xref: /openbsd/gnu/usr.bin/perl/pod/perltie.pod (revision 8932bfb7)
1=head1 NAME
2X<tie>
3
4perltie - how to hide an object class in a simple variable
5
6=head1 SYNOPSIS
7
8 tie VARIABLE, CLASSNAME, LIST
9
10 $object = tied VARIABLE
11
12 untie VARIABLE
13
14=head1 DESCRIPTION
15
16Prior to release 5.0 of Perl, a programmer could use dbmopen()
17to connect an on-disk database in the standard Unix dbm(3x)
18format magically to a %HASH in their program.  However, their Perl was either
19built with one particular dbm library or another, but not both, and
20you couldn't extend this mechanism to other packages or types of variables.
21
22Now you can.
23
24The tie() function binds a variable to a class (package) that will provide
25the implementation for access methods for that variable.  Once this magic
26has been performed, accessing a tied variable automatically triggers
27method calls in the proper class.  The complexity of the class is
28hidden behind magic methods calls.  The method names are in ALL CAPS,
29which is a convention that Perl uses to indicate that they're called
30implicitly rather than explicitly--just like the BEGIN() and END()
31functions.
32
33In the tie() call, C<VARIABLE> is the name of the variable to be
34enchanted.  C<CLASSNAME> is the name of a class implementing objects of
35the correct type.  Any additional arguments in the C<LIST> are passed to
36the appropriate constructor method for that class--meaning TIESCALAR(),
37TIEARRAY(), TIEHASH(), or TIEHANDLE().  (Typically these are arguments
38such as might be passed to the dbminit() function of C.) The object
39returned by the "new" method is also returned by the tie() function,
40which would be useful if you wanted to access other methods in
41C<CLASSNAME>. (You don't actually have to return a reference to a right
42"type" (e.g., HASH or C<CLASSNAME>) so long as it's a properly blessed
43object.)  You can also retrieve a reference to the underlying object
44using the tied() function.
45
46Unlike dbmopen(), the tie() function will not C<use> or C<require> a module
47for you--you need to do that explicitly yourself.
48
49=head2 Tying Scalars
50X<scalar, tying>
51
52A class implementing a tied scalar should define the following methods:
53TIESCALAR, FETCH, STORE, and possibly UNTIE and/or DESTROY.
54
55Let's look at each in turn, using as an example a tie class for
56scalars that allows the user to do something like:
57
58    tie $his_speed, 'Nice', getppid();
59    tie $my_speed,  'Nice', $$;
60
61And now whenever either of those variables is accessed, its current
62system priority is retrieved and returned.  If those variables are set,
63then the process's priority is changed!
64
65We'll use Jarkko Hietaniemi <F<jhi@iki.fi>>'s BSD::Resource class (not
66included) to access the PRIO_PROCESS, PRIO_MIN, and PRIO_MAX constants
67from your system, as well as the getpriority() and setpriority() system
68calls.  Here's the preamble of the class.
69
70    package Nice;
71    use Carp;
72    use BSD::Resource;
73    use strict;
74    $Nice::DEBUG = 0 unless defined $Nice::DEBUG;
75
76=over 4
77
78=item TIESCALAR classname, LIST
79X<TIESCALAR>
80
81This is the constructor for the class.  That means it is
82expected to return a blessed reference to a new scalar
83(probably anonymous) that it's creating.  For example:
84
85    sub TIESCALAR {
86        my $class = shift;
87        my $pid = shift || $$; # 0 means me
88
89        if ($pid !~ /^\d+$/) {
90            carp "Nice::Tie::Scalar got non-numeric pid $pid" if $^W;
91            return undef;
92        }
93
94        unless (kill 0, $pid) { # EPERM or ERSCH, no doubt
95            carp "Nice::Tie::Scalar got bad pid $pid: $!" if $^W;
96            return undef;
97        }
98
99        return bless \$pid, $class;
100    }
101
102This tie class has chosen to return an error rather than raising an
103exception if its constructor should fail.  While this is how dbmopen() works,
104other classes may well not wish to be so forgiving.  It checks the global
105variable C<$^W> to see whether to emit a bit of noise anyway.
106
107=item FETCH this
108X<FETCH>
109
110This method will be triggered every time the tied variable is accessed
111(read).  It takes no arguments beyond its self reference, which is the
112object representing the scalar we're dealing with.  Because in this case
113we're using just a SCALAR ref for the tied scalar object, a simple $$self
114allows the method to get at the real value stored there.  In our example
115below, that real value is the process ID to which we've tied our variable.
116
117    sub FETCH {
118        my $self = shift;
119        confess "wrong type" unless ref $self;
120        croak "usage error" if @_;
121        my $nicety;
122        local($!) = 0;
123        $nicety = getpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, $$self);
124        if ($!) { croak "getpriority failed: $!" }
125        return $nicety;
126    }
127
128This time we've decided to blow up (raise an exception) if the renice
129fails--there's no place for us to return an error otherwise, and it's
130probably the right thing to do.
