math::Trig>. 234 235 =item cosh 236 237 This is identical to the C function C<cosh()>, for returning 238 the hyperbolic cosine of its numeric argument. See also L<Math::Trig>. 239 240 =item creat 241 242 Create a new file. This returns a file descriptor like the ones returned by 243 C<POSIX::open>. Use C<POSIX::close> to close the file. 244 245 $fd = POSIX::creat( "foo", 0611 ); 246 POSIX::close( $fd ); 247 248 See also L<perlfunc/sysopen> and its C<O_CREAT> flag. 249 250 =item ctermid 251 252 Generates the path name for the controlling terminal. 253 254 $path = POSIX::ctermid(); 255 256 =item ctime 257 258 This is identical to the C function C<ctime()> and equivalent 259 to C<asctime(localtime(...))>, see L</asctime> and L</localtime>. 260 261 =item cuserid 262 263 Get the login name of the owner of the current process. 264 265 $name = POSIX::cuserid(); 266 267 =item difftime 268 269 This is identical to the C function C<difftime()>, for returning 270 the time difference (in seconds) between two times (as returned 271 by C<time()>), see L</time>. 272 273 =item div 274 275 div() is C-specific, use L<perlfunc/int> on the usual C</> division and 276 the modulus C<%>. 277 278 =item dup 279 280 This is similar to the C function C<dup()>, for duplicating a file 281 descriptor. 282 283 This uses file descriptors such as those obtained by calling 284 C<POSIX::open>. 285 286 Returns C<undef> on failure. 287 288 =item dup2 289 290 This is similar to the C function C<dup2()>, for duplicating a file 291 descriptor to an another known file descriptor. 292 293 This uses file descriptors such as those obtained by calling 294 C<POSIX::open>. 295 296 Returns C<undef> on failure. 297 298 =item errno 299 300 Returns the value of errno. 301 302 $errno = POSIX::errno(); 303 304 This identical to the numerical values of the C<$!>, see L<perlvar/$ERRNO>. 305 306 =item execl 307 308 execl() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/exec>. 309 310 =item execle 311 312 execle() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/exec>. 313 314 =item execlp 315 316 execlp() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/exec>. 317 318 =item execv 319 320 execv() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/exec>. 321 322 =item execve 323 324 execve() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/exec>. 325 326 =item execvp 327 328 execvp() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/exec>. 329 330 =item exit 331 332 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<exit()> function for exiting the 333 program, see L<perlfunc/exit>. 334 335 =item exp 336 337 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<exp()> function for 338 returning the exponent (I<e>-based) of the numerical argument, 339 see L<perlfunc/exp>. 340 341 =item fabs 342 343 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<abs()> function for returning 344 the absolute value of the numerical argument, see L<perlfunc/abs>. 345 346 =item fclose 347 348 Use method C<IO::Handle::close()> instead, or see L<perlfunc/close>. 349 350 =item fcntl 351 352 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<fcntl()> function, 353 see L<perlfunc/fcntl>. 354 355 =item fdopen 356 357 Use method C<IO::Handle::new_from_fd()> instead, or see L<perlfunc/open>. 358 359 =item feof 360 361 Use method C<IO::Handle::eof()> instead, or see L<perlfunc/eof>. 362 363 =item ferror 364 365 Use method C<IO::Handle::error()> instead. 366 367 =item fflush 368 369 Use method C<IO::Handle::flush()> instead. 370 See also L<perlvar/$OUTPUT_AUTOFLUSH>. 371 372 =item fgetc 373 374 Use method C<IO::Handle::getc()> instead, or see L<perlfunc/read>. 375 376 =item fgetpos 377 378 Use method C<IO::Seekable::getpos()> instead, or see L<L/seek>. 379 380 =item fgets 381 382 Use method C<IO::Handle::gets()> instead. Similar to E<lt>E<gt>, also known 383 as L<perlfunc/readline>. 384 385 =item fileno 386 387 Use method C<IO::Handle::fileno()> instead, or see L<perlfunc/fileno>. 388 389 =item floor 390 391 This is identical to the C function C<floor()>, returning the largest 392 integer value less than or equal to the numerical argument. 393 394 =item fmod 395 396 This is identical to the C function C<fmod()>. 397 398 $r = fmod($x, $y); 399 400 It returns the remainder C<$r = $x - $n*$y>, where C<$n = trunc($x/$y)>. 401 The C<$r> has the same sign as C<$x> and magnitude (absolute value) 402 less than the magnitude of C<$y>. 403 404 =item fopen 405 406 Use method C<IO::File::open()> instead, or see L<perlfunc/open>. 407 408 =item fork 409 410 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<fork()> function 411 for duplicating the current process, see L<perlfunc/fork> 412 and L<perlfork> if you are in Windows. 413 414 =item fpathconf 415 416 Retrieves the value of a configurable limit on a file or directory. This 417 uses file descriptors such as those obtained by calling C<POSIX::open>. 418 419 The following will determine the maximum length of the longest allowable 420 pathname on the filesystem which holds C</var/foo>. 421 422 $fd = POSIX::open( "/var/foo", &POSIX::O_RDONLY ); 423 $path_max = POSIX::fpathconf( $fd, &POSIX::_PC_PATH_MAX ); 424 425 Returns C<undef> on failure. 426 427 =item fprintf 428 429 fprintf() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/printf> instead. 430 431 =item fputc 432 433 fputc() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/print> instead. 434 435 =item fputs 436 437 fputs() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/print> instead. 438 439 =item fread 440 441 fread() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/read> instead. 442 443 =item free 444 445 free() is C-specific. Perl does memory management transparently. 446 447 =item freopen 448 449 freopen() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/open> instead. 450 451 =item frexp 452 453 Return the mantissa and exponent of a floating-point number. 454 455 ($mantissa, $exponent) = POSIX::frexp( 1.234e56 ); 456 457 =item fscanf 458 459 fscanf() is C-specific, use E<lt>E<gt> and regular expressions instead. 460 461 =item fseek 462 463 Use method C<IO::Seekable::seek()> instead, or see L<perlfunc/seek>. 464 465 =item fsetpos 466 467 Use method C<IO::Seekable::setpos()> instead, or seek L<perlfunc/seek>. 468 469 =item fstat 470 471 Get file status. This uses file descriptors such as those obtained by 472 calling C<POSIX::open>. The data returned is identical to the data from 473 Perl's builtin C<stat> function. 474 475 $fd = POSIX::open( "foo", &POSIX::O_RDONLY ); 476 @stats = POSIX::fstat( $fd ); 477 478 =item fsync 479 480 Use method C<IO::Handle::sync()> instead. 481 482 =item ftell 483 484 Use method C<IO::Seekable::tell()> instead, or see L<perlfunc/tell>. 485 486 =item fwrite 487 488 fwrite() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/print> instead. 489 490 =item getc 491 492 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<getc()> function, 493 see L<perlfunc/getc>. 494 495 =item getchar 496 497 Returns one character from STDIN. Identical to Perl's C<getc()>, 498 see L<perlfunc/getc>. 499 500 =item getcwd 501 502 Returns the name of the current working directory. 503 See also L<Cwd>. 504 505 =item getegid 506 507 Returns the effective group identifier. Similar to Perl' s builtin 508 variable C<$(>, see L<perlvar/$EGID>. 509 510 =item getenv 511 512 Returns the value of the specified environment variable. 513 The same information is available through the C<%ENV> array. 