- NAME
- VERSION
- SYNOPSIS
- DESCRIPTION
- CONSTRUCTORS
- METHODS
- absolute
- append, append_raw, append_utf8
- assert
- basename
- canonpath
- cached_temp
- child
- children
- chmod
- copy
- digest
- dirname (deprecated)
- edit, edit_raw, edit_utf8
- edit_lines, edit_lines_utf8, edit_lines_raw
- exists, is_file, is_dir
- filehandle
- is_absolute, is_relative
- is_rootdir
- iterator
- lines, lines_raw, lines_utf8
- mkpath
- move
- openr, openw, openrw, opena
- parent
- realpath
- relative
- remove
- remove_tree
- sibling
- slurp, slurp_raw, slurp_utf8
- spew, spew_raw, spew_utf8
- stat, lstat
- stringify
- subsumes
- touch
- touchpath
- visit
- volume
- EXCEPTION HANDLING
- CAVEATS
- TYPE CONSTRAINTS AND COERCION
- SEE ALSO
- SUPPORT
- AUTHOR
- CONTRIBUTORS
- COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Path::Tiny - File path utility
version 0.104
use Path::Tiny;
# creating Path::Tiny objects
$dir = path("/tmp");
$foo = path("foo.txt");
$subdir = $dir->child("foo");
$bar = $subdir->child("bar.txt");
# stringifies as cleaned up path
$file = path("./foo.txt");
print $file; # "foo.txt"
# reading files
$guts = $file->slurp;
$guts = $file->slurp_utf8;
@lines = $file->lines;
@lines = $file->lines_utf8;
($head) = $file->lines( {count => 1} );
($tail) = $file->lines( {count => -1} );
# writing files
$bar->spew( @data );
$bar->spew_utf8( @data );
# reading directories
for ( $dir->children ) { ... }
$iter = $dir->iterator;
while ( my $next = $iter->() ) { ... }
This module provides a small, fast utility for working with file paths. It is
friendlier to use than the File::Spec manpage and provides easy access to functions from
several other core file handling modules. It aims to be smaller and faster
than many alternatives on CPAN, while helping people do many common things in
consistent and less error-prone ways.
Path::Tiny does not try to work for anything except Unix-like and Win32
platforms. Even then, it might break if you try something particularly obscure
or tortuous. (Quick! What does this mean:
///../../..//./././a//b/.././c/././ ? And how does it differ on Win32?)
All paths are forced to have Unix-style forward slashes. Stringifying
the object gives you back the path (after some clean up).
File input/output methods flock handles before reading or writing,
as appropriate (if supported by the platform).
The *_utf8 methods (slurp_utf8 , lines_utf8 , etc.) operate in raw
mode. On Windows, that means they will not have CRLF translation from the
:crlf IO layer. Installing the Unicode::UTF8 manpage 0.58 or later will speed up
*_utf8 situations in many cases and is highly recommended.
Alternatively, installing the PerlIO::utf8_strict manpage 0.003 or later will be
used in place of the default :encoding(UTF-8) .
This module depends heavily on PerlIO layers for correct operation and thus
requires Perl 5.008001 or later.
$path = path("foo/bar");
$path = path("/tmp", "file.txt"); # list
$path = path("."); # cwd
$path = path("~user/file.txt"); # tilde processing
Constructs a Path::Tiny object. It doesn't matter if you give a file or
directory path. It's still up to you to call directory-like methods only on
directories and file-like methods only on files. This function is exported
automatically by default.
The first argument must be defined and have non-zero length or an exception
will be thrown. This prevents subtle, dangerous errors with code like
path( maybe_undef() )->remove_tree .
If the first component of the path is a tilde ('~') then the component will be
replaced with the output of glob('~') . If the first component of the path
is a tilde followed by a user name then the component will be replaced with
output of glob('~username') . Behaviour for non-existent users depends on
the output of glob on the system.
On Windows, if the path consists of a drive identifier without a path component
(C: or D: ), it will be expanded to the absolute path of the current
directory on that volume using Cwd::getdcwd() .
