56

Yes, There's More Than One Way To Do It but there must be a canonical or most efficient or most concise way. I'll add answers I know of and see what percolates to the top.

To be clear, the question is how best to read the contents of a file into a string. One solution per answer.

0

17 Answers 17

77

How about this:

use File::Slurp;
my $text = read_file($filename);

ETA: note Bug #83126 for File-Slurp: Security hole with encoding(UTF-8). I now recommend using File::Slurper (disclaimer: I wrote it), also because it has better defaults around encodings:

use File::Slurper 'read_text';
my $text = read_text($filename);

or Path::Tiny:

use Path::Tiny;
path($filename)->slurp_utf8;
6
  • What if you don't want this to die if the file doesn't exist?
    – dreeves
    Jul 1, 2009 at 22:09
  • 4
    The easiest way to prevent that from being likely is that simply first checking if the file exists... Jul 13, 2009 at 22:08
  • 1
    this does have the disadvantage that it is not included in out-of-the-box perl. at least not my ActiveState perl for windows (v5.10.0).
    – Kip
    Apr 14, 2010 at 15:12
  • 3
    Note that File::Slurp has recently been discovered to be a huge security problem: rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=83126 Feb 19, 2014 at 6:41
  • Hi, I got Undefined subroutine &main::read_text. It should be use File::Slurper 'read_text';. metacpan.org/pod/File::Slurper
    – stenlytw
    Jun 12, 2016 at 12:13
48

I like doing this with a do block in which I localize @ARGV so I can use the diamond operator to do the file magic for me.

 my $contents = do { local(@ARGV, $/) = $file; <> };

If you need this to be a bit more robust, you can easily turn this into a subroutine.

If you need something really robust that handles all sorts of special cases, use File::Slurp. Even if you aren't going to use it, take a look at the source to see all the wacky situations it has to handle. File::Slurp has a big security problem that doesn't look to have a solution. Part of this is its failure to properly handle encodings. Even my quick answer has that problem. If you need to handle the encoding (maybe because you don't make everything UTF-8 by default), this expands to:

my $contents = do {
    open my $fh, '<:encoding(UTF-8)', $file or die '...';
    local $/;
    <$fh>;
    };

If you don't need to change the file, you might be able to use File::Map.

4
  • 8
    I'm lazy and write my $contents = do {local (@ARGV,$/) = $file; <>};, which is the exact same thing in less characters :)
    – ephemient
    Oct 16, 2008 at 19:27
  • I'm wondering why local @ARGV = $file; <> would be any different than <$file>.
    – Powerlord
    Nov 21, 2008 at 14:08
  • @Bemrose: because $file is not a filehandle. Nov 22, 2008 at 11:12
  • 1
    I got shot in the foot adding this method to a file that further down was already using <>, expecting it to read from STDIN. The behaviour of <> differs from the first call to subsequent calls, and since I changed the first call, I altered the behaviour of the existing call too (which was expecting the <STDIN> behaviour of <>). Nov 6, 2015 at 3:44
35

In writing File::Slurp (which is the best way), Uri Guttman did a lot of research in the many ways of slurping and which is most efficient. He wrote down his findings here and incorporated them info File::Slurp.

1
24
open(my $f, '<', $filename) or die "OPENING $filename: $!\n";
$string = do { local($/); <$f> };
close($f);
0
11

Things to think about (especially when compared with other solutions):

  1. Lexical filehandles
  2. Reduce scope
  3. Reduce magic

So I get:

my $contents = do {
  local $/;
  open my $fh, $filename or die "Can't open $filename: $!";
  <$fh>
};

I'm not a big fan of magic <> except when actually using magic <>. Instead of faking it out, why not just use the open call directly? It's not much more work, and is explicit. (True magic <>, especially when handling "-", is far more work to perfectly emulate, but we aren't using it here anyway.)

