SILENT KILLERPanel

Current Path: > > > usr > lib64 > perl5


Operation   : Linux premium131.web-hosting.com 4.18.0-553.44.1.lve.el8.x86_64 #1 SMP Thu Mar 13 14:29:12 UTC 2025 x86_64
Software     : Apache
Server IP    : 162.0.232.56 | Your IP: 216.73.216.111
Domains      : 1034 Domain(s)
Permission   : [ 0755 ]

Files and Folders in: ///usr/lib64/perl5

NameTypeSizeLast ModifiedActions
B Directory - -
CORE Directory - -
Devel Directory - -
File Directory - -
Hash Directory - -
I18N Directory - -
IO Directory - -
IPC Directory - -
PerlIO Directory - -
Sys Directory - -
Tie Directory - -
Time Directory - -
asm Directory - -
asm-generic Directory - -
auto Directory - -
bits Directory - -
gnu Directory - -
linux Directory - -
machine Directory - -
sys Directory - -
vendor_perl Directory - -
B.pm File 31457 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
Config.pm File 3198 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
Config.pod File 256889 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
Config_git.pl File 409 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
Config_heavy.pl File 56655 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
DynaLoader.pm File 25222 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
Errno.pm File 6865 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
Fcntl.pm File 4044 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
GDBM_File.pm File 1551 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
IO.pm File 1453 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
NDBM_File.pm File 2500 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
O.pm File 4208 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
ODBM_File.pm File 2383 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
Opcode.pm File 15893 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
POSIX.pm File 20198 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
POSIX.pod File 73705 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
SDBM_File.pm File 3541 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
_h2ph_pre.ph File 29256 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:18.
arybase.pm File 2816 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
attributes.pm File 16929 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
endian.ph File 4461 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:18.
features.ph File 13692 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:18.
lib.pm File 6006 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
mro.pm File 10099 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
ops.pm File 997 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
perllocal.pod File 10955 bytes March 17 2024 10:36:19.
re.pm File 22687 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:09.
signal.ph File 3381 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:18.
stdarg.ph File 2870 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:18.
stdc-predef.ph File 840 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:18.
stddef.ph File 12372 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:18.
syscall.ph File 86 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:18.
syslimits.ph File 452 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:18.
syslog.ph File 85 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:18.
wait.ph File 83 bytes July 28 2025 08:07:18.

Reading File: ///usr/lib64/perl5/SDBM_File.pm

package SDBM_File;

use strict;
use warnings;

require Tie::Hash;
require XSLoader;

our @ISA = qw(Tie::Hash);
our $VERSION = "1.14";

our @EXPORT_OK = qw(PAGFEXT DIRFEXT PAIRMAX);
use Exporter "import";

XSLoader::load();

1;

__END__

=head1 NAME

SDBM_File - Tied access to sdbm files

=head1 SYNOPSIS

 use Fcntl;   # For O_RDWR, O_CREAT, etc.
 use SDBM_File;

 tie(%h, 'SDBM_File', 'filename', O_RDWR|O_CREAT, 0666)
   or die "Couldn't tie SDBM file 'filename': $!; aborting";

 # Now read and change the hash
 $h{newkey} = newvalue;
 print $h{oldkey}; 
 ...

 untie %h;

=head1 DESCRIPTION

C<SDBM_File> establishes a connection between a Perl hash variable and
a file in SDBM_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.

=head2 Tie

Use C<SDBM_File> with the Perl built-in C<tie> function to establish
the connection between the variable and the file.

    tie %hash, 'SDBM_File', $basename, $modeflags, $perms;

    tie %hash, 'SDBM_File', $dirfile,  $modeflags, $perms, $pagfilename;

C<$basename> is the base filename for the database.  The database is two
files with ".dir" and ".pag" extensions appended to C<$basename>,

    $basename.dir     (or .sdbm_dir on VMS, per DIRFEXT constant)
    $basename.pag

The two filenames can also be given separately in full as C<$dirfile>
and C<$pagfilename>.  This suits for two files without ".dir" and ".pag"
extensions, perhaps for example two files from L<File::Temp>.

C<$modeflags> can be the following constants from the C<Fcntl> module (in
the style of the L<open(2)> system call),

    O_RDONLY          read-only access
    O_WRONLY          write-only access
    O_RDWR            read and write access

If you want to create the file if it does not already exist then bitwise-OR
(C<|>) C<O_CREAT> too.  If you omit C<O_CREAT> and the database does not
already exist then the C<tie> call will fail.

    O_CREAT           create database if doesn't already exist

C<$perms> is the file permissions bits to use if new database files are
created.  This parameter is mandatory even when not creating a new database.
The permissions will be reduced by the user's umask so the usual value here
would be 0666, or if some very private data then 0600.  (See
L<perlfunc/umask>.)

=head1 EXPORTS

SDBM_File optionally exports the following constants:

=over

=item *

C<PAGFEXT> - the extension used for the page file, usually C<.pag>.

=item *

C<DIRFEXT> - the extension used for the directory file, C<.dir>
everywhere but VMS, where it is C<.sdbm_dir>.

=item *

C<PAIRMAX> - the maximum size of a stored hash entry, including the
length of both the key and value.

=back

These constants can also be used with fully qualified names,
eg. C<SDBM_File::PAGFEXT>.

=head1 DIAGNOSTICS

On failure, the C<tie> call returns an undefined value and probably
sets C<$!> to contain the reason the file could not be tied.

=head2 C<sdbm 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.

=head1 BUGS AND WARNINGS

There are a number of limits on the size of the data that you can
store in the SDBM file.  The most important is that the length of a
key, plus the length of its associated value, may not exceed 1008
bytes.

See L<perlfunc/tie>, L<perldbmfilter>, L<Fcntl>

=cut

SILENT KILLER Tool