If called with a single Path::Tiny argument, the original is returned unless
the original is holding a temporary file or directory reference in which case a
stringified copy is made.
$path = path("foo/bar");
$temp = Path::Tiny->tempfile;
$p2 = path($path); # like $p2 = $path
$t2 = path($temp); # like $t2 = path( "$temp" )
This optimizes copies without proliferating references unexpectedly if a copy is
made by code outside your control.
Current API available since 0.017.
$path = Path::Tiny->new("foo/bar");
This is just like path , but with method call overhead. (Why would you
do that?)
Current API available since 0.001.
$path = Path::Tiny->cwd; # path( Cwd::getcwd )
$path = cwd; # optional export
Gives you the absolute path to the current directory as a Path::Tiny object.
This is slightly faster than path(".")->absolute .
cwd may be exported on request and used as a function instead of as a
method.
Current API available since 0.018.
$path = Path::Tiny->rootdir; # /
$path = rootdir; # optional export
Gives you File::Spec->rootdir as a Path::Tiny object if you're too
picky for path("/") .
rootdir may be exported on request and used as a function instead of as a
method.
Current API available since 0.018.
$temp = Path::Tiny->tempfile( @options );
$temp = Path::Tiny->tempdir( @options );
$temp = tempfile( @options ); # optional export
$temp = tempdir( @options ); # optional export
tempfile passes the options to File::Temp->new and returns a Path::Tiny
object with the file name. The TMPDIR option is enabled by default.
The resulting File::Temp object is cached. When the Path::Tiny object is
destroyed, the File::Temp object will be as well.
File::Temp annoyingly requires you to specify a custom template in slightly
different ways depending on which function or method you call, but
Path::Tiny lets you ignore that and can take either a leading template or a
TEMPLATE option and does the right thing.
$temp = Path::Tiny->tempfile( "customXXXXXXXX" ); # ok
$temp = Path::Tiny->tempfile( TEMPLATE => "customXXXXXXXX" ); # ok
The tempfile path object will be normalized to have an absolute path, even if
created in a relative directory using DIR . If you want it to have
the realpath instead, pass a leading options hash like this:
$real_temp = tempfile({realpath => 1}, @options);
tempdir is just like tempfile , except it calls
File::Temp->newdir instead.
Both tempfile and tempdir may be exported on request and used as
functions instead of as methods.
Note: for tempfiles, the filehandles from File::Temp are closed and not
reused. This is not as secure as using File::Temp handles directly, but is
less prone to deadlocks or access problems on some platforms. Think of what
Path::Tiny gives you to be just a temporary file name that gets cleaned
up.
Note 2: if you don't want these cleaned up automatically when the object
is destroyed, File::Temp requires different options for directories and
files. Use CLEANUP => 0 for directories and UNLINK => 0 for
files.
Note 3: Don't lose the temporary object by chaining a method call instead
of storing it:
my $lost = tempdir()->child("foo"); # tempdir cleaned up right away
Note 4: The cached object may be accessed with the cached_temp method.
Keeping a reference to, or modifying the cached object may break the
behavior documented above and is not supported. Use at your own risk.
Current API available since 0.097.
$abs = path("foo/bar")->absolute;
$abs = path("foo/bar")->absolute("/tmp");
Returns a new Path::Tiny object with an absolute path (or itself if already
absolute). If no argument is given, the current directory is used as the
absolute base path. If an argument is given, it will be converted to an
absolute path (if it is not already) and used as the absolute base path.
This will not resolve upward directories (``foo/../bar'') unless canonpath
in the File::Spec manpage would normally do so on your platform. If you need them
resolved, you must call the more expensive realpath method instead.
On Windows, an absolute path without a volume component will have it added
based on the current drive.
Current API available since 0.101.
path("foo.txt")->append(@data);
path("foo.txt")->append(\@data);
path("foo.txt")->append({binmode => ":raw"}, @data);
path("foo.txt")->append_raw(@data);
path("foo.txt")->append_utf8(@data);
Appends data to a file. The file is locked with flock prior to writing. An
optional hash reference may be used to pass options. Valid options are:
-
binmode : passed to binmode() on the handle used for writing.