514 515 =item geteuid 516 517 Returns the effective user identifier. Identical to Perl's builtin C<$E<gt>> 518 variable, see L<perlvar/$EUID>. 519 520 =item getgid 521 522 Returns the user's real group identifier. Similar to Perl's builtin 523 variable C<$)>, see L<perlvar/$GID>. 524 525 =item getgrgid 526 527 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<getgrgid()> function for 528 returning group entries by group identifiers, see 529 L<perlfunc/getgrgid>. 530 531 =item getgrnam 532 533 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<getgrnam()> function for 534 returning group entries by group names, see L<perlfunc/getgrnam>. 535 536 =item getgroups 537 538 Returns the ids of the user's supplementary groups. Similar to Perl's 539 builtin variable C<$)>, see L<perlvar/$GID>. 540 541 =item getlogin 542 543 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<getlogin()> function for 544 returning the user name associated with the current session, see 545 L<perlfunc/getlogin>. 546 547 =item getpgrp 548 549 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<getpgrp()> function for 550 returning the process group identifier of the current process, see 551 L<perlfunc/getpgrp>. 552 553 =item getpid 554 555 Returns the process identifier. Identical to Perl's builtin 556 variable C<$$>, see L<perlvar/$PID>. 557 558 =item getppid 559 560 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<getppid()> function for 561 returning the process identifier of the parent process of the current 562 process , see L<perlfunc/getppid>. 563 564 =item getpwnam 565 566 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<getpwnam()> function for 567 returning user entries by user names, see L<perlfunc/getpwnam>. 568 569 =item getpwuid 570 571 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<getpwuid()> function for 572 returning user entries by user identifiers, see L<perlfunc/getpwuid>. 573 574 =item gets 575 576 Returns one line from C<STDIN>, similar to E<lt>E<gt>, also known 577 as the C<readline()> function, see L<perlfunc/readline>. 578 579 B<NOTE>: if you have C programs that still use C<gets()>, be very 580 afraid. The C<gets()> function is a source of endless grief because 581 it has no buffer overrun checks. It should B<never> be used. The 582 C<fgets()> function should be preferred instead. 583 584 =item getuid 585 586 Returns the user's identifier. Identical to Perl's builtin C<$E<lt>> variable, 587 see L<perlvar/$UID>. 588 589 =item gmtime 590 591 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<gmtime()> function for 592 converting seconds since the epoch to a date in Greenwich Mean Time, 593 see L<perlfunc/gmtime>. 594 595 =item isalnum 596 597 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to a 598 single character or to a whole string. Note that locale settings may 599 affect what characters are considered C<isalnum>. Does not work on 600 Unicode characters code point 256 or higher. Consider using regular 601 expressions and the C</[[:alnum:]]/> construct instead, or possibly 602 the C</\w/> construct. 603 604 =item isalpha 605 606 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to 607 a single character or to a whole string. Note that locale settings 608 may affect what characters are considered C<isalpha>. Does not work 609 on Unicode characters code point 256 or higher. Consider using regular 610 expressions and the C</[[:alpha:]]/> construct instead. 611 612 =item isatty 613 614 Returns a boolean indicating whether the specified filehandle is connected 615 to a tty. Similar to the C<-t> operator, see L<perlfunc/-X>. 616 617 =item iscntrl 618 619 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to 620 a single character or to a whole string. Note that locale settings 621 may affect what characters are considered C<iscntrl>. Does not work 622 on Unicode characters code point 256 or higher. Consider using regular 623 expressions and the C</[[:cntrl:]]/> construct instead. 624 625 =item isdigit 626 627 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to 628 a single character or to a whole string. Note that locale settings 629 may affect what characters are considered C<isdigit> (unlikely, but 630 still possible). Does not work on Unicode characters code point 256 631 or higher. Consider using regular expressions and the C</[[:digit:]]/> 632 construct instead, or the C</\d/> construct. 633 634 =item isgraph 635 636 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to 637 a single character or to a whole string. Note that locale settings 638 may affect what characters are considered C<isgraph>. Does not work 639 on Unicode characters code point 256 or higher. Consider using regular 640 expressions and the C</[[:graph:]]/> construct instead. 641 642 =item islower 643 644 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to 645 a single character or to a whole string. Note that locale settings 646 may affect what characters are considered C<islower>. Does not work 647 on Unicode characters code point 256 or higher. Consider using regular 648 expressions and the C</[[:lower:]]/> construct instead. Do B<not> use 649 C</[a-z]/>. 650 651 =item isprint 652 653 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to 654 a single character or to a whole string. Note that locale settings 655 may affect what characters are considered C<isprint>. Does not work 656 on Unicode characters code point 256 or higher. Consider using regular 657 expressions and the C</[[:print:]]/> construct instead. 658 659 =item ispunct 660 661 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to 662 a single character or to a whole string. Note that locale settings 663 may affect what characters are considered C<ispunct>. Does not work 664 on Unicode characters code point 256 or higher. Consider using regular 665 expressions and the C</[[:punct:]]/> construct instead. 666 667 =item isspace 668 669 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to 670 a single character or to a whole string. Note that locale settings 671 may affect what characters are considered C<isspace>. Does not work 672 on Unicode characters code point 256 or higher. Consider using regular 673 expressions and the C</[[:space:]]/> construct instead, or the C</\s/> 674 construct. (Note that C</\s/> and C</[[:space:]]/> are slightly 675 different in that C</[[:space:]]/> can normally match a vertical tab, 676 while C</\s/> does not.) 677 678 =item isupper 679 680 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to 681 a single character or to a whole string. Note that locale settings 682 may affect what characters are considered C<isupper>. Does not work 683 on Unicode characters code point 256 or higher. Consider using regular 684 expressions and the C</[[:upper:]]/> construct instead. Do B<not> use 685 C</[A-Z]/>. 686 687 =item isxdigit 688 689 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to a single 690 character or to a whole string. Note that locale settings may affect what 691 characters are considered C<isxdigit> (unlikely, but still possible). 692 Does not work on Unicode characters code point 256 or higher. 693 Consider using regular expressions and the C</[[:xdigit:]]/> 694 construct instead, or simply C</[0-9a-f]/i>. 695 696 =item kill 697 698 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<kill()> function for sending 699 signals to processes (often to terminate them), see L<perlfunc/kill>. 700 701 =item labs 702 703 (For returning absolute values of long integers.) 704 labs() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/abs> instead. 705 706 =item ldexp 707 708 This is identical to the C function C<ldexp()> 709 for multiplying floating point numbers with powers of two. 710 711 $x_quadrupled = POSIX::ldexp($x, 2); 712 713 =item ldiv 714 715 (For computing dividends of long integers.) 716 ldiv() is C-specific, use C</> and C<int()> instead. 717 718 =item link 719 720 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<link()> function 721 for creating hard links into files, see L<perlfunc/link>. 722 723 =item localeconv 724 725 Get numeric formatting information. Returns a reference to a hash 726 containing the current locale formatting values. 727 728 Here is how to query the database for the B<de> (Deutsch or German) locale. 729 730 $loc = POSIX::setlocale( &POSIX::LC_ALL, "de" ); 731 print "Locale = $loc\n"; 732 $lconv = POSIX::localeconv(); 733 print "decimal_point = ", $lconv->{decimal_point}, "\n"; 734 print "thousands_sep = ", $lconv->{thousands_sep}, "\n"; 735 print "grouping = ", $lconv->{grouping}, "\n"; 736 print "int_curr_symbol = ", $lconv->{int_curr_symbol}, "\n"; 737 print "currency_symbol = ", $lconv->{currency_symbol}, "\n"; 738 print "mon_decimal_point = ", $lconv->{mon_decimal_point}, "\n"; 739 print "mon_thousands_sep = ", $lconv->{mon_thousands_sep}, "\n"; 740 print "mon_grouping = ", $lconv->{mon_grouping}, "\n"; 741 print "positive_sign = ", $lconv->{positive_sign}, "\n"; 742 print "negative_sign = ", $lconv->{negative_sign}, "\n"; 743 print "int_frac_digits = ", $lconv->{int_frac_digits}, "\n"; 744 print "frac_digits = ", $lconv->{frac_digits}, "\n"; 745 print "p_cs_precedes = ", $lconv->{p_cs_precedes}, "\n"; 746 print "p_sep_by_space = ", $lconv->{p_sep_by_space}, "\n"; 747 print "n_cs_precedes = ", $lconv->{n_cs_precedes}, "\n"; 748 print "n_sep_by_space = ", $lconv->{n_sep_by_space}, "\n"; 749 print "p_sign_posn = ", $lconv->{p_sign_posn}, "\n"; 750 print "n_sign_posn = ", $lconv->{n_sign_posn}, "\n"; 751 752 =item localtime 753 754 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<localtime()> function for 755 converting seconds since the epoch to a date see L<perlfunc/localtime>. 756 757 =item log 758 759 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<log()> function, 760 returning the natural (I<e>-based) logarithm of the numerical argument, 761 see L<perlfunc/log>. 762 763 =item log10 764 765 This is identical to the C function C<log10()>, 766 returning the 10-base logarithm of the numerical argument. 767 You can also use 768 769 sub log10 { log($_[0]) / log(10) } 770 771 or 772 773 sub log10 { log($_[0]) / 2.30258509299405 } 774 775 or 776 777 sub log10 { log($_[0]) * 0.434294481903252 } 778 779 =item longjmp 780 781 longjmp() is C-specific: use L<perlfunc/die> instead. 782 783 =item lseek 784 785 Move the file's read/write position. This uses file descriptors such as 786 those obtained by calling C<POSIX::open>. 787 788 $fd = POSIX::open( "foo", &POSIX::O_RDONLY ); 789 $off_t = POSIX::lseek( $fd, 0, &POSIX::SEEK_SET ); 790 791 Returns C<undef> on failure. 792 793 =item malloc 794 795 malloc() is C-specific. Perl does memory management transparently. 796 797 =item mblen 798 799 This is identical to the C function C<mblen()>. 800 Perl does not have any support for the wide and multibyte 801 characters of the C standards, so this might be a rather 802 useless function. 803 804 =item mbstowcs 805 806 This is identical to the C function C<mbstowcs()>. 807 Perl does not have any support for the wide and multibyte 808 characters of the C standards, so this might be a rather 809 useless function. 810 811 =item mbtowc 812 813 This is identical to the C function C<mbtowc()>. 814 Perl does not have any support for the wide and multibyte 815 characters of the C standards, so this might be a rather 816 useless function. 817 818 =item memchr 819 820 memchr() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/index> instead. 821 822 =item memcmp 823 824 memcmp() is C-specific, use C<eq> instead, see L<perlop>. 825 826 =item memcpy 827 828 memcpy() is C-specific, use C<=>, see L<perlop>, or see L<perlfunc/substr>. 829 830 =item memmove 831 832 memmove() is C-specific, use C<=>, see L<perlop>, or see L<perlfunc/substr>. 833 834 =item memset 835 836 memset() is C-specific, use C<x> instead, see L<perlop>. 837 838 =item mkdir 839 840 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<mkdir()> function 841 for creating directories, see L<perlfunc/mkdir>. 842 843 =item mkfifo 844 845 This is similar to the C function C<mkfifo()> for creating 846 FIFO special files. 847 848 if (mkfifo($path, $mode)) { .... 849 850 Returns C<undef> on failure. The C<$mode> is similar to the 851 mode of C<mkdir()>, see L<perlfunc/mkdir>, though for C<mkfifo> 852 you B<must> specify the C<$mode>. 853 854 =item mktime 855 856 Convert date/time info to a calendar time. 857 858 Synopsis: 859 860 mktime(sec, min, hour, mday, mon, year, wday = 0, yday = 0, isdst = -1) 861 862 The month (C<mon>), weekday (C<wday>), and yearday (C<yday>) begin at zero. 863 I.e. January is 0, not 1; Sunday is 0, not 1; January 1st is 0, not 1. The 864 year (C<year>) is given in years since 1900. I.e. The year 1995 is 95; the 865 year 2001 is 101. Consult your system's C<mktime()> manpage for details 866 about these and the other arguments. 867 868 Calendar time for December 12, 1995, at 10:30 am. 869 870 $time_t = POSIX::mktime( 0, 30, 10, 12, 11, 95 ); 871 print "Date = ", POSIX::ctime($time_t); 872 873 Returns C<undef> on failure. 874 875 =item modf 876 877 Return the integral and fractional parts of a floating-point number. 878 879 ($fractional, $integral) = POSIX::modf( 3.14 ); 880 881 =item nice 882 883 This is similar to the C function C<nice()>, for changing 884 the scheduling preference of the current process. Positive 885 arguments mean more polite process, negative values more 886 needy process. Normal user processes can only be more polite. 887 888 Returns C<undef> on failure. 889 890 =item offsetof 891 892 offsetof() is C-specific, you probably want to see L<perlfunc/pack> instead. 893 894 =item open 895 896 Open a file for reading for writing. This returns file descriptors, not 897 Perl filehandles. Use C<POSIX::close> to close the file. 898 899 Open a file read-only with mode 0666. 900 901 $fd = POSIX::open( "foo" ); 902 903 Open a file for read and write. 904 905 $fd = POSIX::open( "foo", &POSIX::O_RDWR ); 906 907 Open a file for write, with truncation. 908 909 $fd = POSIX::open( "foo", &POSIX::O_WRONLY | &POSIX::O_TRUNC ); 910 911 Create a new file with mode 0640. Set up the file for writing. 912 913 $fd = POSIX::open( "foo", &POSIX::O_CREAT | &POSIX::O_WRONLY, 0640 ); 914 915 Returns C<undef> on failure. 916 917 See also L<perlfunc/sysopen>. 918 919 =item opendir 920 921 Open a directory for reading. 922 923 $dir = POSIX::opendir( "/var" ); 924 @files = POSIX::readdir( $dir ); 925 POSIX::closedir( $dir ); 926 927 Returns C<undef> on failure. 928 929 =item pathconf 930 931 Retrieves the value of a configurable limit on a file or directory. 932 933 The following will determine the maximum length of the longest allowable 934 pathname on the filesystem which holds C</var>. 935 936 $path_max = POSIX::pathconf( "/var", &POSIX::_PC_PATH_MAX ); 937 938 Returns C<undef> on failure. 939 940 =item pause 941 942 This is similar to the C function C<pause()>, which suspends 943 the execution of the current process until a signal is received. 944 945 Returns C<undef> on failure. 946 947 =item perror 948 949 This is identical to the C function C<perror()>, which outputs to the 950 standard error stream the specified message followed by ": " and the 951 current error string. Use the C<warn()> function and the C<$!