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package CDB_File; use strict; use XSLoader (); use Exporter (); our @ISA = qw(XSLoader Exporter); our $VERSION = '0.99'; our @EXPORT_OK = qw(create); =head1 NAME CDB_File - Perl extension for access to cdb databases =head1 SYNOPSIS use CDB_File; $c = tie %h, 'CDB_File', 'file.cdb' or die "tie failed: $!\n"; $fh = $c->handle; sysseek $fh, $c->datapos, 0 or die ...; sysread $fh, $x, $c->datalen; undef $c; untie %h; $t = new CDB_File ('t.cdb', "t.$$") or die ...; $t->insert('key', 'value'); $t->finish; CDB_File::create %t, $file, "$file.$$"; or use CDB_File 'create'; create %t, $file, "$file.$$"; =head1 DESCRIPTION B<CDB_File> is a module which provides a Perl interface to Dan Bernstein's B<cdb> package: cdb is a fast, reliable, lightweight package for creating and reading constant databases. =head2 Reading from a cdb After the C<tie> shown above, accesses to C<%h> will refer to the B<cdb> file C<file.cdb>, as described in L<perlfunc/tie>. Low level access to the database is provided by the three methods C<handle>, C<datapos>, and C<datalen>. To use them, you must remember the C<CDB_File> object returned by the C<tie> call: C<$c> in the example above. The C<datapos> and C<datalen> methods return the file offset position and length respectively of the most recently visited key (for example, via C<exists>). Beware that if you create an extra reference to the C<CDB_File> object (like C<$c> in the example above) you must destroy it (with C<undef>) before calling C<untie> on the hash. This ensures that the object's C<DESTROY> method is called. Note that C<perl -w> will check this for you; see L<perltie> for further details. =head2 Creating a cdb A B<cdb> file is created in three steps. First call C<new CDB_File ($final, $tmp)>, where C<$final> is the name of the database to be created, and C<$tmp> is the name of a temporary file which can be atomically renamed to C<$final>. Secondly, call the C<insert> method once for each (I<key>, I<value>) pair. Finally, call the C<finish> method to complete the creation and renaming of the B<cdb> file. Alternatively, call the C<insert()> method with multiple key/value pairs. This can be significantly faster because there is less crossing over the bridge from perl to C code. One simple way to do this is to pass in an entire hash, as in: C<< $cdbmaker->insert(%hash); >>. A simpler interface to B<cdb> file creation is provided by C<CDB_File::create %t, $final, $tmp>. This creates a B<cdb> file named C<$final> containing the contents of C<%t>. As before, C<$tmp> must name a temporary file which can be atomically renamed to C<$final>. C<CDB_File::create> may be imported. =head1 EXAMPLES These are all complete programs. 1. Convert a Berkeley DB (B-tree) database to B<cdb> format. use CDB_File; use DB_File; tie %h, DB_File, $ARGV[0], O_RDONLY, undef, $DB_BTREE or die "$0: can't tie to $ARGV[0]: $!\n"; CDB_File::create %h, $ARGV[1], "$ARGV[1].$$" or die "$0: can't create cdb: $!\n"; 2. Convert a flat file to B<cdb> format. In this example, the flat file consists of one key per line, separated by a colon from the value. Blank lines and lines beginning with B<#> are skipped. use CDB_File; $cdb = new CDB_File("data.cdb", "data.$$") or die "$0: new CDB_File failed: $!\n"; while (<>) { next if /^$/ or /^#/; chop; ($k, $v) = split /:/, $_, 2; if (defined $v) { $cdb->insert($k, $v); } else { warn "bogus line: $_\n"; } } $cdb->finish or die "$0: CDB_File finish failed: $!\n"; 3. Perl version of B<cdbdump>. use CDB_File; tie %data, 'CDB_File', $ARGV[0] or die "$0: can't tie to $ARGV[0]: $!\n"; while (($k, $v) = each %data) { print '+', length $k, ',', length $v, ":$k->$v\n"; } print "\n"; 4. For really enormous data values, you can use C<handle>, C<datapos>, and C<datalen>, in combination with C<sysseek> and C<sysread>, to avoid reading the values into memory. Here is the script F<bun-x.pl>, which can extract uncompressed files and directories from a B<bun> file. use CDB_File; sub unnetstrings { my($netstrings) = @_; my @result; while ($netstrings =~ s/^([0-9]+)://) { push @result, substr($netstrings, 0, $1, ''); $netstrings =~ s/^,//; } return @result; } my $chunk = 8192; sub extract { my($file, $t, $b) = @_; my $head = $$b{"H$file"}; my ($code, $type) = $head =~ m/^([0-9]+)(.)/; if ($type eq "/") { mkdir $file, 0777; } elsif ($type eq "_") { my ($total, $now, $got, $x); open OUT, ">$file" or die "open for output: $!\n"; exists $$b{"D$code"} or die "corrupt bun file\n"; my $fh = $t->handle; sysseek $fh, $t->datapos, 0; $total = $t->datalen; while ($total) { $now = ($total > $chunk) ? $chunk : $total; $got = sysread $fh, $x, $now; if (not $got) { die "read error\n"; } $total -= $got; print OUT $x; } close OUT; } else { print STDERR "warning: skipping unknown file type\n"; } } die "usage\n" if @ARGV != 1; my (%b, $t); $t = tie %b, 'CDB_File', $ARGV[0] or die "tie: $!