1=head1 NAME 2 3perlpacktut - tutorial on C<pack> and C<unpack> 4 5=head1 DESCRIPTION 6 7C<pack> and C<unpack> are two functions for transforming data according 8to a user-defined template, between the guarded way Perl stores values 9and some well-defined representation as might be required in the 10environment of a Perl program. Unfortunately, they're also two of 11the most misunderstood and most often overlooked functions that Perl 12provides. This tutorial will demystify them for you. 13 14 15=head1 The Basic Principle 16 17Most programming languages don't shelter the memory where variables are 18stored. In C, for instance, you can take the address of some variable, 19and the C<sizeof> operator tells you how many bytes are allocated to 20the variable. Using the address and the size, you may access the storage 21to your heart's content. 22 23In Perl, you just can't access memory at random, but the structural and 24representational conversion provided by C<pack> and C<unpack> is an 25excellent alternative. The C<pack> function converts values to a byte 26sequence containing representations according to a given specification, 27the so-called "template" argument. C<unpack> is the reverse process, 28deriving some values from the contents of a string of bytes. (Be cautioned, 29however, that not all that has been packed together can be neatly unpacked - 30a very common experience as seasoned travellers are likely to confirm.) 31 32Why, you may ask, would you need a chunk of memory containing some values 33in binary representation? One good reason is input and output accessing 34some file, a device, or a network connection, whereby this binary 35representation is either forced on you or will give you some benefit 36in processing. Another cause is passing data to some system call that 37is not available as a Perl function: C<syscall> requires you to provide 38parameters stored in the way it happens in a C program. Even text processing 39(as shown in the next section) may be simplified with judicious usage 40of these two functions. 41 42To see how (un)packing works, we'll start with a simple template 43code where the conversion is in low gear: between the contents of a byte 44sequence and a string of hexadecimal digits. Let's use C<unpack>, since 45this is likely to remind you of a dump program, or some desperate last 46message unfortunate programs are wont to throw at you before they expire 47into the wild blue yonder. Assuming that the variable C<$mem> holds a 48sequence of bytes that we'd like to inspect without assuming anything 49about its meaning, we can write 50 51 my( $hex ) = unpack( 'H*', $mem ); 52 print "$hex\n"; 53 54whereupon we might see something like this, with each pair of hex digits 55corresponding to a byte: 56 57 41204d414e204120504c414e20412043414e414c2050414e414d41 58 59What was in this chunk of memory? Numbers, characters, or a mixture of 60both? Assuming that we're on a computer where ASCII (or some similar) 61encoding is used: hexadecimal values in the range C<0x40> - C<0x5A> 62indicate an uppercase letter, and C<0x20> encodes a space. So we might 63assume it is a piece of text, which some are able to read like a tabloid; 64but others will have to get hold of an ASCII table and relive that 65firstgrader feeling. Not caring too much about which way to read this, 66we note that C<unpack> with the template code C<H> converts the contents 67of a sequence of bytes into the customary hexadecimal notation. Since 68"a sequence of" is a pretty vague indication of quantity, C<H> has been 69defined to convert just a single hexadecimal digit unless it is followed 70by a repeat count. An asterisk for the repeat count means to use whatever 71remains. 72 73The inverse operation - packing byte contents from a string of hexadecimal 74digits - is just as easily written. For instance: 75 76 my $s = pack( 'H2' x 10, 30..39 ); 77 print "$s\n"; 78 79Since we feed a list of ten 2-digit hexadecimal strings to C<pack>, the 80pack template should contain ten pack codes. If this is run on a computer 81with ASCII character coding, it will print C<0123456789>. 82 83=head1 Packing Text 84 85Let's suppose you've got to read in a data file like this: 86 87 Date |Description | Income|Expenditure 88 01/24/2001 Zed's Camel Emporium 1147.99 89 01/28/2001 Flea spray 24.99 90 01/29/2001 Camel rides to tourists 235.00 91 92How do we do it? You might think first to use C<split>; however, since 93C<split> collapses blank fields, you'll never know whether a record was 94income or expenditure. Oops. Well, you could always use C<substr>: 95 96 while (<>) { 97 my $date = substr($_, 0, 11); 98 my $desc = substr($_, 12, 27); 99 my $income = substr($_, 40, 7); 100 my $expend = substr($_, 52, 7); 101 ... 102 } 103 104It's not really a barrel of laughs, is it? In fact, it's worse than it 105may seem; the eagle-eyed may notice that the first field should only be 10610 characters wide, and the error has propagated right through the other 107numbers - which we've had to count by hand. So it's error-prone as well 108as horribly unfriendly. 109 110Or maybe we could use regular expressions: 111 112 while (<>) { 113 my($date, $desc, $income, $expend) = 114 m|(\d\d/\d\d/\d{4}) (.{27}) (.{7})(.*)|; 115 ... 116 } 117 118Urgh. Well, it's a bit better, but - well, would you want to maintain 119that? 120 121Hey, isn't Perl supposed to make this sort of thing easy? Well, it does, 122if you use the right tools. C<pack> and C<unpack> are designed to help 123you out when dealing with fixed-width data like the above. Let's have a 124look at a solution with C<unpack>: 125 126 while (<>) { 127 my($date, $desc, $income, $expend) = unpack("A10xA27xA7A*", $_); 128 ... 129 } 130 131That looks a bit nicer; but we've got to take apart that weird template. 132Where did I pull that out of? 133 134OK, let's have a look at some of our data again; in fact, we'll include 135the headers, and a handy ruler so we can keep track of where we are. 136 137 1 2 3 4 5 138 1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678 139 Date |Description | Income|Expenditure 140 01/28/2001 Flea spray 24.99 141 01/29/2001 Camel rides to tourists 235.00 142 143From this, we can see that the date column stretches from column 1 to 144column 10 - ten characters wide. The C<pack>-ese for "character" is 145C<A>, and ten of them are C<A10>. So if we just wanted to extract the 146dates, we could say this: 147 148 my($date) = unpack("A10", $_); 149 150OK, what's next? Between the date and the description is a blank column; 151we want to skip over that. The C<x> template means "skip forward", so we 152want one of those. Next, we have another batch of characters, from 12 to 15338. That's 27 more characters, hence C<A27>. (Don't make the fencepost 154error - there are 27 characters between 12 and 38, not 26. Count 'em!) 155 156Now we skip another character and pick up the next 7 characters: 157 158 my($date,$description,$income) = unpack("A10xA27xA7", $_); 159 160Now comes the clever bit. Lines in our ledger which are just income and 161not expenditure might end at column 46. Hence, we don't want to tell our 162C<unpack> pattern that we B<need> to find another 12 characters; we'll 163just say "if there's anything left, take it". As you might guess from 164regular expressions, that's what the C<*> means: "use everything 165remaining". 