In short - the same currents/potentials as to whole cell patch-clamp recordings.
From an electrical point of view the perforated patch configuration is essentially similar to whole-cell, but with a slightly higher access resistance, as the membrane patch is not ruptured but merely perforated. So, you obtain a giga-seal and immediately clamp at -70 mV (or so), while you monitor the perforation process by test pulses (e.g. -5mV, as when you are opening the membrane in whole-cell recordings). You will also have the contribution of the liquid junction potential, which you can correct for if you wish.
Biochemically, it is different from the whole-cell config, as there is (almost) no mixing of the pipette solution with the cytosol and therefore no washout of the cell.
Mm... It is not that simple. In whole-cell mode there is no LJ potential between pipette solution and cytoplasm whatsoever, because they are completely mixed. Now imagine a perforated patch with let say K Gluconate in a pipette. Na diffuses freely through the perforated membrane, while for gluconate is remains impermeable, therefore junction potential forms with a cell positive compared to a pipette. However, this value is not so easy to measure or even to estimate. Maybe, best way is to make a solution where monovalent cations are in equilibrium with a cytoplasm, such that no diffusion is expected. Than no LJ is formed at this barrier.