can_read() sometimes (often?) returns true when nothing is available.

Well that's problematic! I know it returns true when the handle has been closed. That's a good thing. sysread returns zero allowing you to handle disconnects. But I presume that's not what you mean.

I simply don't know if IO::Select suffers the same limitations as select, but I suspect that it probaly does.

IO::Select is just a thin wrapper for select that handles packing and unpacking the bit vectors for you. If it affects select, it affects IO::Select.

Mixing select with buffered IO seems to give unreliable results.

As documented. select translates into a system call and pays no attention to Perl's buffers.

I'm very shy of using select or IO::Select in conjuction with blocking IO (the diamond operator and friends).

As you should be. The diamond operator does buffered I/O which is incompatible with select.

when I get bitten a few times, I tend to get shy.

It wasn't a trick question. I have little real-world experience in the matter. Thanks for the info.


In reply to Re^4: Timeouts: Any alternative to alarm in Win32? by ikegami
in thread Timeouts: Any alternative to alarm in Win32? by jbbarnes

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