ODBM_File - Tied access to odbm files
use Fcntl; # For O_RDWR, O_CREAT, etc.
use ODBM_File;
# Now read and change the hash
$h{newkey} = newvalue;
print $h{oldkey};
...
untie %h;
ODBM_File
establishes a connection between a Perl hash variable and a file in ODBM_File format;. You can manipulate the data in the file just as if it were in a Perl hash, but when your program exits, the data will remain in the file, to be used the next time your program runs.
Use ODBM_File
with the Perl built-in tie
function to establish the connection between the variable and the file. The arguments to tie
should be:
The hash variable you want to tie.
The string "ODBM_File"
. (Ths tells Perl to use the ODBM_File
package to perform the functions of the hash.)
The name of the file you want to tie to the hash.
Flags. Use one of:
O_RDONLY
Read-only access to the data in the file.
O_WRONLY
Write-only access to the data in the file.
O_RDWR
Both read and write access.
If you want to create the file if it does not exist, add O_CREAT
to any of these, as in the example. If you omit O_CREAT
and the file does not already exist, the tie
call will fail.
The default permissions to use if a new file is created. The actual permissions will be modified by the user's umask, so you should probably use 0666 here. (See "umask" in perlfunc.)
On failure, the tie
call returns an undefined value and probably sets $!
to contain the reason the file could not be tied.
odbm store returned -1, errno 22, key "..." at ...
This warning is emitted when you try to store a key or a value that is too long. It means that the change was not recorded in the database. See BUGS AND WARNINGS below.
Do not accept ODBM files from untrusted sources.
On modern Linux systems these are typically GDBM files, which are not portable across platforms.
The GDBM documentation doesn't imply that files from untrusted sources can be safely used with libgdbm
.
Systems that don't use GDBM compatibilty for old dbm support will be using a platform specific library, possibly inherited from BSD systems, where it may or may not be safe to use an untrusted file.
A maliciously crafted file might cause perl to crash or even expose a security vulnerability.
There are a number of limits on the size of the data that you can store in the ODBM file. The most important is that the length of a key, plus the length of its associated value, may not exceed 1008 bytes.