Provided by: libmongodb-perl_2.2.2-2_all bug

NAME

       MongoDB::GridFSBucket::DownloadStream - File handle abstraction for downloading

VERSION

       version v2.2.2

SYNOPSIS

           # OO API
           $stream = $bucket->open_download_stream($file_id)
           while ( my $line = $stream->readline ) {
               ...
           }

           # Tied-handle API
           $fh = $stream->fh;
           while ( my $line = <$fh> ) {
               ...
           }

DESCRIPTION

       This class provides a file abstraction for downloading.  You can stream data from an
       object of this class using method calls or a tied-handle interface.

ATTRIBUTES

   file_doc
       The file document for the file to be downloaded.

       Valid file documents typically include the following fields:

       •   _id – a unique ID for this document, typically a BSON::OID object. Legacy GridFS files
           may store this value as a different type.

       •   length – the length of this stored file, in bytes

       •   chunkSize – the size, in bytes, of each full data chunk of this file.

       •   uploadDate – the date and time this file was added to GridFS, stored as a BSON
           datetime value and inflated per the bucket's bson_codec attribute.

       •   filename – the name of this stored file; this does not need to be unique

       •   metadata – any additional application-specific data

       •   md5 – DEPRECATED

       •   contentType – DEPRECATED

       •   aliases – DEPRECATED

METHODS

   fh
           my $fh = $downloadstream->fh;
           while ( <$fh> ) {
               say($_);
           }

       Returns a new Perl file handle tied to this instance of DownloadStream that can be
       operated on with the built-in functions "read", "readline", "getc", "eof", "fileno" and
       "close".

       Important notes:

       Allowing one of these tied filehandles to fall out of scope will NOT cause close to be
       called. This is due to the way tied file handles are implemented in Perl.  For close to be
       called implicitly, all tied filehandles and the original object must go out of scope.

       Each file handle retrieved this way is tied back to the same object, so calling close on
       multiple tied file handles and/or the original object will have the same effect as calling
       close on the original object multiple times.

   close
           $stream->close

       Works like the builtin "close".

       Important notes:

       •   Calling close will also cause any tied file handles created for the stream to also
           close.

       •   "close" will be automatically called when a stream object is destroyed.

       •   Calling "close" repeatedly will warn.

   eof
           if ( $stream->eof() ) { ... }

       Works like the builtin "eof".

   fileno
           if ( $stream->fileno() ) { ... }

       Works like the builtin "fileno", but it returns -1 if the stream is open and undef if
       closed.

   getc
           $char = $stream->getc();

       Works like the builtin "getc".

   read
           $data = $stream->read($buf, $length, $offset)

       Works like the builtin "read".

   readline
           $line  = $stream->readline();
           @lines = $stream->readline();

       Works like the builtin "readline".

AUTHORS

       •   David Golden <david@mongodb.com>

       •   Rassi <rassi@mongodb.com>

       •   Mike Friedman <friedo@friedo.com>

       •   Kristina Chodorow <k.chodorow@gmail.com>

       •   Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is Copyright (c) 2020 by MongoDB, Inc.

       This is free software, licensed under:

         The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004