-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
dir.rb
505 lines (501 loc) · 19.4 KB
/
dir.rb
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
# An object of class \Dir represents a directory in the underlying file system.
#
# It consists mainly of:
#
# - A string _path_, given when the object is created,
# that specifies a directory in the underlying file system;
# method #path returns the path.
# - A collection of string <i>entry names</i>,
# each of which is the name of a directory or file in the underlying file system;
# the entry names may be retrieved
# in an {array-like fashion}[rdoc-ref:Dir@Dir+As+Array-Like]
# or in a {stream-like fashion}[rdoc-ref:Dir@Dir+As+Stream-Like].
#
# == About the Examples
#
# Some examples on this page use this simple file tree:
#
# example/
# ├── config.h
# ├── lib/
# │ ├── song/
# │ │ └── karaoke.rb
# │ └── song.rb
# └── main.rb
#
# Others use the file tree for the
# {Ruby project itself}[https://github.com/ruby/ruby].
#
# == \Dir As \Array-Like
#
# A \Dir object is in some ways array-like:
#
# - It has instance methods #children, #each, and #each_child.
# - It includes {module Enumerable}[rdoc-ref:Enumerable@What-27s+Here].
#
# == \Dir As Stream-Like
#
# A \Dir object is in some ways stream-like.
#
# The stream is initially open for reading,
# but may be closed manually (using method #close),
# and will be closed on block exit if created by Dir.open called with a block.
# The closed stream may not be further manipulated,
# and may not be reopened.
#
# The stream has a _position_, which is the index of an entry in the directory:
#
# - The initial position is zero (before the first entry).
# - \Method #tell (aliased as #pos) returns the position.
# - \Method #pos= sets the position (but ignores a value outside the stream),
# and returns the position.
# - \Method #seek is like #pos=, but returns +self+ (convenient for chaining).
# - \Method #read, if not at end-of-stream, reads the next entry and increments
# the position;
# if at end-of-stream, does not increment the position.
# - \Method #rewind sets the position to zero.
#
# Examples (using the {simple file tree}[rdoc-ref:Dir@About+the+Examples]):
#
# dir = Dir.new('example') # => #<Dir:example>
# dir.pos # => 0
#
# dir.read # => "."
# dir.read # => ".."
# dir.read # => "config.h"
# dir.read # => "lib"
# dir.read # => "main.rb"
# dir.pos # => 5
# dir.read # => nil
# dir.pos # => 5
#
# dir.rewind # => #<Dir:example>
# dir.pos # => 0
#
# dir.pos = 3 # => 3
# dir.pos # => 3
#
# dir.seek(4) # => #<Dir:example>
# dir.pos # => 4
#
# dir.close # => nil
# dir.read # Raises IOError.
#
# == What's Here
#
# First, what's elsewhere. \Class \Dir:
#
# - Inherits from {class Object}[rdoc-ref:Object@What-27s+Here].
# - Includes {module Enumerable}[rdoc-ref:Enumerable@What-27s+Here],
# which provides dozens of additional methods.
#
# Here, class \Dir provides methods that are useful for:
#
# - {Reading}[rdoc-ref:Dir@Reading]
# - {Setting}[rdoc-ref:Dir@Setting]
# - {Querying}[rdoc-ref:Dir@Querying]
# - {Iterating}[rdoc-ref:Dir@Iterating]
# - {Other}[rdoc-ref:Dir@Other]
#
# === Reading
#
# - #close: Closes the directory stream for +self+.
# - #pos=: Sets the position in the directory stream for +self+.
# - #read: Reads and returns the next entry in the directory stream for +self+.
# - #rewind: Sets the position in the directory stream for +self+ to the first entry.
# - #seek: Sets the position in the directory stream for +self+
# the entry at the given offset.
#
# === Setting
#
# - ::chdir: Changes the working directory of the current process
# to the given directory.
# - ::chroot: Changes the file-system root for the current process
# to the given directory.
#
# === Querying
#
# - ::[]: Same as ::glob without the ability to pass flags.
# - ::children: Returns an array of names of the children
# (both files and directories) of the given directory,
# but not including <tt>.</tt> or <tt>..</tt>.
# - ::empty?: Returns whether the given path is an empty directory.
# - ::entries: Returns an array of names of the children
# (both files and directories) of the given directory,
# including <tt>.</tt> and <tt>..</tt>.
# - ::exist?: Returns whether the given path is a directory.
# - ::getwd (aliased as #pwd): Returns the path to the current working directory.
# - ::glob: Returns an array of file paths matching the given pattern and flags.
