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______________________________________________________________________________


NAME

       open - Open a file-based or command pipeline channel


SYNOPSIS

       open fileName
       open fileName access
       open fileName access permissions
_________________________________________________________________


DESCRIPTION

       This command opens a file, serial port, or command pipeline and returns
       a channel identifier that may be used in future invocations of commands
       like  read, puts, and close.  If the first character of fileName is not
       | then the command opens a file: fileName gives the name of the file to
       open,  and it must conform to the conventions described in the filename
       manual entry.

       The access argument, if present, indicates the way in  which  the  file
       (or  command pipeline) is to be accessed.  In the first form access may
       have any of the following values:

       r              Open the file for reading only; the  file  must  already
                      exist. This is the default value if access is not speci-
                      fied.

       r+             Open the file for both reading  and  writing;  the  file
                      must already exist.

       w              Open  the  file  for  writing  only.   Truncate it if it
                      exists.  If it doesn't exist, create a new file.

       w+             Open the file for reading and writing.  Truncate  it  if
                      it exists.  If it doesn't exist, create a new file.

       a              Open  the  file  for  writing only.  If the file doesn't
                      exist, create a new empty file.  Set the initial  access
                      position  to the end of the file.

       a+             Open  the  file  for  reading  and writing.  If the file
                      doesn't exist, create a new empty file.  Set the initial
                      access position  to the end of the file.

       In  the  second form, access consists of a list of any of the following
       flags, all of which have the standard POSIX meanings.  One of the flags
       must be either RDONLY, WRONLY or RDWR.

       RDONLY         Open the file for reading only.

       WRONLY         Open the file for writing only.

       RDWR           Open the file for both reading and writing.

       APPEND         Set  the  file  pointer  to the end of the file prior to
                      each write.

       CREAT          Create the file if it  doesn't  already  exist  (without
                      this flag it is an error for the file not to exist).

       EXCL           If  CREAT is also specified, an error is returned if the
                      file already exists.

       NOCTTY         If the file is a terminal device, this flag prevents the
                      file  from  becoming  the  controlling  terminal  of the
                      process.

       NONBLOCK       Prevents the process from  blocking  while  opening  the
                      file,  and  possibly  in subsequent I/O operations.  The
                      exact behavior of this flag is system- and device-depen-
                      dent;   its  use is discouraged (it is better to use the
                      fconfigure command to put a file in  nonblocking  mode).
                      For  details  refer  to your system documentation on the
                      open system call's O_NONBLOCK flag.

       TRUNC          If the file exists it is truncated to zero length.

       If a new file is created as part of opening it, permissions  (an  inte-
       ger)  is  used  to  set the permissions for the new file in conjunction
       with the process's file mode creation mask.   Permissions  defaults  to
       0666.

       Note  that  if  you are going to be reading or writing binary data from
       the channel created by this command, you should use the fconfigure com-
       mand  to change the -translation option of the channel to binary before
       transferring any binary data.  This is in contrast to the ``b'' charac-
       ter  passed  as  part of the equivalent of the access parameter to some
       versions of the C library fopen() function.


COMMAND PIPELINES

       If the first character of fileName is ``|'' then the remaining  charac-
       ters  of  fileName  are  treated as a list of arguments that describe a
       command pipeline to invoke, in the same  style  as  the  arguments  for
       exec.   In  this  case,  the channel identifier returned by open may be
       used to write to the command's input pipe or read from its output pipe,
       depending  on  the value of access.  If write-only access is used (e.g.
       access is w), then standard output for the pipeline is directed to  the
       current standard output unless overridden by the command.  If read-only
       access is used (e.g. access is r), standard input for the  pipeline  is
       taken from the current standard input unless overridden by the command.
       The id of the spawned process is accessible through  the  pid  command,
       using the channel id returned by open as argument.

       If  the  command (or one of the commands) executed in the command pipe-
       line returns an error (according to the  definition  in  exec),  a  Tcl
       error is generated when close is called on the channel unless the pipe-
       line is in non-blocking mode then no exit status is returned (a  silent
       close with -blocking 0).

