NAME Filesys::Virtual::Async::Plain - A plain non-blocking virtual filesystem SYNOPSIS use Filesys::Virtual::Async::Plain; my $fs = Filesys::Virtual::Async::Plain->new( root => '/home/foo', ); $fs->mkdir( '/bar', $mode, sub { if ( $_[0] ) { print "success\n"; } else { print "failure:$!\n"; } }); DESCRIPTION Filesys::Virtual::Async::Plain provides non-blocking access to virtual filesystem rooted in a real filesystem. It's like a chrooted filesytem WARNING This module is still in flux to an extent. It will change. I released this module early due to demand. If you'd like to suggest changes, please drop in the irc channel #poe on irc.perl.org and speak with xantus[] or Apocalypse OBJECT METHODS new( root => $path ); root is optional, and defaults to /. root is prepended to all paths after resolution cwd() Returns the current working directory (virtual) root() or root( $path ) Gets or sets the root path CALLBACK METHODS All of these work exactly like the IO::AIO methods of the same name. Use IO::AIO as a reference for these functions. This module is mostly a wrapper around IO::AIO. All paths passed to these functions are resolved for you, so pass virtual paths, not the full path on disk as you would pass to aio dirlist( $path, $withstat, $callback ) Not an aio method, but a helper that will fetch a list of files in a path, and optionally stat each file. The callback is called with an array. The first element is the file name and the second param is an array ref of the return value of io_stat() if requested. open() close() read() write() sendfile() readahead() stat() lstat() utime() chown() truncate() chmod() unlink() mknod() link() symlink() readlink() rename() mkdir() rmdir() readdir() load() copy() move() scandir() rmtree() fsync() fdatasync() SEE ALSO Filesys::Virtual::Async BUGS Probably. Report 'em: AUTHOR David W Davis RATING You can rate this this module at COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright (c) 2009 by David W Davis, All rights reserved This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself