## ## Package to read/write on BINARY data connections ## package Net::FTP::I; use vars qw(@ISA $buf $VERSION); use Carp; require Net::FTP::dataconn; @ISA = qw(Net::FTP::dataconn); $VERSION = sprintf("1.%02d",(q$Id: //depot/libnet/Net/FTP/I.pm#5$ =~ /#(\d+)/)[0]); sub read { my $data = shift; local *buf = \$_[0]; shift; my $size = shift || croak 'read($buf,$size,[$timeout])'; my $timeout = @_ ? shift : $data->timeout; $data->can_read($timeout) or croak "Timeout"; my $n = sysread($data, $buf, $size); ${*$data}{'net_ftp_bytesread'} += $n if $n > 0; ${*$data}{'net_ftp_eof'} = 1 unless $n; $n; } sub write { my $data = shift; local *buf = \$_[0]; shift; my $size = shift || croak 'write($buf,$size,[$timeout])'; my $timeout = @_ ? shift : $data->timeout; $data->can_write($timeout) or croak "Timeout"; # If the remote server has closed the connection we will be signal'd # when we write. This can happen if the disk on the remote server fills up local $SIG{PIPE} = 'IGNORE'; my $sent = $size; my $off = 0; while($sent > 0) { my $n = syswrite($data, $buf, $sent,$off); return $n if $n < 0; $sent -= $n; $off += $n; } $size; } 1;