166 167=over 3 168 169=item * 170 171Be warned, though, that unlike regular expressions, if the C<unpack> 172template doesn't match the incoming data, Perl will scream and die. 173 174=back 175 176 177Hence, putting it all together: 178 179 my ($date, $description, $income, $expend) = 180 unpack("A10xA27xA7xA*", $_); 181 182Now, that's our data parsed. I suppose what we might want to do now is 183total up our income and expenditure, and add another line to the end of 184our ledger - in the same format - saying how much we've brought in and 185how much we've spent: 186 187 while (<>) { 188 my ($date, $desc, $income, $expend) = 189 unpack("A10xA27xA7xA*", $_); 190 $tot_income += $income; 191 $tot_expend += $expend; 192 } 193 194 $tot_income = sprintf("%.2f", $tot_income); # Get them into 195 $tot_expend = sprintf("%.2f", $tot_expend); # "financial" format 196 197 $date = POSIX::strftime("%m/%d/%Y", localtime); 198 199 # OK, let's go: 200 201 print pack("A10xA27xA7xA*", $date, "Totals", 202 $tot_income, $tot_expend); 203 204Oh, hmm. That didn't quite work. Let's see what happened: 205 206 01/24/2001 Zed's Camel Emporium 1147.99 207 01/28/2001 Flea spray 24.99 208 01/29/2001 Camel rides to tourists 1235.00 209 03/23/2001Totals 1235.001172.98 210 211OK, it's a start, but what happened to the spaces? We put C<x>, didn't 212we? Shouldn't it skip forward? Let's look at what L<perlfunc/pack> says: 213 214 x A null byte. 215 216Urgh. No wonder. There's a big difference between "a null byte", 217character zero, and "a space", character 32. Perl's put something 218between the date and the description - but unfortunately, we can't see 219it! 220 221What we actually need to do is expand the width of the fields. The C<A> 222format pads any non-existent characters with spaces, so we can use the 223additional spaces to line up our fields, like this: 224 225 print pack("A11 A28 A8 A*", $date, "Totals", 226 $tot_income, $tot_expend); 227 228(Note that you can put spaces in the template to make it more readable, 229but they don't translate to spaces in the output.) Here's what we got 230this time: 231 232 01/24/2001 Zed's Camel Emporium 1147.99 233 01/28/2001 Flea spray 24.99 234 01/29/2001 Camel rides to tourists 1235.00 235 03/23/2001 Totals 1235.00 1172.98 236 237That's a bit better, but we still have that last column which needs to 238be moved further over. There's an easy way to fix this up: 239unfortunately, we can't get C<pack> to right-justify our fields, but we 240can get C<sprintf> to do it: 241 242 $tot_income = sprintf("%.2f", $tot_income); 243 $tot_expend = sprintf("%12.2f", $tot_expend); 244 $date = POSIX::strftime("%m/%d/%Y", localtime); 245 print pack("A11 A28 A8 A*", $date, "Totals", 246 $tot_income, $tot_expend); 247 248This time we get the right answer: 249 250 01/28/2001 Flea spray 24.99 251 01/29/2001 Camel rides to tourists 1235.00 252 03/23/2001 Totals 1235.00 1172.98 253 254So that's how we consume and produce fixed-width data. Let's recap what 255we've seen of C<pack> and C<unpack> so far: 256 257=over 3 258 259=item * 260 261Use C<pack> to go from several pieces of data to one fixed-width 262version; use C<unpack> to turn a fixed-width-format string into several 263pieces of data. 264 265=item * 266 267The pack format C<A> means "any character"; if you're C<pack>ing and 268you've run out of things to pack, C<pack> will fill the rest up with 269spaces. 270 271=item * 272 273C<x> means "skip a byte" when C<unpack>ing; when C<pack>ing, it means 274"introduce a null byte" - that's probably not what you mean if you're 275dealing with plain text. 276 277=item * 278 279You can follow the formats with numbers to say how many characters 280should be affected by that format: C<A12> means "take 12 characters"; 281C<x6> means "skip 6 bytes" or "character 0, 6 times". 282 283=item * 284 285Instead of a number, you can use C<*> to mean "consume everything else 286left". 287 288B<Warning>: when packing multiple pieces of data, C<*> only means 289"consume all of the current piece of data". That's to say 290 291 pack("A*A*", $one, $two) 292 293packs all of C<$one> into the first C<A*> and then all of C<$two> into 294the second. This is a general principle: each format character 295corresponds to one piece of data to be C<pack>ed. 296 297=back 298 299 300 301=head1 Packing Numbers 302 303So much for textual data. Let's get onto the meaty stuff that C<pack> 304and C<unpack> are best at: handling binary formats for numbers. There is, 305of course, not just one binary format - life would be too simple - but 306Perl will do all the finicky labor for you. 307 308 309=head2 Integers 310 311Packing and unpacking numbers implies conversion to and from some 312I<specific> binary representation. Leaving floating point numbers 313aside for the moment, the salient properties of any such representation 314are: 315 316=over 4 317 318=item * 319 320the number of bytes used for storing the integer, 321 322=item * 323 324whether the contents are interpreted as a signed or unsigned number, 325 326=item * 327 328the byte ordering: whether the first byte is the least or most 329significant byte (or: little-endian or big-endian, respectively). 330 331=back 332 333So, for instance, to pack 20302 to a signed 16 bit integer in your 334computer's representation you write 335 336 my $ps = pack( 's', 20302 ); 337 338Again, the result is a string, now containing 2 bytes. If you print 339this string (which is, generally, not recommended) you might see 340C<ON> or C<NO> (depending on your system's byte ordering) - or something 341entirely different if your computer doesn't use ASCII character encoding. 342Unpacking C<$ps> with the same template returns the original integer value: 343 344 my( $s ) = unpack( 's', $ps ); 345 346This is true for all numeric template codes. But don't expect miracles: 347if the packed value exceeds the allotted byte capacity, high order bits 348are silently discarded, and unpack certainly won't be able to pull them 349back out of some magic hat. And, when you pack using a signed template 350code such as C<s>, an excess value may result in the sign bit 351getting set, and unpacking this will smartly return a negative value. 