> 952 variable instead, see L<perlfunc/warn> and L<perlvar/$ERRNO>. 953 954 =item pipe 955 956 Create an interprocess channel. This returns file descriptors like those 957 returned by C<POSIX::open>. 958 959 my ($read, $write) = POSIX::pipe(); 960 POSIX::write( $write, "hello", 5 ); 961 POSIX::read( $read, $buf, 5 ); 962 963 See also L<perlfunc/pipe>. 964 965 =item pow 966 967 Computes C<$x> raised to the power C<$exponent>. 968 969 $ret = POSIX::pow( $x, $exponent ); 970 971 You can also use the C<**> operator, see L<perlop>. 972 973 =item printf 974 975 Formats and prints the specified arguments to STDOUT. 976 See also L<perlfunc/printf>. 977 978 =item putc 979 980 putc() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/print> instead. 981 982 =item putchar 983 984 putchar() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/print> instead. 985 986 =item puts 987 988 puts() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/print> instead. 989 990 =item qsort 991 992 qsort() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/sort> instead. 993 994 =item raise 995 996 Sends the specified signal to the current process. 997 See also L<perlfunc/kill> and the C<$$> in L<perlvar/$PID>. 998 999 =item rand 1000 1001 C<rand()> is non-portable, see L<perlfunc/rand> instead. 1002 1003 =item read 1004 1005 Read from a file. This uses file descriptors such as those obtained by 1006 calling C<POSIX::open>. If the buffer C<$buf> is not large enough for the 1007 read then Perl will extend it to make room for the request. 1008 1009 $fd = POSIX::open( "foo", &POSIX::O_RDONLY ); 1010 $bytes = POSIX::read( $fd, $buf, 3 ); 1011 1012 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1013 1014 See also L<perlfunc/sysread>. 1015 1016 =item readdir 1017 1018 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<readdir()> function 1019 for reading directory entries, see L<perlfunc/readdir>. 1020 1021 =item realloc 1022 1023 realloc() is C-specific. Perl does memory management transparently. 1024 1025 =item remove 1026 1027 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<unlink()> function 1028 for removing files, see L<perlfunc/unlink>. 1029 1030 =item rename 1031 1032 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<rename()> function 1033 for renaming files, see L<perlfunc/rename>. 1034 1035 =item rewind 1036 1037 Seeks to the beginning of the file. 1038 1039 =item rewinddir 1040 1041 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<rewinddir()> function for 1042 rewinding directory entry streams, see L<perlfunc/rewinddir>. 1043 1044 =item rmdir 1045 1046 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<rmdir()> function 1047 for removing (empty) directories, see L<perlfunc/rmdir>. 1048 1049 =item scanf 1050 1051 scanf() is C-specific, use E<lt>E<gt> and regular expressions instead, 1052 see L<perlre>. 1053 1054 =item setgid 1055 1056 Sets the real group identifier and the effective group identifier for 1057 this process. Similar to assigning a value to the Perl's builtin 1058 C<$)> variable, see L<perlvar/$EGID>, except that the latter 1059 will change only the real user identifier, and that the setgid() 1060 uses only a single numeric argument, as opposed to a space-separated 1061 list of numbers. 1062 1063 =item setjmp 1064 1065 C<setjmp()> is C-specific: use C<eval {}> instead, 1066 see L<perlfunc/eval>. 1067 1068 =item setlocale 1069 1070 Modifies and queries program's locale. The following examples assume 1071 1072 use POSIX qw(setlocale LC_ALL LC_CTYPE); 1073 1074 has been issued. 1075 1076 The following will set the traditional UNIX system locale behavior 1077 (the second argument C<"C">). 1078 1079 $loc = setlocale( LC_ALL, "C" ); 1080 1081 The following will query the current LC_CTYPE category. (No second 1082 argument means 'query'.) 1083 1084 $loc = setlocale( LC_CTYPE ); 1085 1086 The following will set the LC_CTYPE behaviour according to the locale 1087 environment variables (the second argument C<"">). 1088 Please see your systems C<setlocale(3)> documentation for the locale 1089 environment variables' meaning or consult L<perllocale>. 1090 1091 $loc = setlocale( LC_CTYPE, "" ); 1092 1093 The following will set the LC_COLLATE behaviour to Argentinian 1094 Spanish. B<NOTE>: The naming and availability of locales depends on 1095 your operating system. Please consult L<perllocale> for how to find 1096 out which locales are available in your system. 1097 1098 $loc = setlocale( LC_ALL, "es_AR.ISO8859-1" ); 1099 1100 =item setpgid 1101 1102 This is similar to the C function C<setpgid()> for 1103 setting the process group identifier of the current process. 1104 1105 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1106 1107 =item setsid 1108 1109 This is identical to the C function C<setsid()> for 1110 setting the session identifier of the current process. 1111 1112 =item setuid 1113 1114 Sets the real user identifier and the effective user identifier for 1115 this process. Similar to assigning a value to the Perl's builtin 1116 C<$E<lt>> variable, see L<perlvar/$UID>, except that the latter 1117 will change only the real user identifier. 1118 1119 =item sigaction 1120 1121 Detailed signal management. This uses C<POSIX::SigAction> objects for 1122 the C<action> and C<oldaction> arguments (the oldaction can also be 1123 just a hash reference). Consult your system's C<sigaction> manpage 1124 for details, see also C<POSIX::SigRt>. 1125 1126 Synopsis: 1127 1128 sigaction(signal, action, oldaction = 0) 1129 1130 Returns C<undef> on failure. The C<signal> must be a number (like 1131 SIGHUP), not a string (like "SIGHUP"), though Perl does try hard 1132 to understand you. 1133 1134 If you use the SA_SIGINFO flag, the signal handler will in addition to 1135 the first argument, the signal name, also receive a second argument, a 1136 hash reference, inside which are the following keys with the following 1137 semantics, as defined by POSIX/SUSv3: 1138 1139 signo the signal number 1140 errno the error number 1141 code if this is zero or less, the signal was sent by 1142 a user process and the uid and pid make sense, 1143 otherwise the signal was sent by the kernel 1144 1145 The following are also defined by POSIX/SUSv3, but unfortunately 1146 not very widely implemented: 1147 1148 pid the process id generating the signal 1149 uid the uid of the process id generating the signal 1150 status exit value or signal for SIGCHLD 1151 band band event for SIGPOLL 1152 1153 A third argument is also passed to the handler, which contains a copy 1154 of the raw binary contents of the siginfo structure: if a system has 1155 some non-POSIX fields, this third argument is where to unpack() them 1156 from. 1157 1158 Note that not all siginfo values make sense simultaneously (some are 1159 valid only for certain signals, for example), and not all values make 1160 sense from Perl perspective, you should to consult your system's 1161 C<sigaction> and possibly also C<siginfo> documentation. 1162 1163 =item siglongjmp 1164 1165 siglongjmp() is C-specific: use L<perlfunc/die> instead. 1166 1167 =item sigpending 1168 1169 Examine signals that are blocked and pending. This uses C<POSIX::SigSet> 1170 objects for the C<sigset> argument. Consult your system's C<sigpending> 1171 manpage for details. 1172 1173 Synopsis: 1174 1175 sigpending(sigset) 1176 1177 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1178 1179 =item sigprocmask 1180 1181 Change and/or examine calling process's signal mask. This uses 1182 C<POSIX::SigSet> objects for the C<sigset> and C<oldsigset> arguments. 