131
132=item STORE this, value
133X<STORE>
134
135This method will be triggered every time the tied variable is set
136(assigned).  Beyond its self reference, it also expects one (and only one)
137argument: the new value the user is trying to assign. Don't worry about
138returning a value from STORE; the semantic of assignment returning the
139assigned value is implemented with FETCH.
140
141    sub STORE {
142        my $self = shift;
143        confess "wrong type" unless ref $self;
144        my $new_nicety = shift;
145        croak "usage error" if @_;
146
147        if ($new_nicety < PRIO_MIN) {
148            carp sprintf
149              "WARNING: priority %d less than minimum system priority %d",
150                  $new_nicety, PRIO_MIN if $^W;
151            $new_nicety = PRIO_MIN;
152        }
153
154        if ($new_nicety > PRIO_MAX) {
155            carp sprintf
156              "WARNING: priority %d greater than maximum system priority %d",
157                  $new_nicety, PRIO_MAX if $^W;
158            $new_nicety = PRIO_MAX;
159        }
160
161        unless (defined setpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, $$self, $new_nicety)) {
162            confess "setpriority failed: $!";
163        }
164    }
165
166=item UNTIE this
167X<UNTIE>
168
169This method will be triggered when the C<untie> occurs. This can be useful
170if the class needs to know when no further calls will be made. (Except DESTROY
171of course.) See L<The C<untie> Gotcha> below for more details.
172
173=item DESTROY this
174X<DESTROY>
175
176This method will be triggered when the tied variable needs to be destructed.
177As with other object classes, such a method is seldom necessary, because Perl
178deallocates its moribund object's memory for you automatically--this isn't
179C++, you know.  We'll use a DESTROY method here for debugging purposes only.
180
181    sub DESTROY {
182        my $self = shift;
183        confess "wrong type" unless ref $self;
184        carp "[ Nice::DESTROY pid $$self ]" if $Nice::DEBUG;
185    }
186
187=back
188
189That's about all there is to it.  Actually, it's more than all there
190is to it, because we've done a few nice things here for the sake
191of completeness, robustness, and general aesthetics.  Simpler
192TIESCALAR classes are certainly possible.
193
194=head2 Tying Arrays
195X<array, tying>
196
197A class implementing a tied ordinary array should define the following
198methods: TIEARRAY, FETCH, STORE, FETCHSIZE, STORESIZE and perhaps UNTIE and/or DESTROY.
199
200FETCHSIZE and STORESIZE are used to provide C<$#array> and
201equivalent C<scalar(@array)> access.
202
203The methods POP, PUSH, SHIFT, UNSHIFT, SPLICE, DELETE, and EXISTS are
204required if the perl operator with the corresponding (but lowercase) name
205is to operate on the tied array. The B<Tie::Array> class can be used as a
206base class to implement the first five of these in terms of the basic
207methods above.  The default implementations of DELETE and EXISTS in
208B<Tie::Array> simply C<croak>.
209
210In addition EXTEND will be called when perl would have pre-extended
211allocation in a real array.
212
213For this discussion, we'll implement an array whose elements are a fixed
214size at creation.  If you try to create an element larger than the fixed
215size, you'll take an exception.  For example:
216
217    use FixedElem_Array;
218    tie @array, 'FixedElem_Array', 3;
219    $array[0] = 'cat';  # ok.
220    $array[1] = 'dogs'; # exception, length('dogs') > 3.
221
222The preamble code for the class is as follows:
223
224    package FixedElem_Array;
225    use Carp;
226    use strict;
227
228=over 4
229
230=item TIEARRAY classname, LIST
231X<TIEARRAY>
232
233This is the constructor for the class.  That means it is expected to
234return a blessed reference through which the new array (probably an
235anonymous ARRAY ref) will be accessed.
236
237In our example, just to show you that you don't I<really> have to return an
238ARRAY reference, we'll choose a HASH reference to represent our object.
239A HASH works out well as a generic record type: the C<{ELEMSIZE}> field will
240store the maximum element size allowed, and the C<{ARRAY}> field will hold the
241true ARRAY ref.  If someone outside the class tries to dereference the
242object returned (doubtless thinking it an ARRAY ref), they'll blow up.
243This just goes to show you that you should respect an object's privacy.
244
245    sub TIEARRAY {
246      my $class    = shift;
247      my $elemsize = shift;
248      if ( @_ || $elemsize =~ /\D/ ) {
249        croak "usage: tie ARRAY, '" . __PACKAGE__ . "', elem_size";
250      }
251      return bless {
252        ELEMSIZE => $elemsize,
253        ARRAY    => [],
254      }, $class;
255    }
256
257=item FETCH this, index
258X<FETCH>
259
260This method will be triggered every time an individual element the tied array
261is accessed (read).  It takes one argument beyond its self reference: the
262index whose value we're trying to fetch.
263
264    sub FETCH {
265      my $self  = shift;
266      my $index = shift;
267      return $self->{ARRAY}->[$index];
268    }
269
270If a negative array index is used to read from an array, the index
271will be translated to a positive one internally by calling FETCHSIZE
272before being passed to FETCH.  You may disable this feature by
273assigning a true value to the variable C<$NEGATIVE_INDICES> in the
274tied array class.
