- NAME
- SYNOPSIS
- DESCRIPTION
- Functional Interface
- OO Interface
- Methods
- Importing
- EXAMPLES
- SEE ALSO
- AUTHOR
- MODIFICATION HISTORY
- COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
NAME
IO::Uncompress::Gunzip - Read RFC 1952 files/buffers
SYNOPSIS
use IO::Uncompress::Gunzip qw(gunzip $GunzipError) ;
my $status = gunzip $input => $output [,OPTS] or die "gunzip failed: $GunzipError\n";
my $z = new IO::Uncompress::Gunzip $input [OPTS] or die "gunzip failed: $GunzipError\n";
$status = $z->read($buffer) $status = $z->read($buffer, $length) $status = $z->read($buffer, $length, $offset) $line = $z->getline() $char = $z->getc() $char = $z->ungetc() $char = $z->opened()
$status = $z->inflateSync()
$data = $z->trailingData() $status = $z->nextStream() $data = $z->getHeaderInfo() $z->tell() $z->seek($position, $whence) $z->binmode() $z->fileno() $z->eof() $z->close()
$GunzipError ;
# IO::File mode
<$z> read($z, $buffer); read($z, $buffer, $length); read($z, $buffer, $length, $offset); tell($z) seek($z, $position, $whence) binmode($z) fileno($z) eof($z) close($z)
DESCRIPTION
This module provides a Perl interface that allows the reading of files/buffers that conform to RFC 1952.
For writing RFC 1952 files/buffers, see the companion module IO::Compress::Gzip.
Functional Interface
A top-level function, gunzip
, is provided to carry out
"one-shot" uncompression between buffers and/or files. For finer
control over the uncompression process, see the "OO Interface"
section.
use IO::Uncompress::Gunzip qw(gunzip $GunzipError) ;
gunzip $input => $output [,OPTS] or die "gunzip failed: $GunzipError\n";
The functional interface needs Perl5.005 or better.
gunzip $input => $output [, OPTS]
gunzip
expects at least two parameters, $input
and $output
.
The $input
parameter
The parameter, $input
, is used to define the source of
the compressed data.
It can take one of the following forms:
- A filename
If the
$input
parameter is a simple scalar, it is assumed to be a filename. This file will be opened for reading and the input data will be read from it. - A filehandle
If the
$input
parameter is a filehandle, the input data will be read from it. The string '-' can be used as an alias for standard input. - A scalar reference
If
$input
is a scalar reference, the input data will be read from$$input
. - An array reference
If
$input
is an array reference, each element in the array must be a filename.The input data will be read from each file in turn.
The complete array will be walked to ensure that it only contains valid filenames before any data is uncompressed.
- An Input FileGlob string
If
$input
is a string that is delimited by the characters "<" and ">"gunzip
will assume that it is an input fileglob string. The input is the list of files that match the fileglob.If the fileglob does not match any files ...
See File::GlobMapper for more details.
If the $input
parameter is any other type, undef
will be returned.
The $output
parameter
The parameter $output
is used to control the destination of the
uncompressed data. This parameter can take one of these forms.
- A filename
If the
$output
parameter is a simple scalar, it is assumed to be a filename. This file will be opened for writing and the uncompressed data will be written to it. - A filehandle
If the
$output
parameter is a filehandle, the uncompressed data will be written to it. The string '-' can be used as an alias for standard output. - A scalar reference
If
$output
is a scalar reference, the uncompressed data will be stored in$$output
. - An Array Reference
If
$output
is an array reference, the uncompressed data will be pushed onto the array. - An Output FileGlob
If
$output
is a string that is delimited by the characters "<" and ">"gunzip
will assume that it is an output fileglob string. The output is the list of files that match the fileglob.When
$output
is an fileglob string,$input
must also be a fileglob string. Anything else is an error.
If the $output
parameter is any other type, undef
will be returned.
Notes
When $input
maps to multiple compressed files/buffers and $output
is
a single file/buffer, after uncompression $output
will contain a
concatenation of all the uncompressed data from each of the input
files/buffers.
Optional Parameters
Unless specified below, the optional parameters for gunzip
,
OPTS
, are the same as those used with the OO interface defined in the
"Constructor Options" section below.
AutoClose => 0|1
This option applies to any input or output data streams to
gunzip
that are filehandles.If
AutoClose
is specified, and the value is true, it will result in all input and/or output filehandles being closed oncegunzip
has completed.This parameter defaults to 0.
