NAME¶
Term::TtyRec::Plus - read a ttyrec
SYNOPSIS¶
"Term::TtyRec::Plus" is a module that lets you read ttyrec files. The
related module, Term::TtyRec is designed more for simple interactions.
"Term::TtyRec::Plus" gives you more information and, using a
callback, lets you munge the data block and timestamp. It will do all the
subtle work of making sure timing is kept consistent, and of rebuilding each
frame header.
use Term::TtyRec::Plus;
# complete (but simple) ttyrec playback script
foreach my $file (@ARGV) {
my $ttyrec = Term::TtyRec::Plus->new(infile => $file, time_threshold => 10);
while (my $frame_ref = $ttyrec->next_frame()) {
select undef, undef, undef, $frame_ref->{diff};
print $frame_ref->{data};
}
}
CONSTRUCTOR AND STARTUP¶
new()¶
Creates and returns a new "Term::TtyRec::Plus" object.
my $ttyrec = Term::TtyRec::Plus->new();
Parameters
Here are the parameters that "Term::TtyRec::Plus->new()"
recognizes.
- infile
- The input filename. A value of "-", which is the
default, or "undef", means "STDIN".
- filehandle
- The input filehandle. By default this is "undef";
if you have already opened the ttyrec then you can pass its filehandle to
the constructor. If both filehandle and infile are defined, filehandle is
used.
- bzip2
- Perform bzip2 decompression. By default this is
"undef", which signals that bzip2 decompression should occur if
and only if the filename is available and it ends in ".bz2".
Otherwise, you can force or forbid decompression by setting bzip2 to a
true or false value, respectively. After the call to new, this field will
be set to either 1 if decompression is enabled or 0 if it is not.
- time_threshold
- The maximum difference between two frames, in seconds. If
"undef", which is the default, there is no enforced maximum. The
second most common value would be 10, which some ttyrec utilities (such as
timettyrec) use.
- frame_filter
- A callback, run for each frame before returning the frame
to the user of "Term::TtyRec::Plus". This callback receives
three arguments: the frame text, the timestamp, and the timestamp of the
previous frame. All three arguments are passed as scalar references. The
previous frame's timestamp is "undef" for the first frame. The
return value is not currently looked at. If you modify the timestamp, the
module will make sure that change is noted and respected in further frame
timestamps. Modifications to the previous frame's timestamp are currently
ignored.
sub halve_frame_time_and_stumblify {
my ($data_ref, $time_ref, $prev_ref) = @_;
$$time_ref = $$prev_ref + ($$time_ref - $$prev_ref) / 2
if defined $$prev_ref;
$$data_ref =~ s/Eidolos/Stumbly/g;
}
State
In addition to passing arguments, you can modify
"Term::TtyRec::Plus"'s initial state, if you want to. This could be
useful if you are chaining multiple ttyrecs together; you could pass a
different initial frame. Support for such chaining might be added in a future
version.
- frame
- The initial frame number. Default 0.
- prev_timestamp
- The previous frame's timestamp. Default
"undef".
- accum_diff
- The accumulated difference of all frames seen so far; see
the section on "diffed_timestamp" in "next_frame()"'s
return value. Default 0.
- relative_time
- The time passed since the first frame. Default 0.
METHODS¶
next_frame()¶
"next_frame()" reads and processes the next frame in the ttyrec. It
accepts no arguments. On EOF, it will return "undef". On malformed
ttyrec input, it will die. If it cannot reconstruct the header of a frame
(which might happen if the callback sets the timestamp to -1, for example), it
will die. Otherwise, a hash reference is returned with the following fields
set.
- data
- The frame data, filtered through the callback. The original
data block is not made available.
- orig_timestamp
- The frame timestamp, straight out of the file.
- diffed_timestamp
- The frame timestamp, with the accumulated difference of all
of the previous frames applied to it. This is so consistent results are
given. For example, if your callback adds three seconds to frame 5's
timestamp, then frame 6's diffed timestamp will take into account those
three seconds, so frame 6 happens three seconds later as well. So the net
effect is frame 5 is extended by three seconds, and no other frames'
relatives times are affected.
- timestamp
- The diffed timestamp, filtered through the callback.
- prev_timestamp
- The previous frame's timestamp (after diffing and
filtering; the originals are not made available).
- diff
- The difference between the current frame's timestamp and
the previous frame's timestamp. Yes, it is equivalent to "timestamp -
prev_timestamp", but it is provided for convenience. On the first
frame it will be 0 (not "undef").
- orig_header
- The 12-byte frame header, straight from the file.
- header
- The 12-byte frame header, reconstructed from
"data" and "timestamp" (so, after filtering,
etc.).
- frame
- The frame number, using 1-based indexing.
- relative_time
- The time between the first frame's timestamp and the
current frame's timestamp.
grep()¶
Returns the next frame that meets the specified criteria. "grep()"
accepts arguments that are subroutines, regex, or strings; anything else is a
fatal error. If you pass multiple arguments to "grep()", each one
must be true. The subroutines receive the frame reference that is returned by
"next_frame()". You can modify the frame, but do so cautiously.
my $next_jump_frame_ref = $t->grep("Where do you want to jump?", sub { $_[0]{data} !~ /Message History/});
rewind()¶
Rewinds the ttyrec to the first frame and resets state variables to their
initial values. Note that if "filehandle" is not seekable (such as
STDIN on some systems, or if bzip2 decompression is used),
"rewind()" will die.
infile()¶
Returns the infile passed to the constructor. If a filehandle was passed, this
will be "undef".
filehandle()¶
Returns the filehandle passed to the constructor, or if "infile" was
used, a handle to "infile".
bzip2()¶
Returns 1 if bzip2 decompression has taken place, 0 if it has not.
time_threshold()¶
Returns the time threshold passed to the constructor. By default it is
"undef".
frame_filter()¶
Returns the frame filter callback passed to the constructor. By default it is
"sub { @_ }".
frame()¶
Returns the frame number of the most recently returned frame.
prev_timestamp()¶
Returns the timestamp of the most recently returned frame.
relative_time()¶
Returns the time so far since the first frame.
accum_diff()¶
Returns the total time difference between timestamps and filtered timestamps.
"accum_diff" is added to each frame's timestamp before they are
passed to the "frame_filter" callback.
AUTHOR¶
Shawn M Moore, "sartak@gmail.com"
CAVEATS¶
- •
- Ttyrecs are frame-based. If you are trying to modify a
string that is broken across multiple frames, it will not work. Say you
have a ttyrec that prints "foo" in frame one and "bar"
in frame two, both with the same timestamp. In a ttyrec player, it might
look like these are one frame (with data "foobar"), but it's
not. There is no easy, complete way to add arbitrary substitutions; you
would have to write (or reuse) a terminal emulator.
- •
- If you modify the data block, weird things could happen.
This is especially true of escape-code-littered ttyrecs (such as those of
NetHack). For best results, pretend the data block is an executable file;
changes are OK as long as you do not change the length of the file. It
really depends on the ttyrec though.
- •
- If you modify the timestamp of a frame so that it is not in
sequence with other frames, the behavior is undefined (it is up to the
client program). "Term::TtyRec::Plus" will not reorder the
frames for you.
- •
- bzip2 support is transparent, mostly. Unfortunately
IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2 is rather slow. I took a lengthy (~4 hours),
bzipped ttyrec and ran a simple script on it, depending on the built-in
bzip2 decompression. This took nearly four minutes. Using bunzip2 then the
same script took about four seconds. So when you can, do explicit bzip2
decompression. Or better yet, help out the guys working on
IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2. :)
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE¶
Copyright 2006-2009 Shawn M Moore, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.