-
truncate : truncates the file after locking and before appending
The truncate option is a way to replace the contents of a file
in place, unlike spew which writes to a temporary file and then
replaces the original (if it exists).
append_raw is like append with a binmode of :unix for fast,
unbuffered, raw write.
append_utf8 is like append with a binmode of
:unix:encoding(UTF-8) (or the PerlIO::utf8_strict manpage). If the Unicode::UTF8 manpage
0.58+ is installed, a raw append will be done instead on the data encoded
with Unicode::UTF8 .
Current API available since 0.060.
$path = path("foo.txt")->assert( sub { $_->exists } );
Returns the invocant after asserting that a code reference argument returns
true. When the assertion code reference runs, it will have the invocant
object in the $_ variable. If it returns false, an exception will be
thrown. The assertion code reference may also throw its own exception.
If no assertion is provided, the invocant is returned without error.
Current API available since 0.062.
$name = path("foo/bar.txt")->basename; # bar.txt
$name = path("foo.txt")->basename('.txt'); # foo
$name = path("foo.txt")->basename(qr/.txt/); # foo
$name = path("foo.txt")->basename(@suffixes);
Returns the file portion or last directory portion of a path.
Given a list of suffixes as strings or regular expressions, any that match at
the end of the file portion or last directory portion will be removed before
the result is returned.
Current API available since 0.054.
$canonical = path("foo/bar")->canonpath; # foo\bar on Windows
Returns a string with the canonical format of the path name for
the platform. In particular, this means directory separators
will be \ on Windows.
Current API available since 0.001.
Returns the cached File::Temp or File::Temp::Dir object if the
Path::Tiny object was created with /tempfile or /tempdir .
If there is no such object, this method throws.
WARNING: Keeping a reference to, or modifying the cached object may
break the behavior documented for temporary files and directories created
with Path::Tiny and is not supported. Use at your own risk.
Current API available since 0.101.
$file = path("/tmp")->child("foo.txt"); # "/tmp/foo.txt"
$file = path("/tmp")->child(@parts);
Returns a new Path::Tiny object relative to the original. Works
like catfile or catdir from File::Spec, but without caring about
file or directories.
Current API available since 0.001.
@paths = path("/tmp")->children;
@paths = path("/tmp")->children( qr/\.txt$/ );
Returns a list of Path::Tiny objects for all files and directories
within a directory. Excludes ``.'' and ``..'' automatically.
If an optional qr// argument is provided, it only returns objects for child
names that match the given regular expression. Only the base name is used
for matching:
@paths = path("/tmp")->children( qr/^foo/ );
# matches children like the glob foo*
Current API available since 0.028.
path("foo.txt")->chmod(0777);
path("foo.txt")->chmod("0755");
path("foo.txt")->chmod("go-w");
path("foo.txt")->chmod("a=r,u+wx");
Sets file or directory permissions. The argument can be a numeric mode, a
octal string beginning with a ``0'' or a limited subset of the symbolic mode use
by /bin/chmod.
The symbolic mode must be a comma-delimited list of mode clauses. Clauses must
match qr/\A([augo]+)([=+-])([rwx]+)\z/ , which defines ``who'', ``op'' and
``perms'' parameters for each clause. Unlike /bin/chmod, all three parameters
are required for each clause, multiple ops are not allowed and permissions
stugoX are not supported. (See the File::chmod manpage for more complex needs.)
Current API available since 0.053.
path("/tmp/foo.txt")->copy("/tmp/bar.txt");
Copies the current path to the given destination using the File::Copy manpage's
copy function. Upon success, returns the Path::Tiny object for the
newly copied file.
Current API available since 0.070.
$obj = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->digest; # SHA-256
$obj = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->digest("MD5"); # user-selected
$obj = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->digest( { chunk_size => 1e6 }, "MD5" );
Returns a hexadecimal digest for a file. An optional hash reference of options may
be given. The only option is chunk_size . If chunk_size is given, that many
bytes will be read at a time. If not provided, the entire file will be slurped
into memory to compute the digest.