1183 Consult your system's C<sigprocmask> manpage for details. 1184 1185 Synopsis: 1186 1187 sigprocmask(how, sigset, oldsigset = 0) 1188 1189 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1190 1191 =item sigsetjmp 1192 1193 C<sigsetjmp()> is C-specific: use C<eval {}> instead, 1194 see L<perlfunc/eval>. 1195 1196 =item sigsuspend 1197 1198 Install a signal mask and suspend process until signal arrives. This uses 1199 C<POSIX::SigSet> objects for the C<signal_mask> argument. Consult your 1200 system's C<sigsuspend> manpage for details. 1201 1202 Synopsis: 1203 1204 sigsuspend(signal_mask) 1205 1206 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1207 1208 =item sin 1209 1210 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<sin()> function 1211 for returning the sine of the numerical argument, 1212 see L<perlfunc/sin>. See also L<Math::Trig>. 1213 1214 =item sinh 1215 1216 This is identical to the C function C<sinh()> 1217 for returning the hyperbolic sine of the numerical argument. 1218 See also L<Math::Trig>. 1219 1220 =item sleep 1221 1222 This is functionally identical to Perl's builtin C<sleep()> function 1223 for suspending the execution of the current for process for certain 1224 number of seconds, see L<perlfunc/sleep>. There is one significant 1225 difference, however: C<POSIX::sleep()> returns the number of 1226 B<unslept> seconds, while the C<CORE::sleep()> returns the 1227 number of slept seconds. 1228 1229 =item sprintf 1230 1231 This is similar to Perl's builtin C<sprintf()> function 1232 for returning a string that has the arguments formatted as requested, 1233 see L<perlfunc/sprintf>. 1234 1235 =item sqrt 1236 1237 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<sqrt()> function. 1238 for returning the square root of the numerical argument, 1239 see L<perlfunc/sqrt>. 1240 1241 =item srand 1242 1243 Give a seed the pseudorandom number generator, see L<perlfunc/srand>. 1244 1245 =item sscanf 1246 1247 sscanf() is C-specific, use regular expressions instead, 1248 see L<perlre>. 1249 1250 =item stat 1251 1252 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<stat()> function 1253 for returning information about files and directories. 1254 1255 =item strcat 1256 1257 strcat() is C-specific, use C<.=> instead, see L<perlop>. 1258 1259 =item strchr 1260 1261 strchr() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/index> instead. 1262 1263 =item strcmp 1264 1265 strcmp() is C-specific, use C<eq> or C<cmp> instead, see L<perlop>. 1266 1267 =item strcoll 1268 1269 This is identical to the C function C<strcoll()> 1270 for collating (comparing) strings transformed using 1271 the C<strxfrm()> function. Not really needed since 1272 Perl can do this transparently, see L<perllocale>. 1273 1274 =item strcpy 1275 1276 strcpy() is C-specific, use C<=> instead, see L<perlop>. 1277 1278 =item strcspn 1279 1280 strcspn() is C-specific, use regular expressions instead, 1281 see L<perlre>. 1282 1283 =item strerror 1284 1285 Returns the error string for the specified errno. 1286 Identical to the string form of the C<$!>, see L<perlvar/$ERRNO>. 1287 1288 =item strftime 1289 1290 Convert date and time information to string. Returns the string. 1291 1292 Synopsis: 1293 1294 strftime(fmt, sec, min, hour, mday, mon, year, wday = -1, yday = -1, isdst = -1) 1295 1296 The month (C<mon>), weekday (C<wday>), and yearday (C<yday>) begin at zero. 1297 I.e. January is 0, not 1; Sunday is 0, not 1; January 1st is 0, not 1. The 1298 year (C<year>) is given in years since 1900. I.e., the year 1995 is 95; the 1299 year 2001 is 101. Consult your system's C<strftime()> manpage for details 1300 about these and the other arguments. 1301 1302 If you want your code to be portable, your format (C<fmt>) argument 1303 should use only the conversion specifiers defined by the ANSI C 1304 standard (C89, to play safe). These are C<aAbBcdHIjmMpSUwWxXyYZ%>. 1305 But even then, the B<results> of some of the conversion specifiers are 1306 non-portable. For example, the specifiers C<aAbBcpZ> change according 1307 to the locale settings of the user, and both how to set locales (the 1308 locale names) and what output to expect are non-standard. 1309 The specifier C<c> changes according to the timezone settings of the 1310 user and the timezone computation rules of the operating system. 1311 The C<Z> specifier is notoriously unportable since the names of 1312 timezones are non-standard. Sticking to the numeric specifiers is the 1313 safest route. 1314 1315 The given arguments are made consistent as though by calling 1316 C<mktime()> before calling your system's C<strftime()> function, 1317 except that the C<isdst> value is not affected. 1318 1319 The string for Tuesday, December 12, 1995. 1320 1321 $str = POSIX::strftime( "%A, %B %d, %Y", 0, 0, 0, 12, 11, 95, 2 ); 1322 print "$str\n"; 1323 1324 =item strlen 1325 1326 strlen() is C-specific, use C<length()> instead, see L<perlfunc/length>. 1327 1328 =item strncat 1329 1330 strncat() is C-specific, use C<.=> instead, see L<perlop>. 1331 1332 =item strncmp 1333 1334 strncmp() is C-specific, use C<eq> instead, see L<perlop>. 1335 1336 =item strncpy 1337 1338 strncpy() is C-specific, use C<=> instead, see L<perlop>. 1339 1340 =item strpbrk 1341 1342 strpbrk() is C-specific, use regular expressions instead, 1343 see L<perlre>. 1344 1345 =item strrchr 1346 1347 strrchr() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/rindex> instead. 1348 1349 =item strspn 1350 1351 strspn() is C-specific, use regular expressions instead, 1352 see L<perlre>. 1353 1354 =item strstr 1355 1356 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<index()> function, 1357 see L<perlfunc/index>. 1358 1359 =item strtod 1360 1361 String to double translation. Returns the parsed number and the number 1362 of characters in the unparsed portion of the string. Truly 1363 POSIX-compliant systems set $! ($ERRNO) to indicate a translation 1364 error, so clear $! before calling strtod. However, non-POSIX systems 1365 may not check for overflow, and therefore will never set $!. 1366 1367 strtod should respect any POSIX I<setlocale()> settings. 1368 1369 To parse a string $str as a floating point number use 1370 1371 $! = 0; 1372 ($num, $n_unparsed) = POSIX::strtod($str); 1373 1374 The second returned item and $! can be used to check for valid input: 1375 1376 if (($str eq '') || ($n_unparsed != 0) || $!) { 1377 die "Non-numeric input $str" . ($! ? ": $!\n" : "\n"); 1378 } 1379 1380 When called in a scalar context strtod returns the parsed number. 1381 1382 =item strtok 1383 1384 strtok() is C-specific, use regular expressions instead, see 1385 L<perlre>, or L<perlfunc/split>. 1386 1387 =item strtol 1388 1389 String to (long) integer translation. Returns the parsed number and 1390 the number of characters in the unparsed portion of the string. Truly 1391 POSIX-compliant systems set $! ($ERRNO) to indicate a translation 1392 error, so clear $! before calling strtol. However, non-POSIX systems 1393 may not check for overflow, and therefore will never set $!. 1394 1395 strtol should respect any POSIX I<setlocale()> settings. 1396 1397 To parse a string $str as a number in some base $base use 1398 1399 $! = 0; 1400 ($num, $n_unparsed) = POSIX::strtol($str, $base); 1401 1402 The base should be zero or between 2 and 36, inclusive. When the base 1403 is zero or omitted strtol will use the string itself to determine the 1404 base: a leading "0x" or "0X" means hexadecimal; a leading "0" means 1405 octal; any other leading characters mean decimal. Thus, "1234" is 1406 parsed as a decimal number, "01234" as an octal number, and "0x1234" 1407 as a hexadecimal number. 