275
276As you may have noticed, the name of the FETCH method (et al.) is the same
277for all accesses, even though the constructors differ in names (TIESCALAR
278vs TIEARRAY).  While in theory you could have the same class servicing
279several tied types, in practice this becomes cumbersome, and it's easiest
280to keep them at simply one tie type per class.
281
282=item STORE this, index, value
283X<STORE>
284
285This method will be triggered every time an element in the tied array is set
286(written).  It takes two arguments beyond its self reference: the index at
287which we're trying to store something and the value we're trying to put
288there.
289
290In our example, C<undef> is really C<$self-E<gt>{ELEMSIZE}> number of
291spaces so we have a little more work to do here:
292
293    sub STORE {
294      my $self = shift;
295      my( $index, $value ) = @_;
296      if ( length $value > $self->{ELEMSIZE} ) {
297        croak "length of $value is greater than $self->{ELEMSIZE}";
298      }
299      # fill in the blanks
300      $self->EXTEND( $index ) if $index > $self->FETCHSIZE();
301      # right justify to keep element size for smaller elements
302      $self->{ARRAY}->[$index] = sprintf "%$self->{ELEMSIZE}s", $value;
303    }
304
305Negative indexes are treated the same as with FETCH.
306
307=item FETCHSIZE this
308X<FETCHSIZE>
309
310Returns the total number of items in the tied array associated with
311object I<this>. (Equivalent to C<scalar(@array)>).  For example:
312
313    sub FETCHSIZE {
314      my $self = shift;
315      return scalar @{$self->{ARRAY}};
316    }
317
318=item STORESIZE this, count
319X<STORESIZE>
320
321Sets the total number of items in the tied array associated with
322object I<this> to be I<count>. If this makes the array larger then
323class's mapping of C<undef> should be returned for new positions.
324If the array becomes smaller then entries beyond count should be
325deleted.
326
327In our example, 'undef' is really an element containing
328C<$self-E<gt>{ELEMSIZE}> number of spaces.  Observe:
329
330    sub STORESIZE {
331      my $self  = shift;
332      my $count = shift;
333      if ( $count > $self->FETCHSIZE() ) {
334        foreach ( $count - $self->FETCHSIZE() .. $count ) {
335          $self->STORE( $_, '' );
336        }
337      } elsif ( $count < $self->FETCHSIZE() ) {
338        foreach ( 0 .. $self->FETCHSIZE() - $count - 2 ) {
339          $self->POP();
340        }
341      }
342    }
343
344=item EXTEND this, count
345X<EXTEND>
346
347Informative call that array is likely to grow to have I<count> entries.
348Can be used to optimize allocation. This method need do nothing.
349
350In our example, we want to make sure there are no blank (C<undef>)
351entries, so C<EXTEND> will make use of C<STORESIZE> to fill elements
352as needed:
353
354    sub EXTEND {
355      my $self  = shift;
356      my $count = shift;
357      $self->STORESIZE( $count );
358    }
359
360=item EXISTS this, key
361X<EXISTS>
362
363Verify that the element at index I<key> exists in the tied array I<this>.
364
365In our example, we will determine that if an element consists of
366C<$self-E<gt>{ELEMSIZE}> spaces only, it does not exist:
367
368    sub EXISTS {
369      my $self  = shift;
370      my $index = shift;
371      return 0 if ! defined $self->{ARRAY}->[$index] ||
372                  $self->{ARRAY}->[$index] eq ' ' x $self->{ELEMSIZE};
373      return 1;
374    }
375
376=item DELETE this, key
377X<DELETE>
378
379Delete the element at index I<key> from the tied array I<this>.
380
381In our example, a deleted item is C<$self-E<gt>{ELEMSIZE}> spaces:
382
383    sub DELETE {
384      my $self  = shift;
385      my $index = shift;
386      return $self->STORE( $index, '' );
387    }
388
389=item CLEAR this
390X<CLEAR>
391
392Clear (remove, delete, ...) all values from the tied array associated with
393object I<this>.  For example:
394
395    sub CLEAR {
396      my $self = shift;
397      return $self->{ARRAY} = [];
398    }
399
400=item PUSH this, LIST
401X<PUSH>
402
403Append elements of I<LIST> to the array.  For example:
404
405    sub PUSH {
406      my $self = shift;
407      my @list = @_;
408      my $last = $self->FETCHSIZE();
409      $self->STORE( $last + $_, $list[$_] ) foreach 0 .. $#list;
410      return $self->FETCHSIZE();
411    }
412
413=item POP this
414X<POP>
415
416Remove last element of the array and return it.  For example:
417
418    sub POP {
419      my $self = shift;
420      return pop @{$self->{ARRAY}};
421    }
422
423=item SHIFT this
424X<SHIFT>
425
426Remove the first element of the array (shifting other elements down)
427and return it.  For example:
428
429    sub SHIFT {
430      my $self = shift;
431      return shift @{$self->{ARRAY}};
432    }
433
434=item UNSHIFT this, LIST
435X<UNSHIFT>
436
437Insert LIST elements at the beginning of the array, moving existing elements
438up to make room.  For example:
439
440    sub UNSHIFT {
441      my $self = shift;
442      my @list = @_;
443      my $size = scalar( @list );
444      # make room for our list
445      @{$self->{ARRAY}}[ $size .. $#{$self->{ARRAY}} + $size ]
446       = @{$self->{ARRAY}};
447      $self->STORE( $_, $list[$_] ) foreach 0 .. $#list;
448    }
449
450=item SPLICE this, offset, length, LIST
451X<SPLICE>
452
453Perform the equivalent of C<splice> on the array.
454
455I<offset> is optional and defaults to zero, negative values count back
456from the end of the array.
457
458I<length> is optional and defaults to rest of the array.
459
460I<LIST> may be empty.
461
462Returns a list of the original I<length> elements at I<offset>.
463
464In our example, we'll use a little shortcut if there is a I<LIST>:
465
466    sub SPLICE {
467      my $self   = shift;
468      my $offset = shift || 0;
469      my $length = shift || $self->FETCHSIZE() - $offset;
470      my @list   = ();
471      if ( @_ ) {
472        tie @list, __PACKAGE__, $self->{ELEMSIZE};
473        @list   = @_;
474      }
475      return splice @{$self->{ARRAY}}, $offset, $length, @list;
476    }
477
478=item UNTIE this
479X<UNTIE>
480
481Will be called when C<untie> happens. (See L<The C<untie> Gotcha> below.)
482
483=item DESTROY this
484X<DESTROY>
485
486This method will be triggered when the tied variable needs to be destructed.
487As with the scalar tie class, this is almost never needed in a
488language that does its own garbage collection, so this time we'll
489just leave it out.
490
491=back
492
493=head2 Tying Hashes
494X<hash, tying>
495
496Hashes were the first Perl data type to be tied (see dbmopen()).  A class
497implementing a tied hash should define the following methods: TIEHASH is
498the constructor.  FETCH and STORE access the key and value pairs.  EXISTS
499reports whether a key is present in the hash, and DELETE deletes one.
500CLEAR empties the hash by deleting all the key and value pairs.  FIRSTKEY
501and NEXTKEY implement the keys() and each() functions to iterate over all
502the keys. SCALAR is triggered when the tied hash is evaluated in scalar
503context. UNTIE is called when C<untie> happens, and DESTROY is called when
504the tied variable is garbage collected.
505
506If this seems like a lot, then feel free to inherit from merely the
507standard Tie::StdHash module for most of your methods, redefining only the
508interesting ones.  See L<Tie::Hash> for details.
509
510Remember that Perl distinguishes between a key not existing in the hash,
511and the key existing in the hash but having a corresponding value of
512C<undef>.  The two possibilities can be tested with the C<exists()> and
513C<defined()> functions.
514
515Here's an example of a somewhat interesting tied hash class:  it gives you
516a hash representing a particular user's dot files.  You index into the hash
517with the name of the file (minus the dot) and you get back that dot file's
518contents.  For example:
519
520    use DotFiles;
521    tie %dot, 'DotFiles';
522    if ( $dot{profile} =~ /MANPATH/ ||
523         $dot{login}   =~ /MANPATH/ ||
524         $dot{cshrc}   =~ /MANPATH/    )
525    {
526	print "you seem to set your MANPATH\n";
527    }
528
529Or here's another sample of using our tied class:
530
531    tie %him, 'DotFiles', 'daemon';
532    foreach $f ( keys %him ) {
533	printf "daemon dot file %s is size %d\n",
534	    $f, length $him{$f};
535    }
536
537In our tied hash DotFiles example, we use a regular
538hash for the object containing several important
539fields, of which only the C<{LIST}> field will be what the
540user thinks of as the real hash.
541
542=over 5
543
544=item USER
545
546whose dot files this object represents
547
548=item HOME
549
550where those dot files live
551
552=item CLOBBER
553
554whether we should try to change or remove those dot files
555
556=item LIST
557
558the hash of dot file names and content mappings
559
560=back
561
562Here's the start of F<Dotfiles.pm>:
563
564    package DotFiles;
565    use Carp;
566    sub whowasi { (caller(1))[3] . '()' }
567    my $DEBUG = 0;
568    sub debug { $DEBUG = @_ ? shift : 1 }
569
570For our example, we want to be able to emit debugging info to help in tracing
571during development.  We keep also one convenience function around
572internally to help print out warnings; whowasi() returns the function name
573that calls it.
574
575Here are the methods for the DotFiles tied hash.
576
577=over 4
578
579=item TIEHASH classname, LIST
580X<TIEHASH>
581
582This is the constructor for the class.  That means it is expected to
583return a blessed reference through which the new object (probably but not
584necessarily an anonymous hash) will be accessed.