Any subsequent arguments are passed to the constructor for Digest to select
an algorithm. If no arguments are given, the default is SHA-256.
Current API available since 0.056.
$name = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->dirname; # "/tmp/"
Returns the directory portion you would get from calling
File::Spec->splitpath( $path->stringify ) or "." for a path without a
parent directory portion. Because the File::Spec manpage is inconsistent, the result
might or might not have a trailing slash. Because of this, this method is
deprecated.
A better, more consistently approach is likely $path->parent->stringify ,
which will not have a trailing slash except for a root directory.
Deprecated in 0.056.
path("foo.txt")->edit( \&callback, $options );
path("foo.txt")->edit_utf8( \&callback );
path("foo.txt")->edit_raw( \&callback );
These are convenience methods that allow ``editing'' a file using a single
callback argument. They slurp the file using slurp , place the contents
inside a localized $_ variable, call the callback function (without
arguments), and then write $_ (presumably mutated) back to the
file with spew .
An optional hash reference may be used to pass options. The only option is
binmode , which is passed to slurp and spew .
edit_utf8 and edit_raw act like their respective slurp_* and
spew_* methods.
Current API available since 0.077.
path("foo.txt")->edit_lines( \&callback, $options );
path("foo.txt")->edit_lines_utf8( \&callback );
path("foo.txt")->edit_lines_raw( \&callback );
These are convenience methods that allow ``editing'' a file's lines using a
single callback argument. They iterate over the file: for each line, the
line is put into a localized $_ variable, the callback function is
executed (without arguments) and then $_ is written to a temporary file.
When iteration is finished, the temporary file is atomically renamed over
the original.
An optional hash reference may be used to pass options. The only option is
binmode , which is passed to the method that open handles for reading and
writing.
edit_lines_utf8 and edit_lines_raw act like their respective
slurp_* and spew_* methods.
Current API available since 0.077.
if ( path("/tmp")->exists ) { ... } # -e
if ( path("/tmp")->is_dir ) { ... } # -d
if ( path("/tmp")->is_file ) { ... } # -e && ! -d
Implements file test operations, this means the file or directory actually has
to exist on the filesystem. Until then, it's just a path.
Note: is_file is not -f because -f is not the opposite of -d .
-f means ``plain file'', excluding symlinks, devices, etc. that often can be
read just like files.
Use -f instead if you really mean to check for a plain file.
Current API available since 0.053.
$fh = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->filehandle($mode, $binmode);
$fh = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->filehandle({ locked => 1 }, $mode, $binmode);
$fh = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->filehandle({ exclusive => 1 }, $mode, $binmode);
Returns an open file handle. The $mode argument must be a Perl-style
read/write mode string (``<'' ,``>'', ``>>'', etc.). If a $binmode
is given, it is set during the open call.
An optional hash reference may be used to pass options.
The locked option governs file locking; if true, handles opened for writing,
appending or read-write are locked with LOCK_EX ; otherwise, they are
locked with LOCK_SH . When using locked , ``>'' or ``+>'' modes will delay
truncation until after the lock is acquired.
The exclusive option causes the open() call to fail if the file already
exists. This corresponds to the O_EXCL flag to sysopen / open(2).
exclusive implies locked and will set it for you if you forget it.
See openr , openw , openrw , and opena for sugar.
Current API available since 0.066.
if ( path("/tmp")->is_absolute ) { ... }
if ( path("/tmp")->is_relative ) { ... }
Booleans for whether the path appears absolute or relative.
Current API available since 0.001.
while ( ! $path->is_rootdir ) {
$path = $path->parent;
...
}
Boolean for whether the path is the root directory of the volume. I.e. the
dirname is q[/] and the basename is q[] .
This works even on MSWin32 with drives and UNC volumes:
path("C:/")->is_rootdir; # true
path("//server/share/")->is_rootdir; #true
Current API available since 0.038.
$iter = path("/tmp")->iterator( \%options );
Returns a code reference that walks a directory lazily. Each invocation
returns a Path::Tiny object or undef when the iterator is exhausted.
$iter = path("/tmp")->iterator;
while ( $path = $iter->() ) {
...
