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Home/ Questions/Q 8920975
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 15, 20262026-06-15T06:24:56+00:00 2026-06-15T06:24:56+00:00

The following minimal example defines a wrapper around PerlIO_write : MODULE = My::FH PACKAGE

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The following minimal example defines a wrapper around PerlIO_write:

MODULE = My::FH        PACKAGE = My::FH
INCLUDE: const-xs.inc
int
write_fh (SV* fh, SV* str)
CODE:
STRLEN len
char* buf = SvPV(str, len);
PerlIO* io = IoIFP(sv_2io(fh));
if (io) {
    RETVAL = PerlIO_write(io, buf, len);
} else {
    croak("cannot use fh as a PerlIO handle");
}
OUTPUT:
RETVAL

Using the write_fh function on a filehandle that has been created
using open $fh, '<', \$buf works as expected. However, a tied
filehandle created using the following snippet is not turned into a
PerlIO handle:

my $fh = Symbol::gensym;
tie *$fh, 'My::TIEFH', \$buf;

My::TIEFH contains the required methods and writing to it via print
$fh $str
works just as expected.

What do I need to do to write to the tied filehandle from XS land?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-15T06:24:57+00:00Added an answer on June 15, 2026 at 6:24 am

    print uses call_method to call PRINT when

    io && (mg = SvTIED_mg((const SV *)io, PERL_MAGIC_tiedscalar)))
    

    is true. The blessed object to place on the stack is

    SvTIED_obj(MUTABLE_SV(io), mg)
    

    By the way, the XS compiler can place non-declaration code before the content of CODE, so the content of CODE cannot start with declarations.

    CODE:
        STRLEN len
        char* buf = SvPV(str, len);
        PerlIO* io = IoIFP(sv_2io(fh));
        if (io) {
        ...
    

    should be

    CODE:
        {
            STRLEN len
            char* buf = SvPV(str, len);
            PerlIO* io = IoIFP(sv_2io(fh));
            if (io) {
            ...
        }
    

    or

    PREINIT:
        STRLEN len
        char* buf = SvPV(str, len);
        PerlIO* io = IoIFP(sv_2io(fh));
    CODE:
        if (io) {
        ...
    
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