BinModeOut => 0|1
When writing to a file or filehandle, set
binmode
before writing to the file.Defaults to 0.
Append => 0|1
TODO
MultiStream => 0|1
If the input file/buffer contains multiple compressed data streams, this option will uncompress the whole lot as a single data stream.
Defaults to 0.
TrailingData => $scalar
Returns the data, if any, that is present immediately after the compressed data stream once uncompression is complete.
This option can be used when there is useful information immediately following the compressed data stream, and you don't know the length of the compressed data stream.
If the input is a buffer,
trailingData
will return everything from the end of the compressed data stream to the end of the buffer.If the input is a filehandle,
trailingData
will return the data that is left in the filehandle input buffer once the end of the compressed data stream has been reached. You can then use the filehandle to read the rest of the input file.Don't bother using
trailingData
if the input is a filename.If you know the length of the compressed data stream before you start uncompressing, you can avoid having to use
trailingData
by setting theInputLength
option.
Examples
To read the contents of the file file1.txt.gz
and write the
compressed data to the file file1.txt
.
use strict ; use warnings ; use IO::Uncompress::Gunzip qw(gunzip $GunzipError) ;
my $input = "file1.txt.gz"; my $output = "file1.txt"; gunzip $input => $output or die "gunzip failed: $GunzipError\n";
To read from an existing Perl filehandle, $input
, and write the
uncompressed data to a buffer, $buffer
.
use strict ; use warnings ; use IO::Uncompress::Gunzip qw(gunzip $GunzipError) ; use IO::File ;
my $input = new IO::File "<file1.txt.gz" or die "Cannot open 'file1.txt.gz': $!\n" ; my $buffer ; gunzip $input => \$buffer or die "gunzip failed: $GunzipError\n";
To uncompress all files in the directory "/my/home" that match "*.txt.gz" and store the compressed data in the same directory
use strict ; use warnings ; use IO::Uncompress::Gunzip qw(gunzip $GunzipError) ;
gunzip '</my/home/*.txt.gz>' => '</my/home/#1.txt>' or die "gunzip failed: $GunzipError\n";
and if you want to compress each file one at a time, this will do the trick
use strict ; use warnings ; use IO::Uncompress::Gunzip qw(gunzip $GunzipError) ;
for my $input ( glob "/my/home/*.txt.gz" ) { my $output = $input; $output =~ s/.gz// ; gunzip $input => $output or die "Error compressing '$input': $GunzipError\n"; }
OO Interface
Constructor
The format of the constructor for IO::Uncompress::Gunzip is shown below
my $z = new IO::Uncompress::Gunzip $input [OPTS] or die "IO::Uncompress::Gunzip failed: $GunzipError\n";
Returns an IO::Uncompress::Gunzip
object on success and undef on failure.
The variable $GunzipError
will contain an error message on failure.
If you are running Perl 5.005 or better the object, $z
, returned from
IO::Uncompress::Gunzip can be used exactly like an IO::File filehandle.
This means that all normal input file operations can be carried out with
$z
. For example, to read a line from a compressed file/buffer you can
use either of these forms
$line = $z->getline(); $line = <$z>;
The mandatory parameter $input
is used to determine the source of the
compressed data. This parameter can take one of three forms.
- A filename
If the
$input
parameter is a scalar, it is assumed to be a filename. This file will be opened for reading and the compressed data will be read from it. - A filehandle
If the
$input
parameter is a filehandle, the compressed data will be read from it. The string '-' can be used as an alias for standard input. - A scalar reference
If
$input
is a scalar reference, the compressed data will be read from$$output
.
Constructor Options
The option names defined below are case insensitive and can be optionally prefixed by a '-'. So all of the following are valid
-AutoClose -autoclose AUTOCLOSE autoclose
OPTS is a combination of the following options:
AutoClose => 0|1
This option is only valid when the
$input
parameter is a filehandle. If specified, and the value is true, it will result in the file being closed once either theclose
method is called or the IO::Uncompress::Gunzip object is destroyed.This parameter defaults to 0.
MultiStream => 0|1
Allows multiple concatenated compressed streams to be treated as a single compressed stream. Decompression will stop once either the end of the file/buffer is reached, an error is encountered (premature eof, corrupt compressed data) or the end of a stream is not immediately followed by the start of another stream.
This parameter defaults to 0.
Prime => $string
This option will uncompress the contents of
$string
before processing the input file/buffer.This option can be useful when the compressed data is embedded in another file/data structure and it is not possible to work out where the compressed data begins without having to read the first few bytes. If this is the case, the uncompression can be primed with these bytes using this option.