1408 1409 The second returned item and $! can be used to check for valid input: 1410 1411 if (($str eq '') || ($n_unparsed != 0) || !$!) { 1412 die "Non-numeric input $str" . $! ? ": $!\n" : "\n"; 1413 } 1414 1415 When called in a scalar context strtol returns the parsed number. 1416 1417 =item strtoul 1418 1419 String to unsigned (long) integer translation. strtoul() is identical 1420 to strtol() except that strtoul() only parses unsigned integers. See 1421 L</strtol> for details. 1422 1423 Note: Some vendors supply strtod() and strtol() but not strtoul(). 1424 Other vendors that do supply strtoul() parse "-1" as a valid value. 1425 1426 =item strxfrm 1427 1428 String transformation. Returns the transformed string. 1429 1430 $dst = POSIX::strxfrm( $src ); 1431 1432 Used in conjunction with the C<strcoll()> function, see L</strcoll>. 1433 1434 Not really needed since Perl can do this transparently, see 1435 L<perllocale>. 1436 1437 =item sysconf 1438 1439 Retrieves values of system configurable variables. 1440 1441 The following will get the machine's clock speed. 1442 1443 $clock_ticks = POSIX::sysconf( &POSIX::_SC_CLK_TCK ); 1444 1445 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1446 1447 =item system 1448 1449 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<system()> function, see 1450 L<perlfunc/system>. 1451 1452 =item tan 1453 1454 This is identical to the C function C<tan()>, returning the 1455 tangent of the numerical argument. See also L<Math::Trig>. 1456 1457 =item tanh 1458 1459 This is identical to the C function C<tanh()>, returning the 1460 hyperbolic tangent of the numerical argument. See also L<Math::Trig>. 1461 1462 =item tcdrain 1463 1464 This is similar to the C function C<tcdrain()> for draining 1465 the output queue of its argument stream. 1466 1467 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1468 1469 =item tcflow 1470 1471 This is similar to the C function C<tcflow()> for controlling 1472 the flow of its argument stream. 1473 1474 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1475 1476 =item tcflush 1477 1478 This is similar to the C function C<tcflush()> for flushing 1479 the I/O buffers of its argument stream. 1480 1481 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1482 1483 =item tcgetpgrp 1484 1485 This is identical to the C function C<tcgetpgrp()> for returning the 1486 process group identifier of the foreground process group of the controlling 1487 terminal. 1488 1489 =item tcsendbreak 1490 1491 This is similar to the C function C<tcsendbreak()> for sending 1492 a break on its argument stream. 1493 1494 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1495 1496 =item tcsetpgrp 1497 1498 This is similar to the C function C<tcsetpgrp()> for setting the 1499 process group identifier of the foreground process group of the controlling 1500 terminal. 1501 1502 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1503 1504 =item time 1505 1506 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<time()> function 1507 for returning the number of seconds since the epoch 1508 (whatever it is for the system), see L<perlfunc/time>. 1509 1510 =item times 1511 1512 The times() function returns elapsed realtime since some point in the past 1513 (such as system startup), user and system times for this process, and user 1514 and system times used by child processes. All times are returned in clock 1515 ticks. 1516 1517 ($realtime, $user, $system, $cuser, $csystem) = POSIX::times(); 1518 1519 Note: Perl's builtin C<times()> function returns four values, measured in 1520 seconds. 1521 1522 =item tmpfile 1523 1524 Use method C<IO::File::new_tmpfile()> instead, or see L<File::Temp>. 1525 1526 =item tmpnam 1527 1528 Returns a name for a temporary file. 1529 1530 $tmpfile = POSIX::tmpnam(); 1531 1532 For security reasons, which are probably detailed in your system's 1533 documentation for the C library tmpnam() function, this interface 1534 should not be used; instead see L<File::Temp>. 1535 1536 =item tolower 1537 1538 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to a single 1539 character or to a whole string. Consider using the C<lc()> function, 1540 see L<perlfunc/lc>, or the equivalent C<\L> operator inside doublequotish 1541 strings. 1542 1543 =item toupper 1544 1545 This is identical to the C function, except that it can apply to a single 1546 character or to a whole string. Consider using the C<uc()> function, 1547 see L<perlfunc/uc>, or the equivalent C<\U> operator inside doublequotish 1548 strings. 1549 1550 =item ttyname 1551 1552 This is identical to the C function C<ttyname()> for returning the 1553 name of the current terminal. 1554 1555 =item tzname 1556 1557 Retrieves the time conversion information from the C<tzname> variable. 1558 1559 POSIX::tzset(); 1560 ($std, $dst) = POSIX::tzname(); 1561 1562 =item tzset 1563 1564 This is identical to the C function C<tzset()> for setting 1565 the current timezone based on the environment variable C<TZ>, 1566 to be used by C<ctime()>, C<localtime()>, C<mktime()>, and C<strftime()> 1567 functions. 1568 1569 =item umask 1570 1571 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<umask()> function 1572 for setting (and querying) the file creation permission mask, 1573 see L<perlfunc/umask>. 1574 1575 =item uname 1576 1577 Get name of current operating system. 1578 1579 ($sysname, $nodename, $release, $version, $machine) = POSIX::uname(); 1580 1581 Note that the actual meanings of the various fields are not 1582 that well standardized, do not expect any great portability. 1583 The C<$sysname> might be the name of the operating system, 1584 the C<$nodename> might be the name of the host, the C<$release> 1585 might be the (major) release number of the operating system, 1586 the C<$version> might be the (minor) release number of the 1587 operating system, and the C<$machine> might be a hardware identifier. 1588 Maybe. 1589 1590 =item ungetc 1591 1592 Use method C<IO::Handle::ungetc()> instead. 1593 1594 =item unlink 1595 1596 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<unlink()> function 1597 for removing files, see L<perlfunc/unlink>. 1598 1599 =item utime 1600 1601 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<utime()> function 1602 for changing the time stamps of files and directories, 1603 see L<perlfunc/utime>. 1604 1605 =item vfprintf 1606 1607 vfprintf() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/printf> instead. 1608 1609 =item vprintf 1610 1611 vprintf() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/printf> instead. 1612 1613 =item vsprintf 1614 1615 vsprintf() is C-specific, see L<perlfunc/sprintf> instead. 1616 1617 =item wait 1618 1619 This is identical to Perl's builtin C<wait()> function, 1620 see L<perlfunc/wait>. 1621 1622 =item waitpid 1623 1624 Wait for a child process to change state. This is identical to Perl's 1625 builtin C<waitpid()> function, see L<perlfunc/waitpid>. 1626 1627 $pid = POSIX::waitpid( -1, POSIX::WNOHANG ); 1628 print "status = ", ($? / 256), "\n"; 1629 1630 =item wcstombs 1631 1632 This is identical to the C function C<wcstombs()>. 1633 Perl does not have any support for the wide and multibyte 1634 characters of the C standards, so this might be a rather 1635 useless function. 