Mass Deface
Email Grabber
establishes a connection between a Perl hash variable and
a file in ODBM_File format;. You can manipulate the data in the file
just as if it were in a Perl hash, but when your program exits, the
data will remain in the file, to be used the next time your program
runs.
Use C with the Perl built-in C function to establish
the connection between the variable and the file. The arguments to
C should be:
=over 4
=item 1.
The hash variable you want to tie.
=item 2.
The string C<"ODBM_File">. (Ths tells Perl to use the C
package to perform the functions of the hash.)
=item 3.
The name of the file you want to tie to the hash.
=item 4.
Flags. Use one of:
=over 2
=item C
Read-only access to the data in the file.
=item C
Write-only access to the data in the file.
=item C
Both read and write access.
=back
If you want to create the file if it does not exist, add C to
any of these, as in the example. If you omit C and the file
does not already exist, the C call will fail.
=item 5.
The default permissions to use if a new file is created. The actual
permissions will be modified by the user's umask, so you should
probably use 0666 here. (See L.)
=back
=head1 DIAGNOSTICS
On failure, the C call returns an undefined value and probably
sets C<$!> to contain the reason the file could not be tied.
=head2 C
This warning is emitted when you try to store a key or a value that
is too long. It means that the change was not recorded in the
database. See BUGS AND WARNINGS below.
=head1 BUGS AND WARNINGS
There are a number of limits on the size of the data that you can
store in the ODBM file. The most important is that the length of a
key, plus the length of its associated value, may not exceed 1008
bytes.
See L, L, L
=cut