585
586Here's the constructor:
587
588    sub TIEHASH {
589	my $self = shift;
590	my $user = shift || $>;
591	my $dotdir = shift || '';
592	croak "usage: @{[&whowasi]} [USER [DOTDIR]]" if @_;
593	$user = getpwuid($user) if $user =~ /^\d+$/;
594	my $dir = (getpwnam($user))[7]
595		|| croak "@{[&whowasi]}: no user $user";
596	$dir .= "/$dotdir" if $dotdir;
597
598	my $node = {
599	    USER    => $user,
600	    HOME    => $dir,
601	    LIST    => {},
602	    CLOBBER => 0,
603	};
604
605	opendir(DIR, $dir)
606		|| croak "@{[&whowasi]}: can't opendir $dir: $!";
607	foreach $dot ( grep /^\./ && -f "$dir/$_", readdir(DIR)) {
608	    $dot =~ s/^\.//;
609	    $node->{LIST}{$dot} = undef;
610	}
611	closedir DIR;
612	return bless $node, $self;
613    }
614
615It's probably worth mentioning that if you're going to filetest the
616return values out of a readdir, you'd better prepend the directory
617in question.  Otherwise, because we didn't chdir() there, it would
618have been testing the wrong file.
619
620=item FETCH this, key
621X<FETCH>
622
623This method will be triggered every time an element in the tied hash is
624accessed (read).  It takes one argument beyond its self reference: the key
625whose value we're trying to fetch.
626
627Here's the fetch for our DotFiles example.
628
629    sub FETCH {
630	carp &whowasi if $DEBUG;
631	my $self = shift;
632	my $dot = shift;
633	my $dir = $self->{HOME};
634	my $file = "$dir/.$dot";
635
636	unless (exists $self->{LIST}->{$dot} || -f $file) {
637	    carp "@{[&whowasi]}: no $dot file" if $DEBUG;
638	    return undef;
639	}
640
641	if (defined $self->{LIST}->{$dot}) {
642	    return $self->{LIST}->{$dot};
643	} else {
644	    return $self->{LIST}->{$dot} = `cat $dir/.$dot`;
645	}
646    }
647
648It was easy to write by having it call the Unix cat(1) command, but it
649would probably be more portable to open the file manually (and somewhat
650more efficient).  Of course, because dot files are a Unixy concept, we're
651not that concerned.
652
653=item STORE this, key, value
654X<STORE>
655
656This method will be triggered every time an element in the tied hash is set
657(written).  It takes two arguments beyond its self reference: the index at
658which we're trying to store something, and the value we're trying to put
659there.
660
661Here in our DotFiles example, we'll be careful not to let
662them try to overwrite the file unless they've called the clobber()
663method on the original object reference returned by tie().
664
665    sub STORE {
666	carp &whowasi if $DEBUG;
667	my $self = shift;
668	my $dot = shift;
669	my $value = shift;
670	my $file = $self->{HOME} . "/.$dot";
671	my $user = $self->{USER};
672
673	croak "@{[&whowasi]}: $file not clobberable"
674	    unless $self->{CLOBBER};
675
676	open(F, "> $file") || croak "can't open $file: $!";
677	print F $value;
678	close(F);
679    }
680
681If they wanted to clobber something, they might say:
682
683    $ob = tie %daemon_dots, 'daemon';
684    $ob->clobber(1);
685    $daemon_dots{signature} = "A true daemon\n";
686
687Another way to lay hands on a reference to the underlying object is to
688use the tied() function, so they might alternately have set clobber
689using:
690
691    tie %daemon_dots, 'daemon';
692    tied(%daemon_dots)->clobber(1);
693
694The clobber method is simply:
695
696    sub clobber {
697	my $self = shift;
698	$self->{CLOBBER} = @_ ? shift : 1;
699    }
700
701=item DELETE this, key
702X<DELETE>
703
704This method is triggered when we remove an element from the hash,
705typically by using the delete() function.  Again, we'll
706be careful to check whether they really want to clobber files.
707
708    sub DELETE   {
709	carp &whowasi if $DEBUG;
710
711	my $self = shift;
712	my $dot = shift;
713	my $file = $self->{HOME} . "/.$dot";
714	croak "@{[&whowasi]}: won't remove file $file"
715	    unless $self->{CLOBBER};
716	delete $self->{LIST}->{$dot};
717	my $success = unlink($file);
718	carp "@{[&whowasi]}: can't unlink $file: $!" unless $success;
719	$success;
720    }
721
722The value returned by DELETE becomes the return value of the call
723to delete().  If you want to emulate the normal behavior of delete(),
724you should return whatever FETCH would have returned for this key.
725In this example, we have chosen instead to return a value which tells
726the caller whether the file was successfully deleted.
727
728=item CLEAR this
729X<CLEAR>
730
731This method is triggered when the whole hash is to be cleared, usually by
732assigning the empty list to it.
733
734In our example, that would remove all the user's dot files!  It's such a
735dangerous thing that they'll have to set CLOBBER to something higher than
7361 to make it happen.
737
738    sub CLEAR    {
739	carp &whowasi if $DEBUG;
740	my $self = shift;
741	croak "@{[&whowasi]}: won't remove all dot files for $self->{USER}"
742	    unless $self->{CLOBBER} > 1;
743	my $dot;
744	foreach $dot ( keys %{$self->{LIST}}) {
745	    $self->DELETE($dot);
746	}
747    }
748
749=item EXISTS this, key
750X<EXISTS>
751
752This method is triggered when the user uses the exists() function
753on a particular hash.  In our example, we'll look at the C<{LIST}>
754hash element for this:
755
756    sub EXISTS   {
757	carp &whowasi if $DEBUG;
758	my $self = shift;
759	my $dot = shift;
760	return exists $self->{LIST}->{$dot};
761    }
762
763=item FIRSTKEY this
764X<FIRSTKEY>
765
766This method will be triggered when the user is going
767to iterate through the hash, such as via a keys() or each()
768call.