1636 1637 =item wctomb 1638 1639 This is identical to the C function C<wctomb()>. 1640 Perl does not have any support for the wide and multibyte 1641 characters of the C standards, so this might be a rather 1642 useless function. 1643 1644 =item write 1645 1646 Write to a file. This uses file descriptors such as those obtained by 1647 calling C<POSIX::open>. 1648 1649 $fd = POSIX::open( "foo", &POSIX::O_WRONLY ); 1650 $buf = "hello"; 1651 $bytes = POSIX::write( $b, $buf, 5 ); 1652 1653 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1654 1655 See also L<perlfunc/syswrite>. 1656 1657 =back 1658 1659 =head1 CLASSES 1660 1661 =head2 POSIX::SigAction 1662 1663 =over 8 1664 1665 =item new 1666 1667 Creates a new C<POSIX::SigAction> object which corresponds to the C 1668 C<struct sigaction>. This object will be destroyed automatically when 1669 it is no longer needed. The first parameter is the handler, a sub 1670 reference. The second parameter is a C<POSIX::SigSet> object, it 1671 defaults to the empty set. The third parameter contains the 1672 C<sa_flags>, it defaults to 0. 1673 1674 $sigset = POSIX::SigSet->new(SIGINT, SIGQUIT); 1675 $sigaction = POSIX::SigAction->new( \&handler, $sigset, &POSIX::SA_NOCLDSTOP ); 1676 1677 This C<POSIX::SigAction> object is intended for use with the C<POSIX::sigaction()> 1678 function. 1679 1680 =back 1681 1682 =over 8 1683 1684 =item handler 1685 1686 =item mask 1687 1688 =item flags 1689 1690 accessor functions to get/set the values of a SigAction object. 1691 1692 $sigset = $sigaction->mask; 1693 $sigaction->flags(&POSIX::SA_RESTART); 1694 1695 =item safe 1696 1697 accessor function for the "safe signals" flag of a SigAction object; see 1698 L<perlipc> for general information on safe (a.k.a. "deferred") signals. If 1699 you wish to handle a signal safely, use this accessor to set the "safe" flag 1700 in the C<POSIX::SigAction> object: 1701 1702 $sigaction->safe(1); 1703 1704 You may also examine the "safe" flag on the output action object which is 1705 filled in when given as the third parameter to C<POSIX::sigaction()>: 1706 1707 sigaction(SIGINT, $new_action, $old_action); 1708 if ($old_action->safe) { 1709 # previous SIGINT handler used safe signals 1710 } 1711 1712 =back 1713 1714 =head2 POSIX::SigRt 1715 1716 =over 8 1717 1718 =item %SIGRT 1719 1720 A hash of the POSIX realtime signal handlers. It is an extension of 1721 the standard %SIG, the $POSIX::SIGRT{SIGRTMIN} is roughly equivalent 1722 to $SIG{SIGRTMIN}, but the right POSIX moves (see below) are made with 1723 the POSIX::SigSet and POSIX::sigaction instead of accessing the %SIG. 1724 1725 You can set the %POSIX::SIGRT elements to set the POSIX realtime 1726 signal handlers, use C<delete> and C<exists> on the elements, and use 1727 C<scalar> on the C<%POSIX::SIGRT> to find out how many POSIX realtime 1728 signals there are available (SIGRTMAX - SIGRTMIN + 1, the SIGRTMAX is 1729 a valid POSIX realtime signal). 1730 1731 Setting the %SIGRT elements is equivalent to calling this: 1732 1733 sub new { 1734 my ($rtsig, $handler, $flags) = @_; 1735 my $sigset = POSIX:SigSet($rtsig); 1736 my $sigact = POSIX::SigAction->new($handler, $sigset, $flags); 1737 sigaction($rtsig, $sigact); 1738 } 1739 1740 The flags default to zero, if you want something different you can 1741 either use C<local> on $POSIX::RtSig::SIGACTION_FLAGS, or you can 1742 derive from POSIX::SigRt and define your own C<new()> (the tied hash 1743 STORE method of the %SIGRT calls C<new($rtsig, $handler, $SIGACTION_FLAGS)>, 1744 where the $rtsig ranges from zero to SIGRTMAX - SIGRTMIN + 1). 1745 1746 Just as with any signal, you can use sigaction($rtsig, undef, $oa) to 1747 retrieve the installed signal handler (or, rather, the signal action). 1748 1749 B<NOTE:> whether POSIX realtime signals really work in your system, or 1750 whether Perl has been compiled so that it works with them, is outside 1751 of this discussion. 1752 1753 =item SIGRTMIN 1754 1755 Return the minimum POSIX realtime signal number available, or C<undef> 1756 if no POSIX realtime signals are available. 1757 1758 =item SIGRTMAX 1759 1760 Return the maximum POSIX realtime signal number available, or C<undef> 1761 if no POSIX realtime signals are available. 1762 1763 =back 1764 1765 =head2 POSIX::SigSet 1766 1767 =over 8 1768 1769 =item new 1770 1771 Create a new SigSet object. This object will be destroyed automatically 1772 when it is no longer needed. Arguments may be supplied to initialize the 1773 set. 1774 1775 Create an empty set. 1776 1777 $sigset = POSIX::SigSet->new; 1778 1779 Create a set with SIGUSR1. 1780 1781 $sigset = POSIX::SigSet->new( &POSIX::SIGUSR1 ); 1782 1783 =item addset 1784 1785 Add a signal to a SigSet object. 1786 1787 $sigset->addset( &POSIX::SIGUSR2 ); 1788 1789 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1790 1791 =item delset 1792 1793 Remove a signal from the SigSet object. 1794 1795 $sigset->delset( &POSIX::SIGUSR2 ); 1796 1797 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1798 1799 =item emptyset 1800 1801 Initialize the SigSet object to be empty. 1802 1803 $sigset->emptyset(); 1804 1805 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1806 1807 =item fillset 1808 1809 Initialize the SigSet object to include all signals. 1810 1811 $sigset->fillset(); 1812 1813 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1814 1815 =item ismember 1816 1817 Tests the SigSet object to see if it contains a specific signal. 1818 1819 if( $sigset->ismember( &POSIX::SIGUSR1 ) ){ 1820 print "contains SIGUSR1\n"; 1821 } 1822 1823 =back 1824 1825 =head2 POSIX::Termios 1826 1827 =over 8 1828 1829 =item new 1830 1831 Create a new Termios object. This object will be destroyed automatically 1832 when it is no longer needed. A Termios object corresponds to the termios 1833 C struct. new() mallocs a new one, getattr() fills it from a file descriptor, 1834 and setattr() sets a file descriptor's parameters to match Termios' contents. 1835 1836 $termios = POSIX::Termios->new; 1837 1838 =item getattr 1839 1840 Get terminal control attributes. 1841 1842 Obtain the attributes for stdin. 1843 1844 $termios->getattr( 0 ) # Recommended for clarity. 1845 $termios->getattr() 1846 1847 Obtain the attributes for stdout. 1848 1849 $termios->getattr( 1 ) 1850 1851 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1852 1853 =item getcc 1854 1855 Retrieve a value from the c_cc field of a termios object. The c_cc field is 1856 an array so an index must be specified. 1857 1858 $c_cc[1] = $termios->getcc(1); 1859 1860 =item getcflag 1861 1862 Retrieve the c_cflag field of a termios object. 1863 1864 $c_cflag = $termios->getcflag; 1865 1866 =item getiflag 1867 1868 Retrieve the c_iflag field of a termios object. 1869 1870 $c_iflag = $termios->getiflag; 1871 1872 =item getispeed 1873 1874 Retrieve the input baud rate. 1875 1876 $ispeed = $termios->getispeed; 1877 1878 =item getlflag 1879 1880 Retrieve the c_lflag field of a termios object. 1881 1882 $c_lflag = $termios->getlflag; 1883 1884 =item getoflag 1885 1886 Retrieve the c_oflag field of a termios object. 1887 1888 $c_oflag = $termios->getoflag; 1889 1890 =item getospeed 1891 1892 Retrieve the output baud rate. 1893 1894 $ospeed = $termios->getospeed; 1895 1896 =item setattr 1897 1898 Set terminal control attributes. 1899 1900 Set attributes immediately for stdout. 1901 1902 $termios->setattr( 1, &POSIX::TCSANOW ); 1903 1904 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1905 1906 =item setcc 1907 1908 Set a value in the c_cc field of a termios object. The c_cc field is an 1909 array so an index must be specified. 