The key concept that salva exploits in his excellent example is the "offset OK hack". When you call substr in Perl and lop a few characters off the front of a scalar... instead of reallocating and copying, Perl performs the following steps:
- Store the number of bytes to get lopped in the scalar's IV.
- Move the SvPVX pointer forwards.
- Set the scalar's OOK flag.
- Turn off the scalar's IOK flag.
- Adjust the scalar's CUR and LEN to reflect the change.
$ perl -MDevel::Peek -e \
'my $toes = "potatoes"; substr($toes, 0, 4, ""); Dump($toes);'
SV = PVIV(0x1801a20) at 0x1801434
REFCNT = 1
FLAGS = (PADBUSY,PADMY,POK,OOK,pPOK)
IV = 4 (OFFSET)
PV = 0x300b64 ( "pota" . ) "toes"\0
CUR = 4
LEN = 5
See the section "Offsets" in perlguts for a thorough explanation, as well as the sv_chop function in perlapi. Perl_sv_chop in the sv.c source code is only a few lines long, so you might also want to snoop that.
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