Library
Module
Module type
Parameter
Class
Class type
An output channel for doing blocking writes to destinations like files and sockets.
Note that an Out_channel.t
is a custom block with a finalizer, and so is allocated directly to the major heap. Creating a lot of out_channels can result in many major collections and poor performance.
Note that this is simply another interface on the out_channel
type in the OCaml standard library.
As for the output functions in the standard library, all the functions in this module, unless otherwise specified, can raise Sys_error
when the system calls they invoke fail.
type t = out_channel
val sexp_of_t : t -> Sexplib0.Sexp.t
include Base.Equal.S with type t := t
val equal : t Base.Equal.equal
val stdout : t
val stderr : t
val create : (Base.string -> t) with_create_args
val with_file : (Base.string -> f:(t -> 'a) -> 'a) with_create_args
close t
flushes and closes t
, and may raise an exception. close
returns () and does not raise if t
is already closed. close
raises an exception if the close() system call on the underlying file descriptor fails (i.e. returns -1), which would happen in the following cases:
EBADF -- this would happen if someone else did close() system call on the underlying fd, which I would think a rare event.
EINTR -- would happen if the system call was interrupted by a signal, which would be rare. Also, I think we should probably just catch EINTR and re-attempt the close. Unfortunately, we can't do that in OCaml because the OCaml library marks the out_channel as closed even if the close syscall fails, so a subsequent call close_out_channel
will be a no-op. This should really be fixed in the OCaml library C code, having it restart the close() syscall on EINTR. I put a couple CRs in fixed_close_channel
, our rework of OCaml's caml_ml_close_channel
,
EIO -- I don't recall seeing this. I think it's rare.
See "man 2 close" for details.
val output : t -> buf:Base.bytes -> pos:Base.int -> len:Base.int -> Base.unit
val output_string : t -> Base.string -> Base.unit
val output_substring :
t ->
buf:Base.string ->
pos:Base.int ->
len:Base.int ->
Base.unit
val output_bytes : t -> Base.Bytes.t -> Base.unit
val output_buffer : t -> Base.Buffer.t -> Base.unit
val output_lines : t -> Base.string Base.list -> Base.unit
Outputs a list of lines, each terminated by a newline character
val fprintf : t -> ('a, t, Base.unit) Base.format -> 'a
Formatted printing to an out channel. This is the same as Printf.sprintf
except that it outputs to t
instead of returning a string. Similarly, the function arguments corresponding to conversions specifications such as %a
or %t
takes t
as argument and must print to it instead of returning a string.
val printf : ('a, t, Base.unit) Base.format -> 'a
printf fmt
is the same as fprintf stdout fmt
val print_s : ?mach:Base.unit -> Base.Sexp.t -> Base.unit
print_s sexp
outputs sexp
on stdout
, by default using Sexp.to_string_hum
, or, with ~mach:()
, Sexp.to_string_mach
.
val eprint_s : ?mach:Base.unit -> Base.Sexp.t -> Base.unit
eprint_s sexp
outputs sexp
on stderr
, by default using Sexp.to_string_hum
, or, with ~mach:()
, Sexp.to_string_mach
.
val eprintf : ('a, t, Base.unit) Base.format -> 'a
eprintf fmt
is the same as fprintf stderr fmt
val kfprintf : (t -> 'a) -> t -> ('b, t, Base.unit, 'a) Base.format4 -> 'b
kfprintf k t fmt
is the same as fprintf t fmt
, but instead of returning immediately, passes the out channel to k
at the end of printing.
val print_string : Base.string -> Base.unit
print_string s
= output_string stdout s
val print_endline : Base.string -> Base.unit
print_endline str
outputs str
to stdout
followed by a newline then flushes stdout
val prerr_endline : Base.string -> Base.unit
prerr_endline str
outputs str
to stderr
followed by a newline then flushes stderr
val seek : t -> Base.int64 -> Base.unit
val pos : t -> Base.int64
val length : t -> Base.int64
val write_lines : Base.string -> Base.string Base.list -> Base.unit
The first argument of these is the file name to write to.
val write_all : Base.string -> data:Base.string -> Base.unit