Transparent => 0|1
If this option is set and the input file/buffer is not compressed data, the module will allow reading of it anyway.
In addition, if the input file/buffer does contain compressed data and there is non-compressed data immediately following it, setting this option will make this module treat the whole file/bufffer as a single data stream.
This option defaults to 1.
BlockSize => $num
When reading the compressed input data, IO::Uncompress::Gunzip will read it in blocks of
$num
bytes.This option defaults to 4096.
InputLength => $size
When present this option will limit the number of compressed bytes read from the input file/buffer to
$size
. This option can be used in the situation where there is useful data directly after the compressed data stream and you know beforehand the exact length of the compressed data stream.This option is mostly used when reading from a filehandle, in which case the file pointer will be left pointing to the first byte directly after the compressed data stream.
This option defaults to off.
Append => 0|1
This option controls what the
read
method does with uncompressed data.If set to 1, all uncompressed data will be appended to the output parameter of the
read
method.If set to 0, the contents of the output parameter of the
read
method will be overwritten by the uncompressed data.Defaults to 0.
Strict => 0|1
This option controls whether the extra checks defined below are used when carrying out the decompression. When Strict is on, the extra tests are carried out, when Strict is off they are not.
The default for this option is off.
-
If the FHCRC bit is set in the gzip FLG header byte, the CRC16 bytes in the header must match the crc16 value of the gzip header actually read.
-
If the gzip header contains a name field (FNAME) it consists solely of ISO 8859-1 characters.
-
If the gzip header contains a comment field (FCOMMENT) it consists solely of ISO 8859-1 characters plus line-feed.
-
If the gzip FEXTRA header field is present it must conform to the sub-field structure as defined in RFC 1952.
-
The CRC32 and ISIZE trailer fields must be present.
-
The value of the CRC32 field read must match the crc32 value of the uncompressed data actually contained in the gzip file.
-
The value of the ISIZE fields read must match the length of the uncompressed data actually read from the file.
-
ParseExtra => 0|1
If the gzip FEXTRA header field is present and this option is set, it will force the module to check that it conforms to the sub-field structure as defined in RFC 1952.If the
Strict
is on it will automatically enable this option.Defaults to 0.
Examples
TODO
Methods
read
Usage is
$status = $z->read($buffer)
Reads a block of compressed data (the size the the compressed block is
determined by the Buffer
option in the constructor), uncompresses it and
writes any uncompressed data into $buffer
. If the Append
parameter is
set in the constructor, the uncompressed data will be appended to the
$buffer
parameter. Otherwise $buffer
will be overwritten.
Returns the number of uncompressed bytes written to $buffer
, zero if eof
or a negative number on error.
read
Usage is
$status = $z->read($buffer, $length) $status = $z->read($buffer, $length, $offset)
$status = read($z, $buffer, $length) $status = read($z, $buffer, $length, $offset)
Attempt to read $length
bytes of uncompressed data into $buffer
.
The main difference between this form of the read
method and the
previous one, is that this one will attempt to return exactly $length
bytes. The only circumstances that this function will not is if end-of-file
or an IO error is encountered.
Returns the number of uncompressed bytes written to $buffer
, zero if eof
or a negative number on error.
getline
Usage is
$line = $z->getline() $line = <$z>
Reads a single line.
This method fully supports the use of of the variable $/
(or
$INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR
or $RS
when English
is in use) to
determine what constitutes an end of line. Paragraph mode, record mode and
file slurp mode are all supported.
getc
Usage is
$char = $z->getc()
Read a single character.
ungetc
Usage is
$char = $z->ungetc($string)
inflateSync
Usage is
$status = $z->inflateSync()
TODO
getHeaderInfo
Usage is
$hdr = $z->getHeaderInfo(); @hdrs = $z->getHeaderInfo();
This method returns either a hash reference (in scalar context) or a list or hash references (in array context) that contains information about each of the header fields in the compressed data stream(s).
- Name
The contents of the Name header field, if present. If no name is present, the value will be undef. Note this is different from a zero length name, which will return an empty string.
- Comment
The contents of the Comment header field, if present. If no comment is present, the value will be undef. Note this is different from a zero length comment, which will return an empty string.
tell
Usage is
$z->tell() tell $z
Returns the uncompressed file offset.
eof
Usage is
$z->eof(); eof($z);
Returns true if the end of the compressed input stream has been reached.
seek
$z->seek($position, $whence); seek($z, $position, $whence);
Provides a sub-set of the seek
functionality, with the restriction
that it is only legal to seek forward in the input file/buffer.
