The typical solution is for the sender to prefix the data with the number of bytes. Then the reader can read (say) a 4 byte integer indicating how many bytes will follow, and then issue a read for the approriate number of bytes, or better, loop reading reasonable size chunks and counting until it has it all:

## sender my $size = -s 'theFileToSend'; print $socket pack 'N', $size; ## Assumes files less than 4GB. local $/ = \2**16; ## read the file in 64k chunks print $socket $_ while <$file>; ## The reader my $size; read( $sock, $size, 4 ); ## Get the size in binary $size = unpack 'N', $size; while( $size > 0 ) { my $buffer; my $chunkSize = $size < 2**16 ? $size : 2**16; $size -= read( $sock, $buffer, $chunkSize ); ## do something with this chunk }

Examine what is said, not who speaks -- Silence betokens consent -- Love the truth but pardon error.
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In reply to Re^8: sysread and syswrite in tcp sockets by BrowserUk
in thread sysread and syswrite in tcp sockets by rustybar

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