Provided by: tcl9.0-doc_9.0.1+dfsg-1_all bug

NAME

       fcopy - Copy data from one channel to another

SYNOPSIS

       fcopy inputChan outputChan ?-size size? ?-command callback?
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The  fcopy  command copies data from one I/O channel, inchan, to another I/O channel, outchan.  The fcopy
       command leverages the buffering in the Tcl I/O system to avoid extra copies and to  avoid  buffering  too
       much data in main memory when copying large files to destinations like network sockets.

   DATA QUANTITY
       All  data  until  EOF is copied.  In addition, the quantity of copied data may be specified by the option
       -size. The given size is in bytes, if  the  input  channel  is  in  binary  mode.  Otherwise,  it  is  in
       characters.

       Depreciated  feature:  the  transfer  is  treated as a binary transfer, if the encoding profile is set to
       “tcl8” and the input encoding matches the output encoding.  In this case, eventual  encoding  errors  are
       not handled.  An eventually given size is in bytes in this case.

   BLOCKING OPERATION MODE
       Without  the  -command option, fcopy blocks until the copy is complete and returns the number of bytes or
       characters (using the same rules as for the -size option) written to outchan.

   BACKGROUND OPERATION MODE
       The -command argument makes fcopy work in the background.  In this case it returns  immediately  and  the
       callback  is  invoked  later  when the copy completes.  The callback is called with one or two additional
       arguments that indicates how many bytes were written  to  outchan.   If  an  error  occurred  during  the
       background  copy,  the  second argument is the error string associated with the error.  With a background
       copy, it is not necessary to put inchan or outchan into non-blocking mode; the fcopy command  takes  care
       of that automatically.  However, it is necessary to enter the event loop by using the vwait command or by
       using Tk.

       You are not allowed to do other input operations with inchan, or output operations with outchan, during a
       background  fcopy.  The  converse is entirely legitimate, as exhibited by the bidirectional fcopy example
       below.

       If either inchan or outchan get closed while the copy is in progress, the current copy is stopped and the
       command callback is not made.  If inchan is closed, then all data already queued for outchan  is  written
       out.

       Note  that  inchan  can  become  readable  during  a  background copy.  You should turn off any fileevent
       handlers during a background copy so those handlers do not interfere with the copy.  Any wrong-sided  I/O
       attempted (by a fileevent handler or otherwise) will get a “channel busy” error.

   CHANNEL TRANSLATION OPTIONS
       Fcopy  translates  end-of-line  sequences  in inchan and outchan according to the -translation option for
       these channels.  See the manual entry for  fconfigure  for  details  on  the  -translation  option.   The
       translations  mean  that  the  number of bytes read from inchan can be different than the number of bytes
       written to outchan.  Only the number of bytes written to outchan is reported, either as the return  value
       of a synchronous fcopy or as the argument to the callback for an asynchronous fcopy.

   CHANNEL ENCODING OPTIONS
       Fcopy  obeys  the  encodings, profiles and character translations configured for the channels. This means
       that the incoming characters are converted internally first UTF-8 and  then  into  the  encoding  of  the
       channel  fcopy  writes  to. See the manual entry for fconfigure for details on the -encoding and -profile
       options. No conversion is done  if  both  channels  are  set  to  encoding  “binary”  and  have  matching
       translations.  If  only the output channel is set to encoding “binary” the system will write the internal
       UTF-8 representation of the incoming characters. If only the input channel is set  to  encoding  “binary”
       the  system  will assume that the incoming bytes are valid UTF-8 characters and convert them according to
       the output encoding. The behaviour of the system for bytes  which  are  not  valid  UTF-8  characters  is
       undefined in this case.

       Fcopy  may  throw  encoding  errors  (error code EILSEQ), if input or output channel is configured to the
       “strict” encoding profile.

       If an encoding error arises on the input channel, any data before the error byte is written to the output
       channel. The input file pointer is located just before the values  causing  the  encoding  error.   Error
       inspection or recovery is possible by changing the encoding parameters and invoking a file command (read,
       fcopy).

       If  an  encoding  error arises on the output channel, the erroneous data is lost.  To make the difference
       between the input error case and the output error case, only the error message may be inspected (read  or
       write), as both throw the error code EILSEQ.

EXAMPLES

       The  first  example  transfers the contents of one channel exactly to another. Note that when copying one
       file to another, it is better to use file copy which also copies file  metadata  (e.g.  the  file  access
       permissions) where possible.

              fconfigure $in -translation binary
              fconfigure $out -translation binary
              fcopy $in $out

       This  second  example  shows  how the callback gets passed the number of bytes transferred.  It also uses
       vwait to put the application into the event loop.  Of course,  this  simplified  example  could  be  done
       without the command callback.

              proc Cleanup {in out bytes {error {}}} {
                  global total
                  set total $bytes
                  close $in
                  close $out
                  if {[string length $error] != 0} {
                      # error occurred during the copy
                  }
              }
              set in [open $file1]
              set out [socket $server $port]
              fcopy $in $out -command [list Cleanup $in $out]
              vwait total

       The third example copies in chunks and tests for end of file in the command callback.

              proc CopyMore {in out chunk bytes {error {}}} {
                  global total done
                  incr total $bytes
                  if {([string length $error] != 0) || [eof $in]} {
                      set done $total
                      close $in
                      close $out
                  } else {
                      fcopy $in $out -size $chunk \
                              -command [list CopyMore $in $out $chunk]
                  }
              }
              set in [open $file1]
              set out [socket $server $port]
              set chunk 1024
              set total 0
              fcopy $in $out -size $chunk \
                      -command [list CopyMore $in $out $chunk]
              vwait done

       The  fourth  example starts an asynchronous, bidirectional fcopy between two sockets. Those could also be
       pipes from two [open "|hal 9000" r+] (though their conversation would remain secret to the script,  since
       all four fileevent slots are busy).

              set flows 2
              proc Done {dir args} {
                   global flows done
                   puts "$dir is over."
                   incr flows -1
                   if {$flows<=0} {set done 1}
              }
              fcopy $sok1 $sok2 -command [list Done UP]
              fcopy $sok2 $sok1 -command [list Done DOWN]
              vwait done

SEE ALSO

       eof(3tcl), fblocked(3tcl), fconfigure(3tcl), file(3tcl)

KEYWORDS

       blocking, channel, end of line, end of file, nonblocking, read, translation

Tcl                                                    8.0                                           fcopy(3tcl)