class type rec_out_channel =Recommended output class type for library interoperability.object
..end
This class type is defined in "Basic I/O class types" as collaborative effort of several library creators.
method output : string -> int -> int -> int
int
argument is the position of the substring, and the second
int
argument is the length of the substring where the data can
be found. The method returns the number of octets actually written.
The implementation may choose to collect written octets in a buffer before they actually delivered to the underlying resource.
When the channel is non-blocking, and there are currently no bytes to write, the number 0 will be returned. This has been changed in ocamlnet-0.97! In previous releases this behaviour was undefined.
When the channel is closed, the exception Closed_channel
will be
raised if an ocamlnet implementation is used. For implementations
of other libraries there is no standard for this case.
method flush : unit -> unit
method close_out : unit -> unit
When the channel is already closed, this is a no-op.
The close_out
method has actually two tasks: First, it writes out
all remaining data (like flush
), and second, it releases OS
resources (e.g. closes file descriptors). There is the question
what has to happen when the write part fails - is the resource released
anyway or not?
We choose here a pragmatic approach under the assumption that
an OS error at close time is usually unrecoverable, and it is
more important to release the OS resource. Also, we
assume that the user is wise enough to call flush
first if
it is essential to know write errors at close time. Under these
assumptions:
flush
method fully reports any errors when writing out
the remaining data.flush
raises an error exception, it should discard
any data in the buffer. This is not obligatory, however,
but considered good practice, and is subject to discussion.close_out
method usually does not report errors by
raising exceptions, but only by logging them via Netlog
.
The OS resource is released in any case. As before, this
behavior is not obligatory, but considered as good practice,
and subject to discussion.
try
ch # flush();
ch # close_out();
with error ->
ch # close_out(); raise error
There are some cases where data can be first written when it is
known that the channel is closed. These data would not be written
by a preceding flush
. In such cases:
write_eof
, that marks the data as logically
being complete, so a following flush
can do the complete
shutdown cycle of the channel.close_out
releases the descriptor: the first close_out
will report the error condition as exception, but discard
all data in the channel. The second close_out
finally
releases the OS resource.