}
The current and parent directory entries (``.'' and ``..'') will not
be included.
If the recurse option is true, the iterator will walk the directory
recursively, breadth-first. If the follow_symlinks option is also true,
directory links will be followed recursively. There is no protection against
loops when following links. If a directory is not readable, it will not be
followed.
The default is the same as:
$iter = path("/tmp")->iterator( {
recurse => 0,
follow_symlinks => 0,
} );
For a more powerful, recursive iterator with built-in loop avoidance, see
the Path::Iterator::Rule manpage.
See also visit.
Current API available since 0.016.
@contents = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->lines;
@contents = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->lines(\%options);
@contents = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->lines_raw;
@contents = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->lines_utf8;
@contents = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->lines( { chomp => 1, count => 4 } );
Returns a list of lines from a file. Optionally takes a hash-reference of
options. Valid options are binmode , count and chomp .
If binmode is provided, it will be set on the handle prior to reading.
If a positive count is provided, that many lines will be returned from the
start of the file. If a negative count is provided, the entire file will be
read, but only abs(count) will be kept and returned. If abs(count)
exceeds the number of lines in the file, all lines will be returned.
If chomp is set, any end-of-line character sequences (CR , CRLF , or
LF ) will be removed from the lines returned.
Because the return is a list, lines in scalar context will return the number
of lines (and throw away the data).
$number_of_lines = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->lines;
lines_raw is like lines with a binmode of :raw . We use :raw
instead of :unix so PerlIO buffering can manage reading by line.
lines_utf8 is like lines with a binmode of :raw:encoding(UTF-8)
(or the PerlIO::utf8_strict manpage). If the Unicode::UTF8 manpage 0.58+ is installed, a raw
UTF-8 slurp will be done and then the lines will be split. This is
actually faster than relying on :encoding(UTF-8) , though a bit memory
intensive. If memory use is a concern, consider openr_utf8 and
iterating directly on the handle.
Current API available since 0.065.
path("foo/bar/baz")->mkpath;
path("foo/bar/baz")->mkpath( \%options );
Like calling make_path from the File::Path manpage. An optional hash reference
is passed through to make_path . Errors will be trapped and an exception
thrown. Returns the list of directories created or an empty list if
the directories already exist, just like make_path .
Current API available since 0.001.
path("foo.txt")->move("bar.txt");
Move the current path to the given destination path using Perl's
built-in rename function. Returns the result
of the rename function.
Current API available since 0.001.
$fh = path("foo.txt")->openr($binmode); # read
$fh = path("foo.txt")->openr_raw;
$fh = path("foo.txt")->openr_utf8;
$fh = path("foo.txt")->openw($binmode); # write
$fh = path("foo.txt")->openw_raw;
$fh = path("foo.txt")->openw_utf8;
$fh = path("foo.txt")->opena($binmode); # append
$fh = path("foo.txt")->opena_raw;
$fh = path("foo.txt")->opena_utf8;
$fh = path("foo.txt")->openrw($binmode); # read/write
$fh = path("foo.txt")->openrw_raw;
$fh = path("foo.txt")->openrw_utf8;
Returns a file handle opened in the specified mode. The openr style methods
take a single binmode argument. All of the open* methods have
open*_raw and open*_utf8 equivalents that use :raw and
:raw:encoding(UTF-8) , respectively.
An optional hash reference may be used to pass options. The only option is
locked . If true, handles opened for writing, appending or read-write are
locked with LOCK_EX ; otherwise, they are locked for LOCK_SH .
$fh = path("foo.txt")->openrw_utf8( { locked => 1 } );
See filehandle for more on locking.
Current API available since 0.011.
$parent = path("foo/bar/baz")->parent; # foo/bar
$parent = path("foo/wibble.txt")->parent; # foo
$parent = path("foo/bar/baz")->parent(2); # foo
Returns a Path::Tiny object corresponding to the parent directory of the
original directory or file. An optional positive integer argument is the number
of parent directories upwards to return. parent by itself is equivalent to
parent(1) .
Current API available since 0.014.
