It is also important to handle the pipes properly with wait to avoid creating zombies. Here is an example that enables an external middleware program called ac_bl to be the basis of a general SQL subroutine.
use IPC::Open2; use POSIX ":sys_wait_h"; my @results = Sql( 'select ...' ); sub Sql { my $command = shift; my $options = ( shift() || '-qs' ) . ' -'; my $pid = open2 my $rh, my $wh, 'ac_bl ' . $options; write $wh $command; close $wh; my @results = <$rh>; chop @results; close $rh; waitpid $pid, 0; return @results; }
Update: Although if this weren't a one-off I'd create a class for this with a 'fetch' method that uses wantarray to distinguish between a call that wants the lot and one that wants to fetch only one line of result output at a time.

-M

Free your mind


In reply to Re: piping a function into a backtick shell by Moron
in thread piping a function into a backtick shell by drawde83

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