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NAME

CIAO::Lib::Param - An interface to the CIAO parameter library.

VERSION

version 0.09

SYNOPSIS

  use CIAO::Lib::Param;

  my $pf = CIAO::Lib::Param->new( $filename, $mode );

  my $value = $pf->get( 'var1' );
  $pf->set( 'var1', $newvalue);

DESCRIPTION

CIAO::Lib::Param is a Perl interface to the parameter library (cxcparam) shipped with the Chandra Interactive Analysis of Observations (CIAO) software package. It implements an interface to IRAF (Image Reduction and Analysis Facility) style parameter files.

This document does not fully discuss the format and usage of parameter files; see http://asc.harvard.edu/ciao/ahelp/parameter.html for more information.

CIAO::Lib::Param provides both object oriented and quick and dirty procedural interfaces. See the "OBJECT INTERFACE" and "PROCEDURAL INTERFACE" sections for the two interfaces.

The Perl interface presents unified error reports from the underlying cxcparam library. If an error is encountered, the module will throw an exception via croak(). For simple applications, simply not catching the exception with eval{} will cause the application to terminate.

For more complicated handling, one can use the exception (which is a CIAO::Lib::Param::Error object) to determine more information about what happened.

INTERNALS

PROCEDURAL INTERFACE

This interface is for quick and dirty parameter retrieval. The parameter file is opened for each call, so these should not be used for repeated access to parameters.

pget
  use CIAO::Lib::Param qw/ pget /;

  $pvalue  = pget( $filename, $pname );
  @pvalues = pget( $filename, @pnames );
  %params  = pget( $filename );

  $pvalue  = pget( $filename, $argv, $pname );
  @pvalues = pget( $filename, $argv, @pnames );
  %params  = pget( $filename, $argv );

Read one or more parameter values. The user is never queried for a parameter value. Illegal values result in an exception being thrown.

In the first form (called in scalar context), retrieve the value of a single parameter.

In the second form (list context, parameter names), the values for the specified parameters are returned as a list.

In the third form, retrieve all of the parameters from the file as a hash, keyed off of the parameter name.

The $filename argument may optionally be followed by an arrayref, which should contain elements of the form param=value. Typically this is used to allow command line argument assignment:

  %params = pget( $0, \@ARGV );
pquery
  use CIAO::Lib::Param qw/ pquery /;

  [...]

This is identical to =pget= except that the user is queried when necessary.

pset
  use CIAO::Lib::Param qw/ pset /;

  pset( $filename, $pname1 => $pvalue1, $pname2 => $pvalue2, ... );

Set the named parameters to the given values.

pfind
   use CIAO::Lib::Param qw/ pfind /;
   $pfile = pfind( $name, $mode, $extn, $path )

Find a parameter file. The extn and path arguments are lists of allowable extension and directories to attempt to search for parameter files. For example, the default search used in the class constructor is

        extn = ".par .rdb $PFEXTN"
        path = "$PDIRS $PFILES $UPARM"

Identifiers prefixed with $ are recursively expanded in the run time environment. For compatibility with IRAF $UPARM should be set to a single directory name with a trailing /. $PFILES may be set to a space or , separated list of directories.

OBJECT INTERFACE

Constructor

new
   $pf = CIAO::Lib::Param->new( $filename );
   $pf = CIAO::Lib::Param->new( $filename, $mode );
   $pf = CIAO::Lib::Param->new( $filename, $mode, @arglist );
   $pf = CIAO::Lib::Param->new( [ $filename, $argv0], $mode, @arglist );

Create a new object and associate it with the specified parameter file. See "Finding Parameter Files" for more information on how the path to the file is determined.

$mode indicates the IRAF mode with which the file should be opened (it defaults to rw if not specified). It should be one of the "IRAF-compatible" parameter-interface access modes (eg r, rw, rH, etc). @arglist is a list of parameter settings that will override those given in the parameter file. They are strings of the form of par=value.