1
  • 3
    And in case it's not obvious to those following along at home, at the end of the curly block, $fh goes out of scope and the file handle is closed automatically.
    – dland
    Oct 16, 2008 at 15:43
10

mmap (Memory mapping) of strings may be useful when you:

  • Have very large strings, that you don't want to load into memory
  • Want a blindly fast initialisation (you get gradual I/O on access)
  • Have random or lazy access to the string.
  • May want to update the string, but are only extending it or replacing characters:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use warnings; use strict;

use IO::File;
use Sys::Mmap;

sub sip {

    my $file_name = shift;
    my $fh;

    open ($fh, '+<', $file_name)
        or die "Unable to open $file_name: $!";

    my $str;

    mmap($str, 0, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, $fh)
      or die "mmap failed: $!";

    return $str;
}

my $str = sip('/tmp/words');

print substr($str, 100,20);

Update: May 2012

The following should be pretty well equivalent, after replacing Sys::Mmap with File::Map

#!/usr/bin/perl
use warnings; use strict;

use File::Map qw{map_file};

map_file(my $str => '/tmp/words', '+<');

print substr($str, 100, 20);
1
  • Actually, File::Map (disclaimer: written by me) would be a better choice nowadays. It's far more portable (it works on both Unix and Windows), but also easier to use («map_file my $str, $file_name;»). May 3, 2012 at 9:53
8

This is neither fast, nor platform independent, and really evil, but it's short (and I've seen this in Larry Wall's code ;-):

 my $contents = `cat $file`;

Kids, don't do that at home ;-).

0
8
use Path::Class;
file('/some/path')->slurp;
7
{
  open F, $filename or die "Can't read $filename: $!";
  local $/;  # enable slurp mode, locally.
  $file = <F>;
  close F;
}
6
use IO::All;

# read into a string (scalar context)
$contents = io($filename)->slurp;

# read all lines an array (array context)
@lines = io($filename)->slurp;
6

For one-liners you can usually use the -0 switch (with -n) to make perl read the whole file at once (if the file doesn't contain any null bytes):

perl -n0e 'print "content is in $_\n"' filename

If it's a binary file, you could use -0777:

perl -n0777e 'print length' filename
1
  • Makes for a nice way to check that an attempted line substitution in a file actually happens: perl -p -i -0 -e 's/^old_line/new_line/m or (print and die)' some_file, or probably could use /mg to do all matching lines if many expected. Apr 30, 2019 at 14:08
4

See the summary of Perl6::Slurp which is incredibly flexible and generally does the right thing with very little effort.

0
3

Here is a nice comparison of the most popular ways to do it:

http://poundcomment.wordpress.com/2009/08/02/perl-read-entire-file/

1
  • Link only answer as discouraged. Copy the code into your answer Jan 22, 2023 at 12:38
3

Nobody said anything about read or sysread, so here is a simple and fast way:

my $string;
{
    open my $fh, '<', $file or die "Can't open $file: $!";
    read $fh, $string, -s $file;   # or sysread
    close $fh;
}
1

Candidate for the worst way to do it! (See comment.)

open(F, $filename) or die "OPENING $filename: $!\n";
@lines = <F>;
close(F);
$string = join('', @lines);
3
  • 2
    This is probably the most inefficient way I can think of, especially for large files. Now you have two copies of the same data and you have processed it twice just to load it into a scalar. Oct 15, 2008 at 22:37
  • It's all situational. For a small file or a run-only-once quickie script, where "$string=cat $filename" is not available, this is perfectly reasonable. Inefficient yes! But that's not necessarily the only consideration.
    – Mr.Ree
    Nov 19, 2008 at 3:56
  • 1
    This answer doesn't deserve a negative rating. Bunch of script kiddies that don't understand or care about what perl means by <FILEHANDLE>. It's an array silly. No worse performance than some of the other answers on this page. Very informative on how to think about Perl filehandles and slurping, as an array.
    – unixman83
    Mar 29, 2012 at 7:35
1

Adjust the special record separator variable $/

undef $/;
open FH, '<', $filename or die "$!\n";
my $contents = <FH>;
close FH;
0
open(IN, "<$filename");
$contents = join('', <IN>);
close(IN);

Details:

<IN> is a file descriptor returns a list (aka array) of lines if assigned to an list variable/context.

join takes a delimiter and a list of lines and returns a string with all the lines joined together. Source: https://perldoc.perl.org/functions/join).

open with a filename prefix of "<" opens the file in read-mode.

I use the join construct often for slurping one-liners eg perl -e '$_=join("",<>);s/multiline_regex/replacement_string/gms;print'. m/s options support multiline regexs, see https://perldoc.perl.org/perlre.

1
  • 2
    Answer needs supporting information Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – moken
    Jul 20, 2023 at 8:15

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.