       It is often useful to use the fileevent command with pipelines so other
       processing may happen at the same time as running the  command  in  the
       background.                                                             |


SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS |

       If  fileName refers to a serial port, then the specified serial port is |
       opened and initialized in a platform-dependent manner.  Acceptable val- |
       ues  for the fileName to use to open a serial port are described in the |
       PORTABILITY ISSUES section.                                             |

       The fconfigure command can be used to query and set additional configu- |
       ration options specific to serial ports (where supported):              |

       -mode baud,par-                                                         |
       ity,data,stop                                             |             |
              This option is a set of 4 comma-separated values: the baud rate, |
              parity,  number  of  data bits, and number of stop bits for this |
              serial port.  The baud rate is a simple integer  that  specifies |
              the  connection  speed.  Parity is one of the following letters: |
              n, o, e, m, s; respectively signifying  the  parity  options  of |
              ``none'',  ``odd'',  ``even'',  ``mark'', or ``space''.  Data is |
              the number of data bits and should be an integer from  5  to  8, |
              while  stop is the number of stop bits and should be the integer |
              1 or 2.                                                          |

       -handshake                                                              |
       type                                                         |          |
              (Windows and Unix). This option is used to setup automatic hand- |
              shake control. Note that not all handshake types maybe supported |
              by  your  operating  system. The type parameter is case-indepen- |
              dent.                                                            |

              If type is none then any  handshake  is  switched  off.   rtscts |
              activates  hardware  handshake.  Hardware  handshake signals are |
              described below.  For software handshake xonxoff  the  handshake |
              characters can be redefined with -xchar.  An additional hardware |
              handshake dtrdsr is available only under Windows.  There  is  no |
              default  handshake  configuration,  the initial value depends on |
              your operating system settings.  The -handshake option cannot be |
              queried.                                                         |

       -queue                                                                  ||
              (Windows and Unix). The -queue option can only be  queried.   It |
              returns  a  list of two integers representing the current number |
              of bytes in the input and output queue respectively.             |

       -timeout                                                                |
       msec                                                           |        |
              (Windows  and  Unix). This option is used to set the timeout for |
              blocking read operations.  It  specifies  the  maximum  interval |
              between  the  reception  of two bytes in milliseconds.  For Unix |
              systems the  granularity  is  100  milliseconds.   The  -timeout |
              option  does  not  affect write operations or nonblocking reads. |
              This option cannot be queried.                                   |

       -ttycontrol {signal boolean signal boolean                              |
       ...}                         |                                          |
              (Windows  and  Unix). This option is used to setup the handshake |
              output lines (see below) permanently or to send a BREAK over the |
              serial line.  The signal names are case-independent.  {RTS 1 DTR |
              0} sets the RTS output to high and the DTR output to  low.   The |
              BREAK  condition (see below) is enabled and disabled with {BREAK |
              1} and {BREAK 0} respectively.  It's not a good idea  to  change |
              the  RTS  (or  DTR) signal with active hardware handshake rtscts |
              (or dtrdsr).  The  result  is  unpredictable.   The  -ttycontrol |
              option cannot be queried.                                        |

       -ttysta-                                                                |
       tus                                                              |      |
              (Windows and Unix). The -ttystatus option can only  be  queried. |
              It  returns the current modem status and handshake input signals |
              (see below).  The result is a list of signal,value pairs with  a |
              fixed  order, e.g. {CTS 1 DSR 0 RING 1 DCD 0}.  The signal names |
              are returned upper case.                                         |

       -xchar {xonChar xof-                                                    |
       fChar}                                               |                  |
              (Windows  and  Unix). This option is used to query or change the |
              software handshake characters.  Normally  the  operating  system |
              default  should  be  DC1  (0x11) and DC3 (0x13) representing the |
              ASCII standard XON and XOFF characters.                          |

       -pollinterval                                                           |
       msec                                                      |             |
              (Windows  only).  This  option  is  used to set the maximum time |
              between polling for fileevents.  This affects the time  interval |
              between  checking for events throughout the Tcl interpreter (the |
              smallest value always wins).  Use this option only if  you  want |
              to  poll  the  serial  port more or less often than 10 msec (the |
              default).                                                        |

       -sysbuffer                                                              |
       inSize                                                       |          |

       -sysbuffer {inSize out-                                                 |
       Size}                                             |                     |
              (Windows only). This option is used to change the size  of  Win- |
              dows  system  buffers for a serial channel. Especially at higher |
              communication rates the default input buffer size of 4096  bytes |
              can  overrun  for  latent  systems. The first form specifies the |
              input buffer size, in the second  form  both  input  and  output |
              buffers are defined.                                             |

       -laster-                                                                |
       ror                                                              |      |
              (Windows only). This option is query only.  In case of a  serial |
              communication error, read or puts returns a general Tcl file I/O |
              error.  fconfigure -lasterror can be called to  get  a  list  of |
              error  details.   See  below  for  an explanation of the various |
              error codes.                                                     |