352 35316 bits won't get you too far with integers, but there is C<l> and C<L> 354for signed and unsigned 32-bit integers. And if this is not enough and 355your system supports 64 bit integers you can push the limits much closer 356to infinity with pack codes C<q> and C<Q>. A notable exception is provided 357by pack codes C<i> and C<I> for signed and unsigned integers of the 358"local custom" variety: Such an integer will take up as many bytes as 359a local C compiler returns for C<sizeof(int)>, but it'll use I<at least> 36032 bits. 361 362Each of the integer pack codes C<sSlLqQ> results in a fixed number of bytes, 363no matter where you execute your program. This may be useful for some 364applications, but it does not provide for a portable way to pass data 365structures between Perl and C programs (bound to happen when you call 366XS extensions or the Perl function C<syscall>), or when you read or 367write binary files. What you'll need in this case are template codes that 368depend on what your local C compiler compiles when you code C<short> or 369C<unsigned long>, for instance. These codes and their corresponding 370byte lengths are shown in the table below. Since the C standard leaves 371much leeway with respect to the relative sizes of these data types, actual 372values may vary, and that's why the values are given as expressions in 373C and Perl. (If you'd like to use values from C<%Config> in your program 374you have to import it with C<use Config>.) 375 376 signed unsigned byte length in C byte length in Perl 377 s! S! sizeof(short) $Config{shortsize} 378 i! I! sizeof(int) $Config{intsize} 379 l! L! sizeof(long) $Config{longsize} 380 q! Q! sizeof(long long) $Config{longlongsize} 381 382The C<i!> and C<I!> codes aren't different from C<i> and C<I>; they are 383tolerated for completeness' sake. 384 385 386=head2 Unpacking a Stack Frame 387 388Requesting a particular byte ordering may be necessary when you work with 389binary data coming from some specific architecture whereas your program could 390run on a totally different system. As an example, assume you have 24 bytes 391containing a stack frame as it happens on an Intel 8086: 392 393 +---------+ +----+----+ +---------+ 394 TOS: | IP | TOS+4:| FL | FH | FLAGS TOS+14:| SI | 395 +---------+ +----+----+ +---------+ 396 | CS | | AL | AH | AX | DI | 397 +---------+ +----+----+ +---------+ 398 | BL | BH | BX | BP | 399 +----+----+ +---------+ 400 | CL | CH | CX | DS | 401 +----+----+ +---------+ 402 | DL | DH | DX | ES | 403 +----+----+ +---------+ 404 405First, we note that this time-honored 16-bit CPU uses little-endian order, 406and that's why the low order byte is stored at the lower address. To 407unpack such a (unsigned) short we'll have to use code C<v>. A repeat 408count unpacks all 12 shorts: 409 410 my( $ip, $cs, $flags, $ax, $bx, $cd, $dx, $si, $di, $bp, $ds, $es ) = 411 unpack( 'v12', $frame ); 412 413Alternatively, we could have used C<C> to unpack the individually 414accessible byte registers FL, FH, AL, AH, etc.: 415 416 my( $fl, $fh, $al, $ah, $bl, $bh, $cl, $ch, $dl, $dh ) = 417 unpack( 'C10', substr( $frame, 4, 10 ) ); 418 419It would be nice if we could do this in one fell swoop: unpack a short, 420back up a little, and then unpack 2 bytes. Since Perl I<is> nice, it 421proffers the template code C<X> to back up one byte. Putting this all 422together, we may now write: 423 424 my( $ip, $cs, 425 $flags,$fl,$fh, 426 $ax,$al,$ah, $bx,$bl,$bh, $cx,$cl,$ch, $dx,$dl,$dh, 427 $si, $di, $bp, $ds, $es ) = 428 unpack( 'v2' . ('vXXCC' x 5) . 'v5', $frame ); 429 430(The clumsy construction of the template can be avoided - just read on!) 431 432We've taken some pains to construct the template so that it matches 433the contents of our frame buffer. Otherwise we'd either get undefined values, 434or C<unpack> could not unpack all. If C<pack> runs out of items, it will 435supply null strings (which are coerced into zeroes whenever the pack code 436says so). 437 438 439=head2 How to Eat an Egg on a Net 440 441The pack code for big-endian (high order byte at the lowest address) is 442C<n> for 16 bit and C<N> for 32 bit integers. You use these codes 443if you know that your data comes from a compliant architecture, but, 444surprisingly enough, you should also use these pack codes if you 445exchange binary data, across the network, with some system that you 446know next to nothing about. The simple reason is that this 447order has been chosen as the I<network order>, and all standard-fearing 448programs ought to follow this convention. (This is, of course, a stern 449backing for one of the Lilliputian parties and may well influence the 450political development there.) So, if the protocol expects you to send 451a message by sending the length first, followed by just so many bytes, 452you could write: 453 454 my $buf = pack( 'N', length( $msg ) ) . $msg; 455 456or even: 457 458 my $buf = pack( 'NA*', length( $msg ), $msg ); 459 460and pass C<$buf> to your send routine. Some protocols demand that the 461count should include the length of the count itself: then just add 4 462to the data length. (But make sure to read L</"Lengths and Widths"> before 463you really code this!) 464 465 466=head2 Byte-order modifiers 467 468In the previous sections we've learned how to use C<n>, C<N>, C<v> and 469C<V> to pack and unpack integers with big- or little-endian byte-order. 470While this is nice, it's still rather limited because it leaves out all 471kinds of signed integers as well as 64-bit integers. For example, if you 472wanted to unpack a sequence of signed big-endian 16-bit integers in a 473platform-independent way, you would have to write: 474 475 my @data = unpack 's*', pack 'S*', unpack 'n*', $buf; 476 477This is ugly. As of Perl 5.9.2, there's a much nicer way to express your 478desire for a certain byte-order: the C<E<gt>> and C<E<lt>> modifiers. 479C<E<gt>> is the big-endian modifier, while C<E<lt>> is the little-endian 480modifier. Using them, we could rewrite the above code as: 481 482 my @data = unpack 's>*', $buf; 483 484As you can see, the "big end" of the arrow touches the C<s>, which is a 485nice way to remember that C<E<gt>> is the big-endian modifier. The same 486obviously works for C<E<lt>>, where the "little end" touches the code. 487 488You will probably find these modifiers even more useful if you have 489to deal with big- or little-endian C structures. Be sure to read 490L</"Packing and Unpacking C Structures"> for more on that. 491 492 493=head2 Floating point Numbers 494 495For packing floating point numbers you have the choice between the 496pack codes C<f>, C<d>, C<F> and C<D>. C<f> and C<d> pack into (or unpack 497from) single-precision or double-precision representation as it is provided 498by your system. If your systems supports it, C<D> can be used to pack and 499unpack (C<long double>) values, which can offer even more resolution 500than C<f> or C<d>. B<Note that there are different long double formats.