$filename is typically $0. However, the underlying library uses two arguments to determine the name of the parameter file. In the (extremely) rare situation where you wish to use that functionality, pass the two names as elements of an anonymous array. The underlying call has the following definition:

  paramopen( filename, argv, argc, filemode )

The $filename parameter will be passed as filename. The $argv0 parameter, which is typically just $0, will be inserted into the argv array as the first element.

new throws an exception via croak if there is an error.

The parameter file is closed (and optionally updated) upon object destruction.

Miscellaneous Parameter methods

access
  $pf->access( $pname );

This returns true if the named parameter exists.

info
   ( $mode, $type, $value, $min, $max, $prompt ) =
                        $pf->info( $pname );

Return various bits of information about the named parameter. It throws an exception via die if the parameter is not found.

Retrieving Parameter Values

The parameter library supports a large variety of data types. Perl really only has two: strings and double precision floating point values, and it automatically converts between the two as needed.

To retrieve a parameter value, in most cases one simply calls get.

To ease re-coding older code into Perl, the other type specific routines (getX) have been incorporated into the Perl interface, even though they should rarely be used. One effect of these routines is that the value is first converted into the specified type (e.g. short) before being passed to Perl. This may be of some benefit in some instances.

get
  $pf->get( $pname );

Retrieve the value of the named parameter. In all cases but Boolean parameters this performs no conversion, returning the value as a string (remember that Perl will automatically convert this to a number as required).

In the case of Boolean parameters (which are stored in the parameter file as the strings yes and no), they are converted to Perl's true and false values.

getb
  $pf->getb( $pname );

Retrieve the named parameter's value as a Boolean value.

gets
  $pf->gets( $pname );

Retrieve the named parameter's value as a short.

geti
  $pf->geti( $pname );

Retrieve the named parameter's value as an integer.

getf
  $pf->getf( $pname );

Retrieve the named parameter's value as a float.

getd
  $pf->getd( $pname );

Retrieve the named parameter's value as a double.

getstr
  $pf->getstr( $pname );

Retrieve the named parameter's value as a string. This is identical to get except for the case of Boolean parameters.

Setting Parameter Values

These routines update the parameter values in the Param object. The parameter file is updated when the Param object is destroyed (if the file was opened with the correct mode to permit writing).

In keeping with standard naming schemes for accessors, the function prefixes have been renamed from putX to setX, although the others are still available to ease porting code.

In general one should use set, which uses Perl's intrinsic stringification mechanisms to convert the Perl value to a string which is passed on to the parameter interface routines. In all but the most esoteric cases this should suffice.

set [put]
  $pf->set( $pname, $value );

Set the named parameter to the given value. In the case that the parameter is boolean, and the value is not a string, it will automatically convert Perl booleans to those required by cxcparam.

setb [putb]
  $pf->setb( $pname, $value );

Set the named parameter to the given value. Convert the value to a Boolean.

setd [putd]
  $pf->setd( $pname, $value );

Set the named parameter to the given value. Convert the value to a double.

seti [puti]
  $pf->seti( $pname, $value );

Set the named parameter to the given value. Convert the value to an integer.

sets [puts]
  $pf->sets( $pname, $value );

Set the named parameter to the given value. Convert the value to a short.

setstr [putstr]
  $pf->setd( $pname, $value );

Set the named parameter to the given value. Convert the value to a string.

Miscellaneous methods

getpath
   $path = $pf->getpath;

This returns the path to the parameter file associated with the object.

match
  $pmatch = $pf->match( $template );

Return a list of the parameters which match the given template. The list is returned as a CIAO::Lib::Param::Match object. The template may be either the single character *, which returns all parameters, or a string where the following characters have special meanings:

?

match any one character

*

match anything, or nothing

[<c>...]

match an inclusive set

SUPPORT

Bugs

Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-ciao-lib-param@rt.cpan.org or through the web interface at: https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=CIAO-Lib-Param

Source

Source is available at

  https://gitlab.com/djerius/ciao-lib-param

and may be cloned from

  https://gitlab.com/djerius/ciao-lib-param.git

AUTHOR

Diab Jerius <djerius@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is Copyright (c) 2005 by Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.

This is free software, licensed under:

  The GNU General Public License, Version 3, June 2007