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What is the Best way to store sequence in a text file or some other way by Perl script. When I run the script for first time, I want the sequence to be 1 and for second time 2. I should also take care of contention when more than one Perl process access the file.

my $seqfile = "f";
my $fh = FileHandle->new($seqfile, O_RDONLY | O_CREAT);
flock($fh, LOCK_EX);
my $seq = $fh->getline;
$seq = 0 unless($seq);
$seq = $seq + 1;
flock($fh, LOCK_UN);

How to write the $seq back without losing the lock on the file?

5
  • "Sequence" is usually longer than one number.
    – choroba
    Jul 31, 2013 at 22:13
  • 1
    Basically you want to lock a file (flock), open it (open), read a number from it, increment the number, write it back to the file, close it and release the lock.
    – marderh
    Jul 31, 2013 at 22:22
  • @marderh Thanks, the way I thought.
    – Vjy
    Jul 31, 2013 at 22:31
  • I think you open the file before you call flock since you need to pass an filehandle to flock.
    – hmatt1
    Jul 31, 2013 at 22:35
  • use some of DBM storages with locking feature, ie. search.cpan.org/~rkinyon/DBM-Deep-2.0009/lib/DBM/…
    – mpapec
    Aug 1, 2013 at 8:27

1 Answer 1

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like this:

my $seqfile = "f";
my $fh = FileHandle->new($seqfile, O_RDWR | O_CREAT);
flock($fh, LOCK_EX) or die; # alternatively do loop retrying...
my $seq = $fh->getline;
$seq = 0 unless($seq);
$seq = $seq + 1;
seek ($fh, 0, SEEK_SET);
print $fh $seq;
close ($fh);

Note that close($fh) will take care of flushing buffered data to file as well as releasing lock.

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