769
770    sub FIRSTKEY {
771	carp &whowasi if $DEBUG;
772	my $self = shift;
773	my $a = keys %{$self->{LIST}};		# reset each() iterator
774	each %{$self->{LIST}}
775    }
776
777=item NEXTKEY this, lastkey
778X<NEXTKEY>
779
780This method gets triggered during a keys() or each() iteration.  It has a
781second argument which is the last key that had been accessed.  This is
782useful if you're carrying about ordering or calling the iterator from more
783than one sequence, or not really storing things in a hash anywhere.
784
785For our example, we're using a real hash so we'll do just the simple
786thing, but we'll have to go through the LIST field indirectly.
787
788    sub NEXTKEY  {
789	carp &whowasi if $DEBUG;
790	my $self = shift;
791	return each %{ $self->{LIST} }
792    }
793
794=item SCALAR this
795X<SCALAR>
796
797This is called when the hash is evaluated in scalar context. In order
798to mimic the behaviour of untied hashes, this method should return a
799false value when the tied hash is considered empty. If this method does
800not exist, perl will make some educated guesses and return true when
801the hash is inside an iteration. If this isn't the case, FIRSTKEY is
802called, and the result will be a false value if FIRSTKEY returns the empty
803list, true otherwise.
804
805However, you should B<not> blindly rely on perl always doing the right
806thing. Particularly, perl will mistakenly return true when you clear the
807hash by repeatedly calling DELETE until it is empty. You are therefore
808advised to supply your own SCALAR method when you want to be absolutely
809sure that your hash behaves nicely in scalar context.
810
811In our example we can just call C<scalar> on the underlying hash
812referenced by C<$self-E<gt>{LIST}>:
813
814    sub SCALAR {
815	carp &whowasi if $DEBUG;
816	my $self = shift;
817	return scalar %{ $self->{LIST} }
818    }
819
820=item UNTIE this
821X<UNTIE>
822
823This is called when C<untie> occurs.  See L<The C<untie> Gotcha> below.
824
825=item DESTROY this
826X<DESTROY>
827
828This method is triggered when a tied hash is about to go out of
829scope.  You don't really need it unless you're trying to add debugging
830or have auxiliary state to clean up.  Here's a very simple function:
831
832    sub DESTROY  {
833	carp &whowasi if $DEBUG;
834    }
835
836=back
837
838Note that functions such as keys() and values() may return huge lists
839when used on large objects, like DBM files.  You may prefer to use the
840each() function to iterate over such.  Example:
841
842    # print out history file offsets
843    use NDBM_File;
844    tie(%HIST, 'NDBM_File', '/usr/lib/news/history', 1, 0);
845    while (($key,$val) = each %HIST) {
846        print $key, ' = ', unpack('L',$val), "\n";
847    }
848    untie(%HIST);
849
850=head2 Tying FileHandles
851X<filehandle, tying>
852
853This is partially implemented now.
854
855A class implementing a tied filehandle should define the following
856methods: TIEHANDLE, at least one of PRINT, PRINTF, WRITE, READLINE, GETC,
857READ, and possibly CLOSE, UNTIE and DESTROY.  The class can also provide: BINMODE,
858OPEN, EOF, FILENO, SEEK, TELL - if the corresponding perl operators are
859used on the handle.
860
861When STDERR is tied, its PRINT method will be called to issue warnings
862and error messages.  This feature is temporarily disabled during the call,
863which means you can use C<warn()> inside PRINT without starting a recursive
864loop.  And just like C<__WARN__> and C<__DIE__> handlers, STDERR's PRINT
865method may be called to report parser errors, so the caveats mentioned under
866L<perlvar/%SIG> apply.
867
868All of this is especially useful when perl is embedded in some other
869program, where output to STDOUT and STDERR may have to be redirected
870in some special way.  See nvi and the Apache module for examples.
871
872In our example we're going to create a shouting handle.
873
874    package Shout;
875
876=over 4
877
878=item TIEHANDLE classname, LIST
879X<TIEHANDLE>
880
881This is the constructor for the class.  That means it is expected to
882return a blessed reference of some sort. The reference can be used to
883hold some internal information.
884
885    sub TIEHANDLE { print "<shout>\n"; my $i; bless \$i, shift }
886
887=item WRITE this, LIST
888X<WRITE>
889
890This method will be called when the handle is written to via the
891C<syswrite> function.
892
893    sub WRITE {
894	$r = shift;
895	my($buf,$len,$offset) = @_;
896	print "WRITE called, \$buf=$buf, \$len=$len, \$offset=$offset";
897    }
898
899=item PRINT this, LIST
900X<PRINT>
901
902This method will be triggered every time the tied handle is printed to
903with the C<print()> or C<say()> functions.  Beyond its self reference
904it also expects the list that was passed to the print function.