1910 1911 $termios->setcc( &POSIX::VEOF, 1 ); 1912 1913 =item setcflag 1914 1915 Set the c_cflag field of a termios object. 1916 1917 $termios->setcflag( $c_cflag | &POSIX::CLOCAL ); 1918 1919 =item setiflag 1920 1921 Set the c_iflag field of a termios object. 1922 1923 $termios->setiflag( $c_iflag | &POSIX::BRKINT ); 1924 1925 =item setispeed 1926 1927 Set the input baud rate. 1928 1929 $termios->setispeed( &POSIX::B9600 ); 1930 1931 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1932 1933 =item setlflag 1934 1935 Set the c_lflag field of a termios object. 1936 1937 $termios->setlflag( $c_lflag | &POSIX::ECHO ); 1938 1939 =item setoflag 1940 1941 Set the c_oflag field of a termios object. 1942 1943 $termios->setoflag( $c_oflag | &POSIX::OPOST ); 1944 1945 =item setospeed 1946 1947 Set the output baud rate. 1948 1949 $termios->setospeed( &POSIX::B9600 ); 1950 1951 Returns C<undef> on failure. 1952 1953 =item Baud rate values 1954 1955 B38400 B75 B200 B134 B300 B1800 B150 B0 B19200 B1200 B9600 B600 B4800 B50 B2400 B110 1956 1957 =item Terminal interface values 1958 1959 TCSADRAIN TCSANOW TCOON TCIOFLUSH TCOFLUSH TCION TCIFLUSH TCSAFLUSH TCIOFF TCOOFF 1960 1961 =item c_cc field values 1962 1963 VEOF VEOL VERASE VINTR VKILL VQUIT VSUSP VSTART VSTOP VMIN VTIME NCCS 1964 1965 =item c_cflag field values 1966 1967 CLOCAL CREAD CSIZE CS5 CS6 CS7 CS8 CSTOPB HUPCL PARENB PARODD 1968 1969 =item c_iflag field values 1970 1971 BRKINT ICRNL IGNBRK IGNCR IGNPAR INLCR INPCK ISTRIP IXOFF IXON PARMRK 1972 1973 =item c_lflag field values 1974 1975 ECHO ECHOE ECHOK ECHONL ICANON IEXTEN ISIG NOFLSH TOSTOP 1976 1977 =item c_oflag field values 1978 1979 OPOST 1980 1981 =back 1982 1983 =head1 PATHNAME CONSTANTS 1984 1985 =over 8 1986 1987 =item Constants 1988 1989 _PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED _PC_LINK_MAX _PC_MAX_CANON _PC_MAX_INPUT _PC_NAME_MAX _PC_NO_TRUNC _PC_PATH_MAX _PC_PIPE_BUF _PC_VDISABLE 1990 1991 =back 1992 1993 =head1 POSIX CONSTANTS 1994 1995 =over 8 1996 1997 =item Constants 1998 1999 _POSIX_ARG_MAX _POSIX_CHILD_MAX _POSIX_CHOWN_RESTRICTED _POSIX_JOB_CONTROL _POSIX_LINK_MAX _POSIX_MAX_CANON _POSIX_MAX_INPUT _POSIX_NAME_MAX _POSIX_NGROUPS_MAX _POSIX_NO_TRUNC _POSIX_OPEN_MAX _POSIX_PATH_MAX _POSIX_PIPE_BUF _POSIX_SAVED_IDS _POSIX_SSIZE_MAX _POSIX_STREAM_MAX _POSIX_TZNAME_MAX _POSIX_VDISABLE _POSIX_VERSION 2000 2001 =back 2002 2003 =head1 SYSTEM CONFIGURATION 2004 2005 =over 8 2006 2007 =item Constants 2008 2009 _SC_ARG_MAX _SC_CHILD_MAX _SC_CLK_TCK _SC_JOB_CONTROL _SC_NGROUPS_MAX _SC_OPEN_MAX _SC_PAGESIZE _SC_SAVED_IDS _SC_STREAM_MAX _SC_TZNAME_MAX _SC_VERSION 2010 2011 =back 2012 2013 =head1 ERRNO 2014 2015 =over 8 2016 2017 =item Constants 2018 2019 E2BIG EACCES EADDRINUSE EADDRNOTAVAIL EAFNOSUPPORT EAGAIN EALREADY EBADF 2020 EBUSY ECHILD ECONNABORTED ECONNREFUSED ECONNRESET EDEADLK EDESTADDRREQ 2021 EDOM EDQUOT EEXIST EFAULT EFBIG EHOSTDOWN EHOSTUNREACH EINPROGRESS EINTR 2022 EINVAL EIO EISCONN EISDIR ELOOP EMFILE EMLINK EMSGSIZE ENAMETOOLONG 2023 ENETDOWN ENETRESET ENETUNREACH ENFILE ENOBUFS ENODEV ENOENT ENOEXEC 2024 ENOLCK ENOMEM ENOPROTOOPT ENOSPC ENOSYS ENOTBLK ENOTCONN ENOTDIR 2025 ENOTEMPTY ENOTSOCK ENOTTY ENXIO EOPNOTSUPP EPERM EPFNOSUPPORT EPIPE 2026 EPROCLIM EPROTONOSUPPORT EPROTOTYPE ERANGE EREMOTE ERESTART EROFS 2027 ESHUTDOWN ESOCKTNOSUPPORT ESPIPE ESRCH ESTALE ETIMEDOUT ETOOMANYREFS 2028 ETXTBSY EUSERS EWOULDBLOCK EXDEV 2029 2030 =back 2031 2032 =head1 FCNTL 2033 2034 =over 8 2035 2036 =item Constants 2037 2038 FD_CLOEXEC F_DUPFD F_GETFD F_GETFL F_GETLK F_OK F_RDLCK F_SETFD F_SETFL F_SETLK F_SETLKW F_UNLCK F_WRLCK O_ACCMODE O_APPEND O_CREAT O_EXCL O_NOCTTY O_NONBLOCK O_RDONLY O_RDWR O_TRUNC O_WRONLY 2039 2040 =back 2041 2042 =head1 FLOAT 2043 2044 =over 8 2045 2046 =item Constants 2047 2048 DBL_DIG DBL_EPSILON DBL_MANT_DIG DBL_MAX DBL_MAX_10_EXP DBL_MAX_EXP DBL_MIN DBL_MIN_10_EXP DBL_MIN_EXP FLT_DIG FLT_EPSILON FLT_MANT_DIG FLT_MAX FLT_MAX_10_EXP FLT_MAX_EXP FLT_MIN FLT_MIN_10_EXP FLT_MIN_EXP FLT_RADIX FLT_ROUNDS LDBL_DIG LDBL_EPSILON LDBL_MANT_DIG LDBL_MAX LDBL_MAX_10_EXP LDBL_MAX_EXP LDBL_MIN LDBL_MIN_10_EXP LDBL_MIN_EXP 2049 2050 =back 2051 2052 =head1 LIMITS 2053 2054 =over 8 2055 2056 =item Constants 2057 2058 ARG_MAX CHAR_BIT CHAR_MAX CHAR_MIN CHILD_MAX INT_MAX INT_MIN LINK_MAX LONG_MAX LONG_MIN MAX_CANON MAX_INPUT MB_LEN_MAX NAME_MAX NGROUPS_MAX OPEN_MAX PATH_MAX PIPE_BUF SCHAR_MAX SCHAR_MIN SHRT_MAX SHRT_MIN SSIZE_MAX STREAM_MAX TZNAME_MAX UCHAR_MAX UINT_MAX ULONG_MAX USHRT_MAX 2059 2060 =back 2061 2062 =head1 LOCALE 2063 2064 =over 8 2065 2066 =item Constants 2067 2068 LC_ALL LC_COLLATE LC_CTYPE LC_MONETARY LC_NUMERIC LC_TIME 2069 2070 =back 2071 2072 =head1 MATH 2073 2074 =over 8 2075 2076 =item Constants 2077 2078 HUGE_VAL 2079 2080 =back 2081 2082 =head1 SIGNAL 2083 2084 =over 8 2085 2086 =item Constants 2087 2088 SA_NOCLDSTOP SA_NOCLDWAIT SA_NODEFER SA_ONSTACK SA_RESETHAND SA_RESTART 2089 SA_SIGINFO SIGABRT SIGALRM SIGCHLD SIGCONT SIGFPE SIGHUP SIGILL SIGINT 2090 SIGKILL SIGPIPE SIGQUIT SIGSEGV SIGSTOP SIGTERM SIGTSTP SIGTTIN SIGTTOU 2091 SIGUSR1 SIGUSR2 SIG_BLOCK SIG_DFL SIG_ERR SIG_IGN SIG_SETMASK 2092 SIG_UNBLOCK 2093 2094 =back 2095 2096 =head1 STAT 2097 2098 =over 8 2099 2100 =item Constants 2101 2102 S_IRGRP S_IROTH S_IRUSR S_IRWXG S_IRWXO S_IRWXU S_ISGID S_ISUID S_IWGRP S_IWOTH S_IWUSR S_IXGRP S_IXOTH S_IXUSR 2103 2104 =item Macros 2105 2106 S_ISBLK S_ISCHR S_ISDIR S_ISFIFO S_ISREG 2107 2108 =back 2109 2110 =head1 STDLIB 2111 2112 =over 8 2113 2114 =item Constants 2115 2116 EXIT_FAILURE EXIT_SUCCESS MB_CUR_MAX RAND_MAX 2117 2118 =back 2119 2120 =head1 STDIO 2121 2122 =over 8 2123 2124 =item Constants 2125 2126 BUFSIZ EOF FILENAME_MAX L_ctermid L_cuserid L_tmpname TMP_MAX 2127 2128 =back 2129 2130 =head1 TIME 2131 2132 =over 8 2133 2134 =item Constants 2135 2136 CLK_TCK CLOCKS_PER_SEC 2137 2138 =back 2139 2140 =head1 UNISTD 2141 2142 =over 8 2143 2144 =item Constants 2145 2146 R_OK SEEK_CUR SEEK_END SEEK_SET STDIN_FILENO STDOUT_FILENO STDERR_FILENO W_OK X_OK 2147 2148 =back 2149 2150 =head1 WAIT 2151 2152 =over 8 2153 2154 =item Constants 2155 2156 WNOHANG WUNTRACED 2157 2158 =over 16 2159 2160 =item WNOHANG 2161 2162 Do not suspend the calling process until a child process 2163 changes state but instead return immediately. 2164 2165 =item WUNTRACED 2166 2167 Catch stopped child processes. 2168 2169 =back 2170 2171 =item Macros 2172 2173 WIFEXITED WEXITSTATUS WIFSIGNALED WTERMSIG WIFSTOPPED WSTOPSIG 2174 2175 =over 16 2176 2177 =item WIFEXITED 2178 2179 WIFEXITED($?) returns true if the child process exited normally 2180 (C<exit()> or by falling off the end of C<main()>) 2181 2182 =item WEXITSTATUS 2183 2184 WEXITSTATUS($?) returns the normal exit status of the child process 2185 (only meaningful if WIFEXITED($?) is true) 2186 2187 =item WIFSIGNALED 2188 2189 WIFSIGNALED($?) returns true if the child process terminated because 2190 of a signal 2191 2192 =item WTERMSIG 2193 2194 WTERMSIG($?) returns the signal the child process terminated for 2195 (only meaningful if WIFSIGNALED($?) is true) 2196 2197 =item WIFSTOPPED 2198 2199 WIFSTOPPED($?) returns true if the child process is currently stopped 2200 (can happen only if you specified the WUNTRACED flag to waitpid()) 2201 2202 =item WSTOPSIG 2203 2204 WSTOPSIG($?) returns the signal the child process was stopped for 2205 (only meaningful if WIFSTOPPED($?) is true) 2206 2207 =back 2208 2209 =back 2210
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