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- =head1 NAME
-
- perldbmfilter - Perl DBM Filters
-
- =head1 SYNOPSIS
-
- $db = tie %hash, 'DBM', ...
-
- $old_filter = $db->filter_store_key ( sub { ... } ) ;
- $old_filter = $db->filter_store_value( sub { ... } ) ;
- $old_filter = $db->filter_fetch_key ( sub { ... } ) ;
- $old_filter = $db->filter_fetch_value( sub { ... } ) ;
-
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
-
- The four C<filter_*> methods shown above are available in all the DBM
- modules that ship with Perl, namely DB_File, GDBM_File, NDBM_File,
- ODBM_File and SDBM_File.
-
- Each of the methods work identically, and are used to install (or
- uninstall) a single DBM Filter. The only difference between them is the
- place that the filter is installed.
-
- To summarise:
-
- =over 5
-
- =item B<filter_store_key>
-
- If a filter has been installed with this method, it will be invoked
- every time you write a key to a DBM database.
-
- =item B<filter_store_value>
-
- If a filter has been installed with this method, it will be invoked
- every time you write a value to a DBM database.
-
-
- =item B<filter_fetch_key>
-
- If a filter has been installed with this method, it will be invoked
- every time you read a key from a DBM database.
-
- =item B<filter_fetch_value>
-
- If a filter has been installed with this method, it will be invoked
- every time you read a value from a DBM database.
-
- =back
-
- You can use any combination of the methods from none to all four.
-
- All filter methods return the existing filter, if present, or C<undef>
- in not.
-
- To delete a filter pass C<undef> to it.
-
- =head2 The Filter
-
- When each filter is called by Perl, a local copy of C<$_> will contain
- the key or value to be filtered. Filtering is achieved by modifying
- the contents of C<$_>. The return code from the filter is ignored.
-
- =head2 An Example -- the NULL termination problem.
-
- DBM Filters are useful for a class of problems where you I<always>
- want to make the same transformation to all keys, all values or both.
-
- For example, consider the following scenario. You have a DBM database
- that you need to share with a third-party C application. The C application
- assumes that I<all> keys and values are NULL terminated. Unfortunately
- when Perl writes to DBM databases it doesn't use NULL termination, so
- your Perl application will have to manage NULL termination itself. When
- you write to the database you will have to use something like this:
-
- $hash{"$key\0"} = "$value\0" ;
-
- Similarly the NULL needs to be taken into account when you are considering
- the length of existing keys/values.
-
- It would be much better if you could ignore the NULL terminations issue
- in the main application code and have a mechanism that automatically
- added the terminating NULL to all keys and values whenever you write to
- the database and have them removed when you read from the database. As I'm
- sure you have already guessed, this is a problem that DBM Filters can
- fix very easily.
-
- use strict ;
- use warnings ;
- use SDBM_File ;
- use Fcntl ;
-
- my %hash ;
- my $filename = "/tmp/filt" ;
- unlink $filename ;
-
- my $db = tie(%hash, 'SDBM_File', $filename, O_RDWR|O_CREAT, 0640)
- or die "Cannot open $filename: $!\n" ;
-
- # Install DBM Filters
- $db->filter_fetch_key ( sub { s/\0$// } ) ;
- $db->filter_store_key ( sub { $_ .= "\0" } ) ;
- $db->filter_fetch_value(
- sub { no warnings 'uninitialized' ;s/\0$// } ) ;
- $db->filter_store_value( sub { $_ .= "\0" } ) ;
-
- $hash{"abc"} = "def" ;
- my $a = $hash{"ABC"} ;
- # ...
- undef $db ;
- untie %hash ;
-
- The code above uses SDBM_File, but it will work with any of the DBM
- modules.
-
- Hopefully the contents of each of the filters should be
- self-explanatory. Both "fetch" filters remove the terminating NULL,
- and both "store" filters add a terminating NULL.
-
-
- =head2 Another Example -- Key is a C int.
-
- Here is another real-life example. By default, whenever Perl writes to
- a DBM database it always writes the key and value as strings. So when
- you use this:
-
- $hash{12345} = "soemthing" ;
-
- the key 12345 will get stored in the DBM database as the 5 byte string
- "12345". If you actually want the key to be stored in the DBM database
- as a C int, you will have to use C<pack> when writing, and C<unpack>
- when reading.
-
- Here is a DBM Filter that does it:
-
- use strict ;
- use warnings ;
- use DB_File ;
- my %hash ;
- my $filename = "/tmp/filt" ;
- unlink $filename ;
-
-
- my $db = tie %hash, 'DB_File', $filename, O_CREAT|O_RDWR, 0666, $DB_HASH
- or die "Cannot open $filename: $!\n" ;
-
- $db->filter_fetch_key ( sub { $_ = unpack("i", $_) } ) ;
- $db->filter_store_key ( sub { $_ = pack ("i", $_) } ) ;
- $hash{123} = "def" ;
- # ...
- undef $db ;
- untie %hash ;
-
- The code above uses DB_File, but again it will work with any of the
- DBM modules.
-
- This time only two filters have been used -- we only need to manipulate
- the contents of the key, so it wasn't necessary to install any value
- filters.
-
- =head1 SEE ALSO
-
- L<DB_File>, L<GDBM_File>, L<NDBM_File>, L<ODBM_File> and L<SDBM_File>.
-
- =head1 AUTHOR
-
- Paul Marquess
-
-