905
906    sub PRINT { $r = shift; $$r++; print join($,,map(uc($_),@_)),$\ }
907
908C<say()> acts just like C<print()> except $\ will be localized to C<\n> so
909you need do nothing special to handle C<say()> in C<PRINT()>.
910
911=item PRINTF this, LIST
912X<PRINTF>
913
914This method will be triggered every time the tied handle is printed to
915with the C<printf()> function.
916Beyond its self reference it also expects the format and list that was
917passed to the printf function.
918
919    sub PRINTF {
920        shift;
921        my $fmt = shift;
922        print sprintf($fmt, @_);
923    }
924
925=item READ this, LIST
926X<READ>
927
928This method will be called when the handle is read from via the C<read>
929or C<sysread> functions.
930
931    sub READ {
932	my $self = shift;
933	my $bufref = \$_[0];
934	my(undef,$len,$offset) = @_;
935	print "READ called, \$buf=$bufref, \$len=$len, \$offset=$offset";
936	# add to $$bufref, set $len to number of characters read
937	$len;
938    }
939
940=item READLINE this
941X<READLINE>
942
943This method will be called when the handle is read from via <HANDLE>.
944The method should return undef when there is no more data.
945
946    sub READLINE { $r = shift; "READLINE called $$r times\n"; }
947
948=item GETC this
949X<GETC>
950
951This method will be called when the C<getc> function is called.
952
953    sub GETC { print "Don't GETC, Get Perl"; return "a"; }
954
955=item EOF this
956X<EOF>
957
958This method will be called when the C<eof> function is called.
959
960Starting with Perl 5.12, an additional integer parameter will be passed.  It
961will be zero if C<eof> is called without parameter; C<1> if C<eof> is given
962a filehandle as a parameter, e.g. C<eof(FH)>; and C<2> in the very special
963case that the tied filehandle is C<ARGV> and C<eof> is called with an empty
964parameter list, e.g. C<eof()>.
965
966    sub EOF { not length $stringbuf }
967
968=item CLOSE this
969X<CLOSE>
970
971This method will be called when the handle is closed via the C<close>
972function.
973
974    sub CLOSE { print "CLOSE called.\n" }
975
976=item UNTIE this
977X<UNTIE>
978
979As with the other types of ties, this method will be called when C<untie> happens.
980It may be appropriate to "auto CLOSE" when this occurs.  See
981L<The C<untie> Gotcha> below.
982
983=item DESTROY this
984X<DESTROY>
985
986As with the other types of ties, this method will be called when the
987tied handle is about to be destroyed. This is useful for debugging and
988possibly cleaning up.
989
990    sub DESTROY { print "</shout>\n" }
991
992=back
993
994Here's how to use our little example:
995
996    tie(*FOO,'Shout');
997    print FOO "hello\n";
998    $a = 4; $b = 6;
999    print FOO $a, " plus ", $b, " equals ", $a + $b, "\n";
1000    print <FOO>;
1001
1002=head2 UNTIE this
1003X<UNTIE>
1004
1005You can define for all tie types an UNTIE method that will be called
1006at untie().  See L<The C<untie> Gotcha> below.
1007
1008=head2 The C<untie> Gotcha
1009X<untie>
1010
1011If you intend making use of the object returned from either tie() or
1012tied(), and if the tie's target class defines a destructor, there is a
1013subtle gotcha you I<must> guard against.
1014
1015As setup, consider this (admittedly rather contrived) example of a
1016tie; all it does is use a file to keep a log of the values assigned to
1017a scalar.
1018
1019    package Remember;
1020
1021    use strict;
1022    use warnings;
1023    use IO::File;
1024
1025    sub TIESCALAR {
1026        my $class = shift;
1027        my $filename = shift;
1028        my $handle = IO::File->new( "> $filename" )
1029                         or die "Cannot open $filename: $!\n";
1030
1031        print $handle "The Start\n";
1032        bless {FH => $handle, Value => 0}, $class;
1033    }
1034
1035    sub FETCH {
1036        my $self = shift;
1037        return $self->{Value};
1038    }
1039
1040    sub STORE {
1041        my $self = shift;
1042        my $value = shift;
1043        my $handle = $self->{FH};
1044        print $handle "$value\n";
1045        $self->{Value} = $value;
1046    }
1047
1048    sub DESTROY {
1049        my $self = shift;
1050        my $handle = $self->{FH};
1051        print $handle "The End\n";
1052        close $handle;
1053    }
1054
1055    1;
1056
1057Here is an example that makes use of this tie:
1058
1059    use strict;
1060    use Remember;
1061
1062    my $fred;
1063    tie $fred, 'Remember', 'myfile.txt';
1064    $fred = 1;
1065    $fred = 4;
1066    $fred = 5;
1067    untie $fred;
1068    system "cat myfile.txt";
1069
1070This is the output when it is executed:
1071
1072    The Start
1073    1
1074    4
1075    5
1076    The End
1077
1078So far so good.  Those of you who have been paying attention will have
1079spotted that the tied object hasn't been used so far.  So lets add an
1080extra method to the Remember class to allow comments to be included in
1081the file; say, something like this:
1082
1083    sub comment {
1084        my $self = shift;
1085        my $text = shift;
1086        my $handle = $self->{FH};
1087        print $handle $text, "\n";
1088    }
1089
1090And here is the previous example modified to use the C<comment> method
1091(which requires the tied object):
1092
1093    use strict;
1094    use Remember;
1095
1096    my ($fred, $x);
1097    $x = tie $fred, 'Remember', 'myfile.txt';
1098    $fred = 1;
1099    $fred = 4;
1100    comment $x "changing...";
1101    $fred = 5;
1102    untie $fred;
1103    system "cat myfile.txt";
1104
1105When this code is executed there is no output.  Here's why:
1106
1107When a variable is tied, it is associated with the object which is the
1108return value of the TIESCALAR, TIEARRAY, or TIEHASH function.  This
1109object normally has only one reference, namely, the implicit reference
1110from the tied variable.  When untie() is called, that reference is
1111destroyed.  Then, as in the first example above, the object's
1112destructor (DESTROY) is called, which is normal for objects that have
1113no more valid references; and thus the file is closed.