$real = path("/baz/foo/../bar")->realpath;
$real = path("foo/../bar")->realpath;
Returns a new Path::Tiny object with all symbolic links and upward directory
parts resolved using Cwd's realpath . Compared to absolute , this is
more expensive as it must actually consult the filesystem.
If the parent path can't be resolved (e.g. if it includes directories that
don't exist), an exception will be thrown:
$real = path("doesnt_exist/foo")->realpath; # dies
However, if the parent path exists and only the last component (e.g. filename)
doesn't exist, the realpath will be the realpath of the parent plus the
non-existent last component:
$real = path("./aasdlfasdlf")->realpath; # works
The underlying Cwd module usually worked this way on Unix, but died on
Windows (and some Unixes) if the full path didn't exist. As of version 0.064,
it's safe to use anywhere.
Current API available since 0.001.
$rel = path("/tmp/foo/bar")->relative("/tmp"); # foo/bar
Returns a Path::Tiny object with a path relative to a new base path
given as an argument. If no argument is given, the current directory will
be used as the new base path.
If either path is already relative, it will be made absolute based on the
current directly before determining the new relative path.
The algorithm is roughly as follows:
-
If the original and new base path are on different volumes, an exception will be thrown.
-
If the original and new base are identical, the relative path is
"." .
-
If the new base subsumes the original, the relative path is the original path with the new base chopped off the front
-
If the new base does not subsume the original, a common prefix path is determined (possibly the root directory) and the relative path will consist of updirs (
".." ) to reach the common prefix, followed by the original path less the common prefix.
Unlike File::Spec::abs2rel , in the last case above, the calculation based
on a common prefix takes into account symlinks that could affect the updir
process. Given an original path ``/A/B'' and a new base ``/A/C'',
(where ``A'', ``B'' and ``C'' could each have multiple path components):
-
Symlinks in ``A'' don't change the result unless the last component of A is a symlink and the first component of ``C'' is an updir.
-
Symlinks in ``B'' don't change the result and will exist in the result as given.
-
Symlinks and updirs in ``C'' must be resolved to actual paths, taking into account the possibility that not all path components might exist on the filesystem.
Current API available since 0.001. New algorithm (that accounts for
symlinks) available since 0.079.
path("foo.txt")->remove;
This is just like unlink , except for its error handling: if the path does
not exist, it returns false; if deleting the file fails, it throws an
exception.
Current API available since 0.012.
# directory
path("foo/bar/baz")->remove_tree;
path("foo/bar/baz")->remove_tree( \%options );
path("foo/bar/baz")->remove_tree( { safe => 0 } ); # force remove
Like calling remove_tree from the File::Path manpage, but defaults to safe mode.
An optional hash reference is passed through to remove_tree . Errors will be
trapped and an exception thrown. Returns the number of directories deleted,
just like remove_tree .
If you want to remove a directory only if it is empty, use the built-in
rmdir function instead.
rmdir path("foo/bar/baz/");
Current API available since 0.013.
$foo = path("/tmp/foo.txt");
$sib = $foo->sibling("bar.txt"); # /tmp/bar.txt
$sib = $foo->sibling("baz", "bam.txt"); # /tmp/baz/bam.txt
Returns a new Path::Tiny object relative to the parent of the original.
This is slightly more efficient than $path->parent->child(...) .
Current API available since 0.058.
$data = path("foo.txt")->slurp;
$data = path("foo.txt")->slurp( {binmode => ":raw"} );
$data = path("foo.txt")->slurp_raw;
$data = path("foo.txt")->slurp_utf8;
Reads file contents into a scalar. Takes an optional hash reference which may
be used to pass options. The only available option is binmode , which is
passed to binmode() on the handle used for reading.
slurp_raw is like slurp with a binmode of :unix for
a fast, unbuffered, raw read.
slurp_utf8 is like slurp with a binmode of
:unix:encoding(UTF-8) (or the PerlIO::utf8_strict manpage). If the Unicode::UTF8 manpage
0.58+ is installed, a raw slurp will be done instead and the result decoded
with Unicode::UTF8 . This is just as strict and is roughly an order of
magnitude faster than using :encoding(UTF-8) .
