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);