1114
1115In the second example, however, we have stored another reference to
1116the tied object in $x.  That means that when untie() gets called
1117there will still be a valid reference to the object in existence, so
1118the destructor is not called at that time, and thus the file is not
1119closed.  The reason there is no output is because the file buffers
1120have not been flushed to disk.
1121
1122Now that you know what the problem is, what can you do to avoid it?
1123Prior to the introduction of the optional UNTIE method the only way
1124was the good old C<-w> flag. Which will spot any instances where you call
1125untie() and there are still valid references to the tied object.  If
1126the second script above this near the top C<use warnings 'untie'>
1127or was run with the C<-w> flag, Perl prints this
1128warning message:
1129
1130    untie attempted while 1 inner references still exist
1131
1132To get the script to work properly and silence the warning make sure
1133there are no valid references to the tied object I<before> untie() is
1134called:
1135
1136    undef $x;
1137    untie $fred;
1138
1139Now that UNTIE exists the class designer can decide which parts of the
1140class functionality are really associated with C<untie> and which with
1141the object being destroyed. What makes sense for a given class depends
1142on whether the inner references are being kept so that non-tie-related
1143methods can be called on the object. But in most cases it probably makes
1144sense to move the functionality that would have been in DESTROY to the UNTIE
1145method.
1146
1147If the UNTIE method exists then the warning above does not occur. Instead the
1148UNTIE method is passed the count of "extra" references and can issue its own
1149warning if appropriate. e.g. to replicate the no UNTIE case this method can
1150be used:
1151
1152    sub UNTIE
1153    {
1154     my ($obj,$count) = @_;
1155     carp "untie attempted while $count inner references still exist" if $count;
1156    }
1157
1158=head1 SEE ALSO
1159
1160See L<DB_File> or L<Config> for some interesting tie() implementations.
1161A good starting point for many tie() implementations is with one of the
1162modules L<Tie::Scalar>, L<Tie::Array>, L<Tie::Hash>, or L<Tie::Handle>.
1163
1164=head1 BUGS
1165
1166The bucket usage information provided by C<scalar(%hash)> is not
1167available.  What this means is that using %tied_hash in boolean
1168context doesn't work right (currently this always tests false,
1169regardless of whether the hash is empty or hash elements).
1170
1171Localizing tied arrays or hashes does not work.  After exiting the
1172scope the arrays or the hashes are not restored.
1173
1174Counting the number of entries in a hash via C<scalar(keys(%hash))>
1175or C<scalar(values(%hash)>) is inefficient since it needs to iterate
1176through all the entries with FIRSTKEY/NEXTKEY.
1177
1178Tied hash/array slices cause multiple FETCH/STORE pairs, there are no
1179tie methods for slice operations.
1180
1181You cannot easily tie a multilevel data structure (such as a hash of
1182hashes) to a dbm file.  The first problem is that all but GDBM and
1183Berkeley DB have size limitations, but beyond that, you also have problems
1184with how references are to be represented on disk.  One
1185module that does attempt to address this need is DBM::Deep.  Check your
1186nearest CPAN site as described in L<perlmodlib> for source code.  Note
1187that despite its name, DBM::Deep does not use dbm.  Another earlier attempt
1188at solving the problem is MLDBM, which is also available on the CPAN, but
1189which has some fairly serious limitations.
1190
1191Tied filehandles are still incomplete.  sysopen(), truncate(),
1192flock(), fcntl(), stat() and -X can't currently be trapped.
1193
1194=head1 AUTHOR
1195
1196Tom Christiansen
1197
1198TIEHANDLE by Sven Verdoolaege <F<skimo@dns.ufsia.ac.be>> and Doug MacEachern <F<dougm@osf.org>>
1199
1200UNTIE by Nick Ing-Simmons <F<nick@ing-simmons.net>>
1201
1202SCALAR by Tassilo von Parseval <F<tassilo.von.parseval@rwth-aachen.de>>
1203
1204Tying Arrays by Casey West <F<casey@geeknest.com>>
1205