seek
- seek FILEHANDLE,POSITION,WHENCE
Sets FILEHANDLE's position, just like the fseek(3) call of C
stdio
. FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value gives the name of the filehandle. The values for WHENCE areto set the new position in bytes to POSITION;
1
to set it to the current position plus POSITION; and2
to set it to EOF plus POSITION, typically negative. For WHENCE you may use the constantsSEEK_SET
,SEEK_CUR
, andSEEK_END
(start of the file, current position, end of the file) from the Fcntl module. Returns1
on success, false otherwise.Note the emphasis on bytes: even if the filehandle has been set to operate on characters (for example using the
:encoding(UTF-8)
I/O layer), the seek, tell, and sysseek family of functions use byte offsets, not character offsets, because seeking to a character offset would be very slow in a UTF-8 file.If you want to position the file for sysread or syswrite, don't use seek, because buffering makes its effect on the file's read-write position unpredictable and non-portable. Use sysseek instead.
Due to the rules and rigors of ANSI C, on some systems you have to do a seek whenever you switch between reading and writing. Amongst other things, this may have the effect of calling stdio's clearerr(3). A WHENCE of
1
(SEEK_CUR
) is useful for not moving the file position:- seek($fh, 0, 1);
This is also useful for applications emulating
tail -f
. Once you hit EOF on your read and then sleep for a while, you (probably) have to stick in a dummy seek to reset things. The seek doesn't change the position, but it does clear the end-of-file condition on the handle, so that the nextreadline FILE
makes Perl try again to read something. (We hope.)If that doesn't work (some I/O implementations are particularly cantankerous), you might need something like this: