You want to create, populate, inspect, or delete values in a DBM database.
Use dbmopen
or tie
to open the database and make it accessible through a hash. Then use the hash as you normally would. When you're done, call dbmclose
or untie
.
use DB_File; # optional; overrides default dbmopen %HASH, $FILENAME, 0666 # open database, accessed through %HASH or die "Can't open $FILENAME: $!\n"; $V = $HASH{$KEY}; # retrieve from database $HASH{$KEY} = $VALUE; # put value into database if (exists $HASH{$KEY}) { # check whether in database # ... } delete $HASH{$KEY}; # remove from database dbmclose %HASH; # close the database
use DB_File; # load database module tie %HASH, "DB_File", $FILENAME # open database, to be accessed or die "Can't open $FILENAME:$!\n"; # through %HASH $V = $HASH{$KEY}; # retrieve from database $HASH{$KEY} = $VALUE; # put value into database if (exists $HASH{$KEY}) { # check whether in database # ... } delete $HASH{$KEY}; # delete from database untie %hash; # close the database
Accessing a database as a hash is powerful but easy, giving you a persistent hash that sticks around after the program using it has finished running. It's also much faster than loading in a new hash every time; even if the hash has a million entries, your program starts up virtually instantaneously.
The program in Example 14.1 treats the database as though it were a normal hash. You can even call keys
or each
on it. Likewise, exists
and defined
are implemented for tied DBM hashes. Unlike a normal hash, a DBM hash does not distinguish between those two functions.
#!/usr/bin/perl -w # userstats - generates statistics on who is logged in. # call with an argument to display totals use DB_File; $db = '/tmp/userstats.db'; # where data is kept between runs tie(%db, 'DB_File', $db) or die "Can't open DB_File $db : $!\n"; if (@ARGV) { if ("@ARGV" eq "ALL") { @ARGV = sort keys %db; } foreach $user (@ARGV) { print "$user\t$db{$user}\n"; } } else { @who = `who`; # run who(1) if ($?) { die "Couldn't run who: $?\n"; # exited abnormally } # extract username (first thing on the line) and update foreach $line (@who) { $line =~ /^(\S+)/; die "Bad line from who: $line\n" unless $1; $db{$1}++; } } untie %db;
We use who to get a list of users logged in. This typically produces output like:
gnat ttyp1 May 29 15:39 (coprolith.frii.com)
If the userstats program is called without any arguments, it checks who's logged on and updates the database appropriately.
If the program is called with arguments, these are treated as usernames whose information will be presented. The special argument "ALL"
sets @ARGV
to a sorted list of DBM keys. For large hashes with many keys, this is prohibitively expensive - a better solution would be to use the BTREE bindings of DB_File described in Recipe 14.6.
The documentation for the standard modules GDBM_File, NDBM_File, SDBM_File, DB_File, also in Chapter 7 of Programming Perl; perltie (1); the section on "Using Tied Variables" in Chapter 5 of Programming Perl; the discussion on the effect of your umask
on file creation in Recipe 7.1; Recipe 13.15