> 501 502C<F> packs an C<NV>, which is the floating point type used by Perl 503internally. 504 505There is no such thing as a network representation for reals, so if 506you want to send your real numbers across computer boundaries, you'd 507better stick to text representation, possibly using the hexadecimal 508float format (avoiding the decimal conversion loss), unless you're 509absolutely sure what's on the other end of the line. For the even more 510adventuresome, you can use the byte-order modifiers from the previous 511section also on floating point codes. 512 513 514 515=head1 Exotic Templates 516 517 518=head2 Bit Strings 519 520Bits are the atoms in the memory world. Access to individual bits may 521have to be used either as a last resort or because it is the most 522convenient way to handle your data. Bit string (un)packing converts 523between strings containing a series of C<0> and C<1> characters and 524a sequence of bytes each containing a group of 8 bits. This is almost 525as simple as it sounds, except that there are two ways the contents of 526a byte may be written as a bit string. Let's have a look at an annotated 527byte: 528 529 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 530 +-----------------+ 531 | 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 | 532 +-----------------+ 533 MSB LSB 534 535It's egg-eating all over again: Some think that as a bit string this should 536be written "10001100" i.e. beginning with the most significant bit, others 537insist on "00110001". Well, Perl isn't biased, so that's why we have two bit 538string codes: 539 540 $byte = pack( 'B8', '10001100' ); # start with MSB 541 $byte = pack( 'b8', '00110001' ); # start with LSB 542 543It is not possible to pack or unpack bit fields - just integral bytes. 544C<pack> always starts at the next byte boundary and "rounds up" to the 545next multiple of 8 by adding zero bits as required. (If you do want bit 546fields, there is L<perlfunc/vec>. Or you could implement bit field 547handling at the character string level, using split, substr, and 548concatenation on unpacked bit strings.) 549 550To illustrate unpacking for bit strings, we'll decompose a simple 551status register (a "-" stands for a "reserved" bit): 552 553 +-----------------+-----------------+ 554 | S Z - A - P - C | - - - - O D I T | 555 +-----------------+-----------------+ 556 MSB LSB MSB LSB 557 558Converting these two bytes to a string can be done with the unpack 559template C<'b16'>. To obtain the individual bit values from the bit 560string we use C<split> with the "empty" separator pattern which dissects 561into individual characters. Bit values from the "reserved" positions are 562simply assigned to C<undef>, a convenient notation for "I don't care where 563this goes". 564 565 ($carry, undef, $parity, undef, $auxcarry, undef, $zero, $sign, 566 $trace, $interrupt, $direction, $overflow) = 567 split( //, unpack( 'b16', $status ) ); 568 569We could have used an unpack template C<'b12'> just as well, since the 570last 4 bits can be ignored anyway. 571 572 573=head2 Uuencoding 574 575Another odd-man-out in the template alphabet is C<u>, which packs a 576"uuencoded string". ("uu" is short for Unix-to-Unix.) Chances are that 577you won't ever need this encoding technique which was invented to overcome 578the shortcomings of old-fashioned transmission mediums that do not support 579other than simple ASCII data. The essential recipe is simple: Take three 580bytes, or 24 bits. Split them into 4 six-packs, adding a space (0x20) to 581each. Repeat until all of the data is blended. Fold groups of 4 bytes into 582lines no longer than 60 and garnish them in front with the original byte count 583(incremented by 0x20) and a C<"\n"> at the end. - The C<pack> chef will 584prepare this for you, a la minute, when you select pack code C<u> on the menu: 585 586 my $uubuf = pack( 'u', $bindat ); 587 588A repeat count after C<u> sets the number of bytes to put into an 589uuencoded line, which is the maximum of 45 by default, but could be 590set to some (smaller) integer multiple of three. C<unpack> simply ignores 591the repeat count. 592 593 594=head2 Doing Sums 595 596An even stranger template code is C<%>E<lt>I<number>E<gt>. First, because 597it's used as a prefix to some other template code. Second, because it 598cannot be used in C<pack> at all, and third, in C<unpack>, doesn't return the 599data as defined by the template code it precedes. Instead it'll give you an 600integer of I<number> bits that is computed from the data value by 601doing sums. For numeric unpack codes, no big feat is achieved: 602 603 my $buf = pack( 'iii', 100, 20, 3 ); 604 print unpack( '%32i3', $buf ), "\n"; # prints 123 605 606For string values, C<%> returns the sum of the byte values saving 607you the trouble of a sum loop with C<substr> and C<ord>: 608 609 print unpack( '%32A*', "\x01\x10" ), "\n"; # prints 17 610 611Although the C<%> code is documented as returning a "checksum": 612don't put your trust in such values! Even when applied to a small number 613of bytes, they won't guarantee a noticeable Hamming distance. 614 615In connection with C<b> or C<B>, C<%> simply adds bits, and this can be put 616to good use to count set bits efficiently: 617 618 my $bitcount = unpack( '%32b*', $mask ); 619 620And an even parity bit can be determined like this: 621 622 my $evenparity = unpack( '%1b*', $mask ); 623 624 625=head2 Unicode 626 627Unicode is a character set that can represent most characters in most of 628the world's languages, providing room for over one million different 629characters. Unicode 3.1 specifies 94,140 characters: The Basic Latin 630characters are assigned to the numbers 0 - 127. The Latin-1 Supplement with 631characters that are used in several European languages is in the next 632range, up to 255. After some more Latin extensions we find the character 633sets from languages using non-Roman alphabets, interspersed with a 634variety of symbol sets such as currency symbols, Zapf Dingbats or Braille. 635(You might want to visit L<http://www.unicode.org/> for a look at some of 636them - my personal favourites are Telugu and Kannada.) 