\n"; map { extract $_, $t, \%b } unnetstrings $b{""}; 5. Although a B<cdb> file is constant, you can simulate updating it in Perl. This is an expensive operation, as you have to create a new database, and copy into it everything that's unchanged from the old database. (As compensation, the update does not affect database readers. The old database is available for them, till the moment the new one is C<finish>ed.) use CDB_File; $file = 'data.cdb'; $new = new CDB_File($file, "$file.$$") or die "$0: new CDB_File failed: $!\n"; # Add the new values; remember which keys we've seen. while (<>) { chop; ($k, $v) = split; $new->insert($k, $v); $seen{$k} = 1; } # Add any old values that haven't been replaced. tie %old, 'CDB_File', $file or die "$0: can't tie to $file: $!\n"; while (($k, $v) = each %old) { $new->insert($k, $v) unless $seen{$k}; } $new->finish or die "$0: CDB_File finish failed: $!\n"; =head1 REPEATED KEYS Most users can ignore this section. A B<cdb> file can contain repeated keys. If the C<insert> method is called more than once with the same key during the creation of a B<cdb> file, that key will be repeated. Here's an example. $cdb = new CDB_File ("$file.cdb", "$file.$$") or die ...; $cdb->insert('cat', 'gato'); $cdb->insert('cat', 'chat'); $cdb->finish; Normally, any attempt to access a key retrieves the first value stored under that key. This code snippet always prints B<gato>. $catref = tie %catalogue, CDB_File, "$file.cdb" or die ...; print "$catalogue{cat}"; However, all the usual ways of iterating over a hash---C<keys>, C<values>, and C<each>---do the Right Thing, even in the presence of repeated keys. This code snippet prints B<cat cat gato chat>. print join(' ', keys %catalogue, values %catalogue); And these two both print B<cat:gato cat:chat>, although the second is more efficient. foreach $key (keys %catalogue) { print "$key:$catalogue{$key} "; } while (($key, $val) = each %catalogue) { print "$key:$val "; } The C<multi_get> method retrieves all the values associated with a key. It returns a reference to an array containing all the values. This code prints B<gato chat>. print "@{$catref->multi_get('cat')}"; C<multi_get> always returns an array reference. If the key was not found in the database, it will be a reference to an empty array. To test whether the key was found, you must test the array, and not the reference. $x = $catref->multiget($key); warn "$key not found\n" unless $x; # WRONG; message never printed warn "$key not found\n" unless @$x; # Correct The C<fetch_all> method returns a hashref of all keys with the first value in the cdb. This is useful for quickly loading a cdb file where there is a 1:1 key mapping. In practice it proved to be about 400% faster then iterating a tied hash. # Slow my %copy = %tied_cdb; # Much Faster my $copy_hashref = $catref->fetch_all(); =head1 RETURN VALUES The routines C<tie>, C<new>, and C<finish> return B<undef> if the attempted operation failed; C<$!> contains the reason for failure. =head1 DIAGNOSTICS The following fatal errors may occur. (See L<perlfunc/eval> if you want to trap them.) =over 4 =item Modification of a CDB_File attempted You attempted to modify a hash tied to a B<CDB_File>. =item CDB database too large You attempted to create a B<cdb> file larger than 4 gigabytes. =item [ Write to | Read of | Seek in ] CDB_File failed: <error string> If B<error string> is B<Protocol error>, you tried to C<use CDB_File> to access something that isn't a B<cdb> file. Otherwise a serious OS level problem occurred, for example, you have run out of disk space. =back =head1 PERFORMANCE Sometimes you need to get the most performance possible out of a library. Rumour has it that perl's tie() interface is slow. In order to get around that you can use CDB_File in an object oriented fashion, rather than via tie(). my $cdb = CDB_File->TIEHASH('/path/to/cdbfile.cdb'); if ($cdb->EXISTS('key')) { print "Key is: ", $cdb->FETCH('key'), "\n"; } For more information on the methods available on tied hashes see L<perltie>. =head1 BUGS The C<create()> interface could be done with C<TIEHASH>. =head1 SEE ALSO cdb(3). =head1 AUTHOR Tim Goodwin, <tjg@star.le.ac.uk>. B<CDB_File> began on 1997-01-08. Now maintained by Matt Sergeant, <matt@sergeant.org> =cut XSLoader::load( 'CDB_File', $VERSION ); sub CLEAR { require Carp; Carp::croak("Modification of a CDB_File attempted"); } sub DELETE { &CLEAR; } sub STORE { &CLEAR; } # Must be preloaded for the prototype. sub create(\%$$) { my ( $RHdata, $fn, $fntemp ) = @_; my $cdb = new CDB_File( $fn, $fntemp ) or return undef; my ( $k, $v ); $cdb->insert(%$RHdata); $cdb->finish; return 1; } 1;