Note: slurp and friends lock the filehandle before slurping. If
you plan to slurp from a file created with the File::Temp manpage, be sure to
close other handles or open without locking to avoid a deadlock:
my $tempfile = File::Temp->new(EXLOCK => 0);
my $guts = path($tempfile)->slurp;
Current API available since 0.004.
path("foo.txt")->spew(@data);
path("foo.txt")->spew(\@data);
path("foo.txt")->spew({binmode => ":raw"}, @data);
path("foo.txt")->spew_raw(@data);
path("foo.txt")->spew_utf8(@data);
Writes data to a file atomically. The file is written to a temporary file in
the same directory, then renamed over the original. An optional hash reference
may be used to pass options. The only option is binmode , which is passed to
binmode() on the handle used for writing.
spew_raw is like spew with a binmode of :unix for a fast,
unbuffered, raw write.
spew_utf8 is like spew with a binmode of :unix:encoding(UTF-8)
(or the PerlIO::utf8_strict manpage). If the Unicode::UTF8 manpage 0.58+ is installed, a raw
spew will be done instead on the data encoded with Unicode::UTF8 .
NOTE: because the file is written to a temporary file and then renamed, the
new file will wind up with permissions based on your current umask. This is a
feature to protect you from a race condition that would otherwise give
different permissions than you might expect. If you really want to keep the
original mode flags, use append with the truncate option.
Current API available since 0.011.
$stat = path("foo.txt")->stat;
$stat = path("/some/symlink")->lstat;
Like calling stat or lstat from the File::stat manpage.
Current API available since 0.001.
$path = path("foo.txt");
say $path->stringify; # same as "$path"
Returns a string representation of the path. Unlike canonpath , this method
returns the path standardized with Unix-style / directory separators.
Current API available since 0.001.
path("foo/bar")->subsumes("foo/bar/baz"); # true
path("/foo/bar")->subsumes("/foo/baz"); # false
Returns true if the first path is a prefix of the second path at a directory
boundary.
This does not resolve parent directory entries (.. ) or symlinks:
path("foo/bar")->subsumes("foo/bar/../baz"); # true
If such things are important to you, ensure that both paths are resolved to
the filesystem with realpath :
my $p1 = path("foo/bar")->realpath;
my $p2 = path("foo/bar/../baz")->realpath;
if ( $p1->subsumes($p2) ) { ... }
Current API available since 0.048.
path("foo.txt")->touch;
path("foo.txt")->touch($epoch_secs);
Like the Unix touch utility. Creates the file if it doesn't exist, or else
changes the modification and access times to the current time. If the first
argument is the epoch seconds then it will be used.
Returns the path object so it can be easily chained with other methods:
# won't die if foo.txt doesn't exist
$content = path("foo.txt")->touch->slurp;
Current API available since 0.015.
path("bar/baz/foo.txt")->touchpath;
Combines mkpath and touch . Creates the parent directory if it doesn't exist,
before touching the file. Returns the path object like touch does.
Current API available since 0.022.
path("/tmp")->visit( \&callback, \%options );
Executes a callback for each child of a directory. It returns a hash
reference with any state accumulated during iteration.
The options are the same as for iterator (which it uses internally):
recurse and follow_symlinks . Both default to false.
The callback function will receive a Path::Tiny object as the first argument
and a hash reference to accumulate state as the second argument. For example:
# collect files sizes
my $sizes = path("/tmp")->visit(
sub {
my ($path, $state) = @_;
return if $path->is_dir;
$state->{$path} = -s $path;
},
{ recurse => 1 }
);
For convenience, the Path::Tiny object will also be locally aliased as the
$_ global variable:
# print paths matching /foo/
path("/tmp")->visit( sub { say if /foo/ }, { recurse => 1} );
If the callback returns a reference to a false scalar value, iteration will
terminate. This is not the same as ``pruning'' a directory search; this just
stops all iteration and returns the state hash reference.
# find up to 10 files larger than 100K
my $files = path("/tmp")->visit(
sub {
my ($path, $state) = @_;
$state->{$path}++ if -s $path > 102400
return \0 if keys %$state == 10;
},
{ recurse => 1 }
);
If you want more flexible iteration, use a module like the Path::Iterator::Rule manpage.