637 638The Unicode character sets associates characters with integers. Encoding 639these numbers in an equal number of bytes would more than double the 640requirements for storing texts written in Latin alphabets. 641The UTF-8 encoding avoids this by storing the most common (from a western 642point of view) characters in a single byte while encoding the rarer 643ones in three or more bytes. 644 645Perl uses UTF-8, internally, for most Unicode strings. 646 647So what has this got to do with C<pack>? Well, if you want to compose a 648Unicode string (that is internally encoded as UTF-8), you can do so by 649using template code C<U>. As an example, let's produce the Euro currency 650symbol (code number 0x20AC): 651 652 $UTF8{Euro} = pack( 'U', 0x20AC ); 653 # Equivalent to: $UTF8{Euro} = "\x{20ac}"; 654 655Inspecting C<$UTF8{Euro}> shows that it contains 3 bytes: 656"\xe2\x82\xac". However, it contains only 1 character, number 0x20AC. 657The round trip can be completed with C<unpack>: 658 659 $Unicode{Euro} = unpack( 'U', $UTF8{Euro} ); 660 661Unpacking using the C<U> template code also works on UTF-8 encoded byte 662strings. 663 664Usually you'll want to pack or unpack UTF-8 strings: 665 666 # pack and unpack the Hebrew alphabet 667 my $alefbet = pack( 'U*', 0x05d0..0x05ea ); 668 my @hebrew = unpack( 'U*', $utf ); 669 670Please note: in the general case, you're better off using 671L<C<Encode::decode('UTF-8', $utf)>|Encode/decode> to decode a UTF-8 672encoded byte string to a Perl Unicode string, and 673L<C<Encode::encode('UTF-8', $str)>|Encode/encode> to encode a Perl Unicode 674string to UTF-8 bytes. These functions provide means of handling invalid byte 675sequences and generally have a friendlier interface. 676 677=head2 Another Portable Binary Encoding 678 679The pack code C<w> has been added to support a portable binary data 680encoding scheme that goes way beyond simple integers. (Details can 681be found at L<http://Casbah.org/>, the Scarab project.) A BER (Binary Encoded 682Representation) compressed unsigned integer stores base 128 683digits, most significant digit first, with as few digits as possible. 684Bit eight (the high bit) is set on each byte except the last. There 685is no size limit to BER encoding, but Perl won't go to extremes. 686 687 my $berbuf = pack( 'w*', 1, 128, 128+1, 128*128+127 ); 688 689A hex dump of C<$berbuf>, with spaces inserted at the right places, 690shows 01 8100 8101 81807F. Since the last byte is always less than 691128, C<unpack> knows where to stop. 692 693 694=head1 Template Grouping 695 696Prior to Perl 5.8, repetitions of templates had to be made by 697C<x>-multiplication of template strings. Now there is a better way as 698we may use the pack codes C<(> and C<)> combined with a repeat count. 699The C<unpack> template from the Stack Frame example can simply 700be written like this: 701 702 unpack( 'v2 (vXXCC)5 v5', $frame ) 703 704Let's explore this feature a little more. We'll begin with the equivalent of 705 706 join( '', map( substr( $_, 0, 1 ), @str ) ) 707 708which returns a string consisting of the first character from each string. 709Using pack, we can write 710 711 pack( '(A)'.@str, @str ) 712 713or, because a repeat count C<*> means "repeat as often as required", 714simply 715 716 pack( '(A)*', @str ) 717 718(Note that the template C<A*> would only have packed C<$str[0]> in full 719length.) 720 721To pack dates stored as triplets ( day, month, year ) in an array C<@dates> 722into a sequence of byte, byte, short integer we can write 723 724 $pd = pack( '(CCS)*', map( @$_, @dates ) ); 725 726To swap pairs of characters in a string (with even length) one could use 727several techniques. First, let's use C<x> and C<X> to skip forward and back: 728 729 $s = pack( '(A)*', unpack( '(xAXXAx)*', $s ) ); 730 731We can also use C<@> to jump to an offset, with 0 being the position where 732we were when the last C<(> was encountered: 733 734 $s = pack( '(A)*', unpack( '(@1A @0A @2)*', $s ) ); 735 736Finally, there is also an entirely different approach by unpacking big 737endian shorts and packing them in the reverse byte order: 738 739 $s = pack( '(v)*', unpack( '(n)*', $s ); 740 741 742=head1 Lengths and Widths 743 744=head2 String Lengths 745 746In the previous section we've seen a network message that was constructed 747by prefixing the binary message length to the actual message. You'll find 748that packing a length followed by so many bytes of data is a 749frequently used recipe since appending a null byte won't work 750if a null byte may be part of the data. Here is an example where both 751techniques are used: after two null terminated strings with source and 752destination address, a Short Message (to a mobile phone) is sent after 753a length byte: 754 755 my $msg = pack( 'Z*Z*CA*', $src, $dst, length( $sm ), $sm ); 756 757Unpacking this message can be done with the same template: 758 759 ( $src, $dst, $len, $sm ) = unpack( 'Z*Z*CA*', $msg ); 760 761There's a subtle trap lurking in the offing: Adding another field after 762the Short Message (in variable C<$sm>) is all right when packing, but this 763cannot be unpacked naively: 764 765 # pack a message 766 my $msg = pack( 'Z*Z*CA*C', $src, $dst, length( $sm ), $sm, $prio ); 767 768 # unpack fails - $prio remains undefined! 769 ( $src, $dst, $len, $sm, $prio ) = unpack( 'Z*Z*CA*C', $msg ); 770 771The pack code C<A*> gobbles up all remaining bytes, and C<$prio> remains 772undefined! Before we let disappointment dampen the morale: Perl's got 773the trump card to make this trick too, just a little further up the sleeve. 774Watch this: 775 776 # pack a message: ASCIIZ, ASCIIZ, length/string, byte 777 my $msg = pack( 'Z* Z* C/A* C', $src, $dst, $sm, $prio ); 778 779 # unpack 780 ( $src, $dst, $sm, $prio ) = unpack( 'Z* Z* C/A* C', $msg ); 781 782Combining two pack codes with a slash (C</>) associates them with a single 783value from the argument list. In C<pack>, the length of the argument is 784taken and packed according to the first code while the argument itself 785is added after being converted with the template code after the slash. 