SERIAL PORT SIGNALS |

       RS-232 is the most commonly  used  standard  electrical  interface  for |
       serial  communications.  A  negative  voltage (-3V..-12V) define a mark |
       (on=1) bit and a positive voltage (+3..+12V) define a space (off=0) bit |
       (RS-232C).  The following signals are specified for incoming and outgo- |
       ing data, status lines and handshaking. Here we  are  using  the  terms |
       workstation  for  your  computer  and  modem  for  the external device, |
       because some signal names (DCD, RI) come from modems.  Of  course  your |
       external device may use these signal lines for other purposes.          |

       TXD(out-                                                                |
       put)                                                             |      |
              Transmitted Data: Outgoing serial data.                          |

       RXD(input)                                                              ||
              Received Data:Incoming serial data.                              |

       RTS(out-                                                                |
       put)                                                             |      |
              Request To Send: This hardware handshake line informs the  modem |
              that your workstation is ready to receive data. Your workstation |
              may automatically reset this signal to indicate that  the  input |
              buffer is full.                                                  |

       CTS(input)                                                              ||
              Clear To Send: The complement to RTS. Indicates that  the  modem |
              is ready to receive data.                                        |

       DTR(out-                                                                |
       put)                                                             |      |
              Data Terminal Ready: This signal tells the modem that the  work- |
              station is ready to establish a link. DTR is often enabled auto- |
              matically whenever a serial port is opened.                      |

       DSR(input)                                                              ||
              Data  Set  Ready:  The  complement to DTR. Tells the workstation |
              that the modem is ready to establish a link.                     |

       DCD(input)                                                              ||
              Data  Carrier  Detect:  This  line  becomes  active when a modem |
              detects a "Carrier" signal.                                      |

       RI(input)                                                               ||
              Ring  Indicator:  Goes active when the modem detects an incoming |
              call.                                                            |

       BREAK                                                                   ||
              A  BREAK  condition is not a hardware signal line, but a logical |
              zero on the TXD or RXD lines for a long period of time,  usually |
              250  to  500  milliseconds.  Normally a receive or transmit data |
              signal stays at the mark (on=1) voltage until the next character |
              is  transferred. A BREAK is sometimes used to reset the communi- |
              cations line or change  the  operating  mode  of  communications |
              hardware.                                                        |


ERROR CODES (Windows only) |

       A  lot  of  different errors may occur during serial read operations or |
       during event polling in background. The external device may  have  been |
       switched  off,  the data lines may be noisy, system buffers may overrun |
       or your mode settings may be wrong.  That's  why  a  reliable  software |
       should  always  catch serial read operations.  In cases of an error Tcl |
       returns a general file I/O error.  Then fconfigure -lasterror may  help |
       to locate the problem.  The following error codes may be returned.      |

       RXOVER                                                                  ||
                 Windows input buffer overrun. The data comes faster than your |
                 scripts reads it or your system is overloaded. Use fconfigure |
                 -sysbuffer to avoid a temporary bottleneck and/or  make  your |
                 script faster.                                                |

       TXFULL                                                                  ||
                 Windows output buffer overrun.  Complement  to  RXOVER.  This |
                 error  should practically not happen, because Tcl cares about |
                 the output buffer status.                                     |

       OVER-                                                                   |
       RUN                                                                 |   |
                 UART  buffer  overrun  (hardware)  with  data lost.  The data |
                 comes faster than the system driver receives it.  Check  your |
                 advanced  serial  port  settings  to  enable the FIFO (16550) |
                 buffer and/or setup a lower(1) interrupt threshold value.     |

       RXPAR-                                                                  |
       ITY                                                                |    |
                 A  parity error has been detected by your UART.  Wrong parity |
                 settings with fconfigure -mode or a noisy data line (RXD) may |
                 cause this error.                                             |

       FRAME                                                                   ||
                 A stop-bit error has been detected by your UART.  Wrong  mode |
                 settings with fconfigure -mode or a noisy data line (RXD) may |
                 cause this error.                                             |

       BREAK                                                                   ||
                 A BREAK condition has been detected by your UART (see above).


PORTABILITY ISSUES

       Windows (all versions)
              Valid values for fileName to open a serial port are of the  form
              comX:,  where  X is a number, generally from 1 to 4.  This nota-
              tion only works for serial ports from 1 to 9, if the system hap-
              pens  to  have more than four.  An attempt to open a serial port
              that does not exist or has a number greater than  9  will  fail.
              An alternate form of opening serial ports is to use the filename
              \\.\comX, where X is any number that  corresponds  to  a  serial
              port;  please  note  that  this method is considerably slower on
              Windows 95 and Windows 98.

       Windows NT
              When running Tcl interactively, there may be some strange inter-
              actions  between the real console, if one is present, and a com-
              mand pipeline that uses standard input or output.  If a  command
              pipeline is opened for reading, some of the lines entered at the
              console will be sent to the command pipeline and  some  will  be
              sent  to the Tcl evaluator.  If a command pipeline is opened for
              writing, keystrokes entered into the  console  are  not  visible
              until the pipe is closed.  This behavior occurs whether the com-
              mand pipeline is executing 16-bit or 32-bit applications.  These
              problems  only  occur because both Tcl and the child application
              are competing for the console at the same time.  If the  command
              pipeline  is started from a script, so that Tcl is not accessing
              the console, or if the command pipeline does  not  use  standard
              input  or  output, but is redirected from or to a file, then the
              above problems do not occur.

       Windows 95
              A command pipeline that executes a 16-bit DOS application cannot
              be  opened for both reading and writing, since 16-bit DOS appli-
              cations that receive standard input from a pipe and  send  stan-
              dard output to a pipe run synchronously.  Command pipelines that
              do not execute 16-bit DOS applications  run  asynchronously  and
              can be opened for both reading and writing.

              When running Tcl interactively, there may be some strange inter-
              actions between the real console, if one is present, and a  com-
              mand  pipeline that uses standard input or output.  If a command
              pipeline is opened for reading from a 32-bit  application,  some
              of  the  keystrokes  entered  at the console will be sent to the
              command pipeline and some will be sent to the Tcl evaluator.  If
              a  command  pipeline  is opened for writing to a 32-bit applica-
              tion, no output is visible on the  console  until  the  pipe  is
              closed.   These  problems  only  occur  because both Tcl and the
              child application are competing for  the  console  at  the  same
              time.  If the command pipeline is started from a script, so that
              Tcl is not accessing the console, or  if  the  command  pipeline
              does not use standard input or output, but is redirected from or
              to a file, then the above problems do not occur.

              Whether or not Tcl is running interactively, if a command  pipe-
              line  is  opened  for reading from a 16-bit DOS application, the
              call to open will not return until end-of-file has been received
              from the command pipeline's standard output.  If a command pipe-
              line is opened for writing to a 16-bit DOS application, no  data
              will be sent to the command pipeline's standard output until the
              pipe is actually closed.  This problem occurs because 16-bit DOS
              applications are run synchronously, as described above.

       Macintosh
              Opening  a serial port is not currently implemented under Macin-
              tosh.

              Opening a command pipeline is  not  supported  under  Macintosh,
              since  applications do not support the concept of standard input
              or output.

       Unix
              Valid values for fileName to open a serial port are generally of
              the  form  /dev/ttyX,  where  X  is  a or b, but the name of any
              pseudo-file that maps to a serial port may  be  used.   Advanced |
              configuration  options  are only supported for serial ports when |
              Tcl is built to use the POSIX serial interface.

              When running Tcl interactively, there may be some strange inter-
              actions  between  the  console, if one is present, and a command
              pipeline that uses standard input.  If  a  command  pipeline  is
              opened  for  reading,  some  of the lines entered at the console
              will be sent to the command pipeline and some will  be  sent  to
              the  Tcl  evaluator.   This problem only occurs because both Tcl
              and the child application are competing for the console  at  the
              same time.  If the command pipeline is started from a script, so
              that Tcl is not accessing the console, or if the  command  pipe-
              line does not use standard input, but is redirected from a file,
              then the above problem does not occur.

       See the PORTABILITY ISSUES section of the exec command  for  additional
       information  not specific to command pipelines about executing applica-
       tions on the various platforms


EXAMPLE

       Open a command pipeline and catch any errors:
              set fl [open "| ls this_file_does_not_exist"]
              set data [read $fl]
              if {[catch {close $fl} err]} {
                  puts "ls command failed: $err"
              }


SEE ALSO

       file(n),  close(n),  filename(n),  fconfigure(n),   gets(n),   read(n),
       puts(n), exec(n), pid(n), fopen(3)


KEYWORDS

       access  mode,  append,  create,  file, non-blocking, open, permissions,
       pipeline, process, serial

Tcl                                   8.3                              open(n)

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