Current API available since 0.062.
$vol = path("/tmp/foo.txt")->volume; # ""
$vol = path("C:/tmp/foo.txt")->volume; # "C:"
Returns the volume portion of the path. This is equivalent
to what the File::Spec manpage would give from splitpath and thus
usually is the empty string on Unix-like operating systems or the
drive letter for an absolute path on MSWin32 .
Current API available since 0.001.
Simple usage errors will generally croak. Failures of underlying Perl
functions will be thrown as exceptions in the class
Path::Tiny::Error .
A Path::Tiny::Error object will be a hash reference with the following fields:
-
op — a description of the operation, usually function call and any extra info
-
file — the file or directory relating to the error
-
err — hold $! at the time the error was thrown
-
msg — a string combining the above data and a Carp-like short stack trace
Exception objects will stringify as the msg field.
For speed, this class is implemented as an array based object and uses many
direct function calls internally. You must not subclass it and expect
things to work properly.
If flock is not supported on a platform, it will not be used, even if
locking is requested.
See additional caveats below.
On BSD, Perl's flock implementation may not work to lock files on an
NFS filesystem. Path::Tiny has some heuristics to detect this
and will warn once and let you continue in an unsafe mode. If you
want this failure to be fatal, you can fatalize the 'flock' warnings
category:
use warnings FATAL => 'flock';
AIX requires a write handle for locking. Therefore, calls that normally
open a read handle and take a shared lock instead will open a read-write
handle and take an exclusive lock. If the user does not have write
permission, no lock will be used.
All the *_utf8 methods by default use :encoding(UTF-8) -- either as
:unix:encoding(UTF-8) (unbuffered) or :raw:encoding(UTF-8) (buffered) --
which is strict against the Unicode spec and disallows illegal Unicode
codepoints or UTF-8 sequences.
Unfortunately, :encoding(UTF-8) is very, very slow. If you install
the Unicode::UTF8 manpage 0.58 or later, that module will be used by some *_utf8
methods to encode or decode data after a raw, binary input/output operation,
which is much faster. Alternatively, if you install the PerlIO::utf8_strict manpage,
that will be used instead of :encoding(UTF-8) and is also very fast.
If you need the performance and can accept the security risk,
slurp({binmode => ":unix:utf8"}) will be faster than :unix:encoding(UTF-8)
(but not as fast as Unicode::UTF8 ).
Note that the *_utf8 methods read in raw mode. There is no CRLF
translation on Windows. If you must have CRLF translation, use the regular
input/output methods with an appropriate binmode:
$path->spew_utf8($data); # raw
$path->spew({binmode => ":encoding(UTF-8)"}, $data; # LF -> CRLF
If you have Perl 5.10 or later, file input/output methods (slurp , spew ,
etc.) and high-level handle opening methods ( filehandle , openr ,
openw , etc. ) respect default encodings set by the -C switch or lexical
open settings of the caller. For UTF-8, this is almost certainly slower
than using the dedicated _utf8 methods if you have the Unicode::UTF8 manpage.
A standard the MooseX::Types manpage library is available at
the MooseX::Types::Path::Tiny manpage. A the Type::Tiny manpage equivalent is available as
the Types::Path::Tiny manpage.
These are other file/path utilities, which may offer a different feature
set than Path::Tiny .
These iterators may be slightly faster than the recursive iterator in
Path::Tiny :
There are probably comparable, non-Tiny tools. Let me know if you want me to
add a module to the list.
This module was featured in the 2013 Perl Advent Calendar.
Please report any bugs or feature requests through the issue tracker
at https://github.com/dagolden/Path-Tiny/issues.
You will be notified automatically of any progress on your issue.
This is open source software. The code repository is available for
public review and contribution under the terms of the license.
https://github.com/dagolden/Path-Tiny
git clone https://github.com/dagolden/Path-Tiny.git
David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>
This software is Copyright (c) 2014 by David Golden.
This is free software, licensed under:
The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004
|