786This saves us the trouble of inserting the C<length> call, but it is 787in C<unpack> where we really score: The value of the length byte marks the 788end of the string to be taken from the buffer. Since this combination 789doesn't make sense except when the second pack code isn't C<a*>, C<A*> 790or C<Z*>, Perl won't let you. 791 792The pack code preceding C</> may be anything that's fit to represent a 793number: All the numeric binary pack codes, and even text codes such as 794C<A4> or C<Z*>: 795 796 # pack/unpack a string preceded by its length in ASCII 797 my $buf = pack( 'A4/A*', "Humpty-Dumpty" ); 798 # unpack $buf: '13 Humpty-Dumpty' 799 my $txt = unpack( 'A4/A*', $buf ); 800 801C</> is not implemented in Perls before 5.6, so if your code is required to 802work on ancient Perls you'll need to C<unpack( 'Z* Z* C')> to get the length, 803then use it to make a new unpack string. For example 804 805 # pack a message: ASCIIZ, ASCIIZ, length, string, byte 806 # (5.005 compatible) 807 my $msg = pack( 'Z* Z* C A* C', $src, $dst, length $sm, $sm, $prio ); 808 809 # unpack 810 ( undef, undef, $len) = unpack( 'Z* Z* C', $msg ); 811 ($src, $dst, $sm, $prio) = unpack ( "Z* Z* x A$len C", $msg ); 812 813But that second C<unpack> is rushing ahead. It isn't using a simple literal 814string for the template. So maybe we should introduce... 815 816=head2 Dynamic Templates 817 818So far, we've seen literals used as templates. If the list of pack 819items doesn't have fixed length, an expression constructing the 820template is required (whenever, for some reason, C<()*> cannot be used). 821Here's an example: To store named string values in a way that can be 822conveniently parsed by a C program, we create a sequence of names and 823null terminated ASCII strings, with C<=> between the name and the value, 824followed by an additional delimiting null byte. Here's how: 825 826 my $env = pack( '(A*A*Z*)' . keys( %Env ) . 'C', 827 map( { ( $_, '=', $Env{$_} ) } keys( %Env ) ), 0 ); 828 829Let's examine the cogs of this byte mill, one by one. There's the C<map> 830call, creating the items we intend to stuff into the C<$env> buffer: 831to each key (in C<$_>) it adds the C<=> separator and the hash entry value. 832Each triplet is packed with the template code sequence C<A*A*Z*> that 833is repeated according to the number of keys. (Yes, that's what the C<keys> 834function returns in scalar context.) To get the very last null byte, 835we add a C<0> at the end of the C<pack> list, to be packed with C<C>. 836(Attentive readers may have noticed that we could have omitted the 0.) 837 838For the reverse operation, we'll have to determine the number of items 839in the buffer before we can let C<unpack> rip it apart: 840 841 my $n = $env =~ tr/\0// - 1; 842 my %env = map( split( /=/, $_ ), unpack( "(Z*)$n", $env ) ); 843 844The C<tr> counts the null bytes. The C<unpack> call returns a list of 845name-value pairs each of which is taken apart in the C<map> block. 846 847 848=head2 Counting Repetitions 849 850Rather than storing a sentinel at the end of a data item (or a list of items), 851we could precede the data with a count. Again, we pack keys and values of 852a hash, preceding each with an unsigned short length count, and up front 853we store the number of pairs: 854 855 my $env = pack( 'S(S/A* S/A*)*', scalar keys( %Env ), %Env ); 856 857This simplifies the reverse operation as the number of repetitions can be 858unpacked with the C</> code: 859 860 my %env = unpack( 'S/(S/A* S/A*)', $env ); 861 862Note that this is one of the rare cases where you cannot use the same 863template for C<pack> and C<unpack> because C<pack> can't determine 864a repeat count for a C<()>-group. 865 866 867=head2 Intel HEX 868 869Intel HEX is a file format for representing binary data, mostly for 870programming various chips, as a text file. (See 871L<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.hex> for a detailed description, and 872L<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SREC_(file_format)> for the Motorola 873S-record format, which can be unravelled using the same technique.) 874Each line begins with a colon (':') and is followed by a sequence of 875hexadecimal characters, specifying a byte count I<n> (8 bit), 876an address (16 bit, big endian), a record type (8 bit), I<n> data bytes 877and a checksum (8 bit) computed as the least significant byte of the two's 878complement sum of the preceding bytes. Example: C<:0300300002337A1E>. 879 880The first step of processing such a line is the conversion, to binary, 881of the hexadecimal data, to obtain the four fields, while checking the 882checksum. No surprise here: we'll start with a simple C<pack> call to 883convert everything to binary: 884 885 my $binrec = pack( 'H*', substr( $hexrec, 1 ) ); 886 887The resulting byte sequence is most convenient for checking the checksum. 888Don't slow your program down with a for loop adding the C<ord> values 889of this string's bytes - the C<unpack> code C<%> is the thing to use 890for computing the 8-bit sum of all bytes, which must be equal to zero: 891 892 die unless unpack( "%8C*", $binrec ) == 0; 893 894Finally, let's get those four fields. By now, you shouldn't have any 895problems with the first three fields - but how can we use the byte count 896of the data in the first field as a length for the data field? Here 897the codes C<x> and C<X> come to the rescue, as they permit jumping 898back and forth in the string to unpack. 899 900 my( $addr, $type, $data ) = unpack( "x n C X4 C x3 /a", $bin ); 901 902Code C<x> skips a byte, since we don't need the count yet. Code C<n> takes 903care of the 16-bit big-endian integer address, and C<C> unpacks the 904record type. Being at offset 4, where the data begins, we need the count. 905C<X4> brings us back to square one, which is the byte at offset 0. 906Now we pick up the count, and zoom forth to offset 4, where we are 907now fully furnished to extract the exact number of data bytes, leaving 908the trailing checksum byte alone. 909 910 911 912=head1 Packing and Unpacking C Structures 913 914In previous sections we have seen how to pack numbers and character 915strings. If it were not for a couple of snags we could conclude this 916section right away with the terse remark that C structures don't 917contain anything else, and therefore you already know all there is to it. 918Sorry, no: read on, please. 919 920If you have to deal with a lot of C structures, and don't want to 921hack all your template strings manually, you'll probably want to have 922a look at the CPAN module C<Convert::Binary::C>. Not only can it parse 923your C source directly, but it also has built-in support for all the 924odds and ends described further on in this section. 925 926=head2 The Alignment Pit 927 928In the consideration of speed against memory requirements the balance 929has been tilted in favor of faster execution. This has influenced the 930way C compilers allocate memory for structures: On architectures 931where a 16-bit or 32-bit operand can be moved faster between places in 932memory, or to or from a CPU register, if it is aligned at an even or 933multiple-of-four or even at a multiple-of eight address, a C compiler 934will give you this speed benefit by stuffing extra bytes into structures. 935If you don't cross the C shoreline this is not likely to cause you any 936grief (although you should care when you design large data structures, 937or you want your code to be portable between architectures (you do want 938that, don't you?)). 939 940To see how this affects C<pack> and C<unpack>, we'll compare these two 941C structures: 942 943 typedef struct { 944 char c1; 945 short s; 946 char c2; 947 long l; 948 } gappy_t; 949 950 typedef struct { 951 long l; 952 short s; 953 char c1; 954 char c2; 955 } dense_t; 956 957Typically, a C compiler allocates 12 bytes to a C<gappy_t> variable, but 958requires only 8 bytes for a C<dense_t>. After investigating this further, 959we can draw memory maps, showing where the extra 4 bytes are hidden: 960 961 0 +4 +8 +12 962 +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ 963 |c1|xx| s |c2|xx|xx|xx| l | xx = fill byte 964 +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ 965 gappy_t 966 967 0 +4 +8 968 +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ 969 | l | h |c1|c2| 970 +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ 971 dense_t 972 973And that's where the first quirk strikes: C<pack> and C<unpack> 974templates have to be stuffed with C<x> codes to get those extra fill bytes. 975 976The natural question: "Why can't Perl compensate for the gaps?" warrants 977an answer. One good reason is that C compilers might provide (non-ANSI) 978extensions permitting all sorts of fancy control over the way structures 979are aligned, even at the level of an individual structure field. And, if 980this were not enough, there is an insidious thing called C<union> where 981the amount of fill bytes cannot be derived from the alignment of the next 982item alone. 983 984OK, so let's bite the bullet. Here's one way to get the alignment right 985by inserting template codes C<x>, which don't take a corresponding item 986from the list: 987 988 my $gappy = pack( 'cxs cxxx l!', $c1, $s, $c2, $l ); 989 990Note the C<!> after C<l>: We want to make sure that we pack a long 991integer as it is compiled by our C compiler. And even now, it will only 992work for the platforms where the compiler aligns things as above. 993And somebody somewhere has a platform where it doesn't. 994[Probably a Cray, where C<short>s, C<int>s and C<long>s are all 8 bytes. :-)] 995 996Counting bytes and watching alignments in lengthy structures is bound to 997be a drag. Isn't there a way we can create the template with a simple 998program? Here's a C program that does the trick: 999 1000 #include <stdio.h> 1001 #include <stddef.h> 1002 1003 typedef struct { 1004 char fc1; 1005 short fs; 1006 char fc2; 1007 long fl; 1008 } gappy_t; 1009 1010 #define Pt(struct,field,tchar) \ 1011 printf( "@%d%s ", offsetof(struct,field), # tchar ); 1012 1013 int main() { 1014 Pt( gappy_t, fc1, c ); 1015 Pt( gappy_t, fs, s! ); 1016 Pt( gappy_t, fc2, c ); 1017 Pt( gappy_t, fl, l! ); 1018 printf( "\n" ); 1019 } 1020 1021The output line can be used as a template in a C<pack> or C<unpack> call: 1022 1023 my $gappy = pack( '@0c @2s! @4c @8l!', $c1, $s, $c2, $l ); 1024 1025Gee, yet another template code - as if we hadn't plenty. But 1026C<@> saves our day by enabling us to specify the offset from the beginning 1027of the pack buffer to the next item: This is just the value 1028the C<offsetof> macro (defined in C<E<lt>stddef.hE<gt>>) returns when 1029given a C<struct> type and one of its field names ("member-designator" in 1030C standardese). 1031 1032Neither using offsets nor adding C<x>'s to bridge the gaps is satisfactory. 1033(Just imagine what happens if the structure changes.) What we really need 1034is a way of saying "skip as many bytes as required to the next multiple of N". 1035In fluent Templatese, you say this with C<x!N> where N is replaced by the 1036appropriate value. Here's the next version of our struct packaging: 1037 1038 my $gappy = pack( 'c x!2 s c x!4 l!', $c1, $s, $c2, $l ); 1039 1040That's certainly better, but we still have to know how long all the 1041integers are, and portability is far away. Rather than C<2>, 1042for instance, we want to say "however long a short is". But this can be 1043done by enclosing the appropriate pack code in brackets: C<[s]>. So, here's 1044the very best we can do: 1045 1046 my $gappy = pack( 'c x![s] s c x![l!] l!', $c1, $s, $c2, $l ); 1047 1048 1049=head2 Dealing with Endian-ness 1050 1051Now, imagine that we want to pack the data for a machine with a 1052different byte-order. First, we'll have to figure out how big the data 1053types on the target machine really are. Let's assume that the longs are 105432 bits wide and the shorts are 16 bits wide. You can then rewrite the 1055template as: 1056 1057 my $gappy = pack( 'c x![s] s c x![l] l', $c1, $s, $c2, $l ); 1058 1059If the target machine is little-endian, we could write: 1060 1061 my $gappy = pack( 'c x![s] s< c x![l] l<', $c1, $s, $c2, $l ); 1062 1063This forces the short and the long members to be little-endian, and is 1064just fine if you don't have too many struct members. But we could also 1065use the byte-order modifier on a group and write the following: 1066 1067 my $gappy = pack( '( c x![s] s c x![l] l )<', $c1, $s, $c2, $l ); 1068 1069This is not as short as before, but it makes it more obvious that we 1070intend to have little-endian byte-order for a whole group, not only 1071for individual template codes. It can also be more readable and easier 1072to maintain. 1073 1074 1075=head2 Alignment, Take 2 1076 1077I'm afraid that we're not quite through with the alignment catch yet. The 1078hydra raises another ugly head when you pack arrays of structures: 1079 1080 typedef struct { 1081 short count; 1082 char glyph; 1083 } cell_t; 1084 1085 typedef cell_t buffer_t[BUFLEN]; 1086 1087Where's the catch? Padding is neither required before the first field C<count>, 1088nor between this and the next field C<glyph>, so why can't we simply pack 1089like this: 1090 1091 # something goes wrong here: 1092 pack( 's!a' x @buffer, 1093 map{ ( $_->{count}, $_->{glyph} ) } @buffer ); 1094 1095This packs C<3*@buffer> bytes, but it turns out that the size of 1096C<buffer_t> is four times C<BUFLEN>! The moral of the story is that 1097the required alignment of a structure or array is propagated to the 1098next higher level where we have to consider padding I<at the end> 1099of each component as well. Thus the correct template is: 1100 1101 pack( 's!ax' x @buffer, 1102 map{ ( $_->{count}, $_->{glyph} ) } @buffer ); 1103 1104=head2 Alignment, Take 3 1105 1106And even if you take all the above into account, ANSI still lets this: 1107 1108 typedef struct { 1109 char foo[2]; 1110 } foo_t; 1111 1112vary in size. The alignment constraint of the structure can be greater than 1113any of its elements. [And if you think that this doesn't affect anything 1114common, dismember the next cellphone that you see. Many have ARM cores, and 1115the ARM structure rules make C<sizeof (foo_t)> == 4] 1116 1117=head2 Pointers for How to Use Them 1118 1119The title of this section indicates the second problem you may run into 1120sooner or later when you pack C structures. If the function you intend 1121to call expects a, say, C<void *> value, you I<cannot> simply take 1122a reference to a Perl variable. (Although that value certainly is a 1123memory address, it's not the address where the variable's contents are 1124stored.) 