It is a fatal error to attempt to seek backward.
The $whence
parameter takes one the usual values, namely SEEK_SET,
SEEK_CUR or SEEK_END.
Returns 1 on success, 0 on failure.
binmode
Usage is
$z->binmode binmode $z ;
This is a noop provided for completeness.
opened
$z->opened()
Returns true if the object currently refers to a opened file/buffer.
autoflush
my $prev = $z->autoflush() my $prev = $z->autoflush(EXPR)
If the $z
object is associated with a file or a filehandle, this method
returns the current autoflush setting for the underlying filehandle. If
EXPR
is present, and is non-zero, it will enable flushing after every
write/print operation.
If $z
is associated with a buffer, this method has no effect and always
returns undef
.
Note that the special variable $|
cannot be used to set or
retrieve the autoflush setting.
input_line_number
$z->input_line_number() $z->input_line_number(EXPR)
Returns the current uncompressed line number. If EXPR
is present it has
the effect of setting the line number. Note that setting the line number
does not change the current position within the file/buffer being read.
The contents of $/
are used to to determine what constitutes a line
terminator.
fileno
$z->fileno() fileno($z)
If the $z
object is associated with a file or a filehandle, this method
will return the underlying file descriptor.
If the $z
object is is associated with a buffer, this method will
return undef.
close
$z->close() ; close $z ;
Closes the output file/buffer.
For most versions of Perl this method will be automatically invoked if
the IO::Uncompress::Gunzip object is destroyed (either explicitly or by the
variable with the reference to the object going out of scope). The
exceptions are Perl versions 5.005 through 5.00504 and 5.8.0. In
these cases, the close
method will be called automatically, but
not until global destruction of all live objects when the program is
terminating.
Therefore, if you want your scripts to be able to run on all versions
of Perl, you should call close
explicitly and not rely on automatic
closing.
Returns true on success, otherwise 0.
If the AutoClose
option has been enabled when the IO::Uncompress::Gunzip
object was created, and the object is associated with a file, the
underlying file will also be closed.
nextStream
Usage is
my $status = $z->nextStream();
Skips to the next compressed data stream in the input file/buffer. If a new
compressed data stream is found, the eof marker will be cleared and $.
will be reset to 0.
Returns 1 if a new stream was found, 0 if none was found, and -1 if an error was encountered.
trailingData
Usage is
my $data = $z->trailingData();
Returns the data, if any, that is present immediately after the compressed data stream once uncompression is complete. It only makes sense to call this method once the end of the compressed data stream has been encountered.
This option can be used when there is useful information immediately following the compressed data stream, and you don't know the length of the compressed data stream.
If the input is a buffer, trailingData
will return everything from the
end of the compressed data stream to the end of the buffer.
If the input is a filehandle, trailingData
will return the data that is
left in the filehandle input buffer once the end of the compressed data
stream has been reached. You can then use the filehandle to read the rest
of the input file.
Don't bother using trailingData
if the input is a filename.
If you know the length of the compressed data stream before you start
uncompressing, you can avoid having to use trailingData
by setting the
InputLength
option in the constructor.
Importing
No symbolic constants are required by this IO::Uncompress::Gunzip at present.
- :all
Imports
gunzip
and$GunzipError
. Same as doing thisuse IO::Uncompress::Gunzip qw(gunzip $GunzipError) ;
EXAMPLES
SEE ALSO
Compress::Zlib, IO::Compress::Gzip, IO::Compress::Deflate, IO::Uncompress::Inflate, IO::Compress::RawDeflate, IO::Uncompress::RawInflate, IO::Compress::Bzip2, IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2, IO::Compress::Lzop, IO::Uncompress::UnLzop, IO::Compress::Lzf, IO::Uncompress::UnLzf, IO::Uncompress::AnyInflate, IO::Uncompress::AnyUncompress
File::GlobMapper, Archive::Zip, Archive::Tar, IO::Zlib
For RFC 1950, 1951 and 1952 see http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1950.html, http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1951.html and http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1952.html
The zlib compression library was written by Jean-loup Gailly gzip@prep.ai.mit.edu and Mark Adler madler@alumni.caltech.edu.
The primary site for the zlib compression library is http://www.zlib.org.
The primary site for gzip is http://www.gzip.org.
AUTHOR
This module was written by Paul Marquess, pmqs@cpan.org.
MODIFICATION HISTORY
See the Changes file.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2005-2007 Paul Marquess. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.