b374k
m1n1 1.01
Apache/2.2.15 (CentOS)
Linux obd60-6c49958d75-2q7cw 5.4.0-174-generic #193-Ubuntu SMP Thu Mar 7 14:29:28 UTC 2024 x86_64
uid=48(apache) gid=48(apache) groups=48(apache)
server ip : 104.21.65.202 | your ip : 10.244.126.0
safemode OFF
 >  / usr / lib64 / perl5 / PerlIO /
Filename/usr/lib64/perl5/PerlIO/scalar.pm
Size973
Permissionrw-r--r--
Ownerapache
Create time23-Dec-2025 17:41
Last modified22-Mar-2017 16:32
Last accessed22-Apr-2026 06:09
Actionsedit | rename | delete | download (gzip)
Viewtext | code | image
package PerlIO::scalar;
our $VERSION = '0.07';
use XSLoader ();
XSLoader::load 'PerlIO::scalar';
1;
__END__

=head1 NAME

PerlIO::scalar - in-memory IO, scalar IO

=head1 SYNOPSIS

my $scalar = '';
...
open my $fh, "<", \$scalar or die;
open my $fh, ">", \$scalar or die;
open my $fh, ">>", \$scalar or die;

or

my $scalar = '';
...
open my $fh, "<:scalar", \$scalar or die;
open my $fh, ">:scalar", \$scalar or die;
open my $fh, ">>:scalar", \$scalar or die;

=head1 DESCRIPTION

A filehandle is opened but the file operations are performed "in-memory"
on a scalar variable. All the normal file operations can be performed
on the handle. The scalar is considered a stream of bytes. Currently
fileno($fh) returns -1.

=head1 IMPLEMENTATION NOTE

C<PerlIO::scalar> only exists to use XSLoader to load C code that
provides support for treating a scalar as an "in memory" file.
One does not need to explicitly C<use PerlIO::scalar>.

=cut