1125 1126Template code C<P> promises to pack a "pointer to a fixed length string". 1127Isn't this what we want? Let's try: 1128 1129 # allocate some storage and pack a pointer to it 1130 my $memory = "\x00" x $size; 1131 my $memptr = pack( 'P', $memory ); 1132 1133But wait: doesn't C<pack> just return a sequence of bytes? How can we pass this 1134string of bytes to some C code expecting a pointer which is, after all, 1135nothing but a number? The answer is simple: We have to obtain the numeric 1136address from the bytes returned by C<pack>. 1137 1138 my $ptr = unpack( 'L!', $memptr ); 1139 1140Obviously this assumes that it is possible to typecast a pointer 1141to an unsigned long and vice versa, which frequently works but should not 1142be taken as a universal law. - Now that we have this pointer the next question 1143is: How can we put it to good use? We need a call to some C function 1144where a pointer is expected. The read(2) system call comes to mind: 1145 1146 ssize_t read(int fd, void *buf, size_t count); 1147 1148After reading L<perlfunc> explaining how to use C<syscall> we can write 1149this Perl function copying a file to standard output: 1150 1151 require 'syscall.ph'; # run h2ph to generate this file 1152 sub cat($){ 1153 my $path = shift(); 1154 my $size = -s $path; 1155 my $memory = "\x00" x $size; # allocate some memory 1156 my $ptr = unpack( 'L', pack( 'P', $memory ) ); 1157 open( F, $path ) || die( "$path: cannot open ($!)\n" ); 1158 my $fd = fileno(F); 1159 my $res = syscall( &SYS_read, fileno(F), $ptr, $size ); 1160 print $memory; 1161 close( F ); 1162 } 1163 1164This is neither a specimen of simplicity nor a paragon of portability but 1165it illustrates the point: We are able to sneak behind the scenes and 1166access Perl's otherwise well-guarded memory! (Important note: Perl's 1167C<syscall> does I<not> require you to construct pointers in this roundabout 1168way. You simply pass a string variable, and Perl forwards the address.) 1169 1170How does C<unpack> with C<P> work? Imagine some pointer in the buffer 1171about to be unpacked: If it isn't the null pointer (which will smartly 1172produce the C<undef> value) we have a start address - but then what? 1173Perl has no way of knowing how long this "fixed length string" is, so 1174it's up to you to specify the actual size as an explicit length after C<P>. 1175 1176 my $mem = "abcdefghijklmn"; 1177 print unpack( 'P5', pack( 'P', $mem ) ); # prints "abcde" 1178 1179As a consequence, C<pack> ignores any number or C<*> after C<P>. 1180 1181 1182Now that we have seen C<P> at work, we might as well give C<p> a whirl. 1183Why do we need a second template code for packing pointers at all? The 1184answer lies behind the simple fact that an C<unpack> with C<p> promises 1185a null-terminated string starting at the address taken from the buffer, 1186and that implies a length for the data item to be returned: 1187 1188 my $buf = pack( 'p', "abc\x00efhijklmn" ); 1189 print unpack( 'p', $buf ); # prints "abc" 1190 1191 1192 1193Albeit this is apt to be confusing: As a consequence of the length being 1194implied by the string's length, a number after pack code C<p> is a repeat 1195count, not a length as after C<P>. 1196 1197 1198Using C<pack(..., $x)> with C<P> or C<p> to get the address where C<$x> is 1199actually stored must be used with circumspection. Perl's internal machinery 1200considers the relation between a variable and that address as its very own 1201private matter and doesn't really care that we have obtained a copy. Therefore: 1202 1203=over 4 1204 1205=item * 1206 1207Do not use C<pack> with C<p> or C<P> to obtain the address of variable 1208that's bound to go out of scope (and thereby freeing its memory) before you 1209are done with using the memory at that address. 1210 1211=item * 1212 1213Be very careful with Perl operations that change the value of the 1214variable. Appending something to the variable, for instance, might require 1215reallocation of its storage, leaving you with a pointer into no-man's land. 1216 1217=item * 1218 1219Don't think that you can get the address of a Perl variable 1220when it is stored as an integer or double number! C<pack('P', $x)> will 1221force the variable's internal representation to string, just as if you 1222had written something like C<$x .= ''>. 1223 1224=back 1225 1226It's safe, however, to P- or p-pack a string literal, because Perl simply 1227allocates an anonymous variable. 1228 1229 1230 1231=head1 Pack Recipes 1232 1233Here are a collection of (possibly) useful canned recipes for C<pack> 1234and C<unpack>: 1235 1236 # Convert IP address for socket functions 1237 pack( "C4", split /\./, "123.4.5.6" ); 1238 1239 # Count the bits in a chunk of memory (e.g. a select vector) 1240 unpack( '%32b*', $mask ); 1241 1242 # Determine the endianness of your system 1243 $is_little_endian = unpack( 'c', pack( 's', 1 ) ); 1244 $is_big_endian = unpack( 'xc', pack( 's', 1 ) ); 1245 1246 # Determine the number of bits in a native integer 1247 $bits = unpack( '%32I!', ~0 ); 1248 1249 # Prepare argument for the nanosleep system call 1250 my $timespec = pack( 'L!L!', $secs, $nanosecs ); 1251 1252For a simple memory dump we unpack some bytes into just as 1253many pairs of hex digits, and use C<map> to handle the traditional 1254spacing - 16 bytes to a line: 1255 1256 my $i; 1257 print map( ++$i % 16 ? "$_ " : "$_\n", 1258 unpack( 'H2' x length( $mem ), $mem ) ), 1259 length( $mem ) % 16 ? "\n" : ''; 1260 1261 1262=head1 Funnies Section 1263 1264 # Pulling digits out of nowhere... 1265 print unpack( 'C', pack( 'x' ) ), 1266 unpack( '%B*', pack( 'A' ) ), 1267 unpack( 'H', pack( 'A' ) ), 1268 unpack( 'A', unpack( 'C', pack( 'A' ) ) ), "\n"; 1269 1270 # One for the road ;-) 1271 my $advice = pack( 'all u can in a van' ); 1272 1273 1274=head1 Authors 1275 1276Simon Cozens and Wolfgang Laun. 1277 1278