# - ::home: Returns the home directory path for a given user or the current user.
# - #children: Returns an array of names of the children
# (both files and directories) of +self+,
# but not including <tt>.</tt> or <tt>..</tt>.
# - #fileno: Returns the integer file descriptor for +self+.
# - #path (aliased as #to_path): Returns the path used to create +self+.
# - #tell (aliased as #pos): Returns the integer position
# in the directory stream for +self+.
#
# === Iterating
#
# - ::each_child: Calls the given block with each entry in the given directory,
# but not including <tt>.</tt> or <tt>..</tt>.
# - ::foreach: Calls the given block with each entry in the given directory,
# including <tt>.</tt> and <tt>..</tt>.
# - #each: Calls the given block with each entry in +self+,
# including <tt>.</tt> and <tt>..</tt>.
# - #each_child: Calls the given block with each entry in +self+,
# but not including <tt>.</tt> or <tt>..</tt>.
#
# === Other
#
# - ::mkdir: Creates a directory at the given path, with optional permissions.
# - ::new: Returns a new \Dir for the given path, with optional encoding.
# - ::open: Same as ::new, but if a block is given, yields the \Dir to the block,
# closing it upon block exit.
# - ::unlink (aliased as ::delete and ::rmdir): Removes the given directory.
# - #inspect: Returns a string description of +self+.
#
class Dir
# call-seq:
# Dir.open(dirpath) -> dir
# Dir.open(dirpath, encoding: nil) -> dir
# Dir.open(dirpath) {|dir| ... } -> object
# Dir.open(dirpath, encoding: nil) {|dir| ... } -> object
#
# Creates a new \Dir object _dir_ for the directory at +dirpath+.
#
# With no block, the method equivalent to Dir.new(dirpath, encoding):
#
# Dir.open('.') # => #<Dir:.>
#
# With a block given, the block is called with the created _dir_;
# on block exit _dir_ is closed and the block's value is returned:
#
# Dir.open('.') {|dir| dir.inspect } # => "#<Dir:.>"
#
# The value given with optional keyword argument +encoding+
# specifies the encoding for the directory entry names;
# if +nil+ (the default), the file system's encoding is used:
#
# Dir.open('.').read.encoding # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
# Dir.open('.', encoding: 'US-ASCII').read.encoding # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
#
def self.open(name, encoding: nil, &block)
dir = Primitive.dir_s_open(name, encoding)
if block
begin
yield dir
ensure
Primitive.dir_s_close(dir)
end
else
dir
end
end
# call-seq:
# Dir.new(dirpath) -> dir
# Dir.new(dirpath, encoding: nil) -> dir
#
# Returns a new \Dir object for the directory at +dirpath+:
#
# Dir.new('.') # => #<Dir:.>
#
# The value given with optional keyword argument +encoding+
# specifies the encoding for the directory entry names;
# if +nil+ (the default), the file system's encoding is used:
#
# Dir.new('.').read.encoding # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
# Dir.new('.', encoding: 'US-ASCII').read.encoding # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
#
def initialize(name, encoding: nil)
Primitive.dir_initialize(name, encoding)
end
# call-seq:
# Dir[*patterns, base: nil, sort: true] -> array
#
# Calls Dir.glob with argument +patterns+
# and the values of keyword arguments +base+ and +sort+;
# returns the array of selected entry names.
#
def self.[](*args, base: nil, sort: true)
Primitive.dir_s_aref(args, base, sort)
end
# call-seq:
# Dir.glob(*patterns, flags: 0, base: nil, sort: true) -> array
# Dir.glob(*patterns, flags: 0, base: nil, sort: true) {|entry_name| ... } -> nil
#
# Forms an array _entry_names_ of the entry names selected by the arguments.
#
# Argument +patterns+ is a string pattern or an array of string patterns;
# note that these are not regexps; see below.
#
# Notes for the following examples:
#
# - <tt>'*'</tt> is the pattern that matches any entry name
# except those that begin with <tt>'.'</tt>.
# - We use method Array#take to shorten returned arrays
# that otherwise would be very large.
#
# With no block, returns array _entry_names_;
# example (using the {simple file tree}[rdoc-ref:Dir@About+the+Examples]):
#
# Dir.glob('*') # => ["config.h", "lib", "main.rb"]
#
# With a block, calls the block with each of the _entry_names_
# and returns +nil+:
#
# Dir.glob('*') {|entry_name| puts entry_name } # => nil
#
# Output:
#
# config.h
# lib
# main.rb
#
# If optional keyword argument +flags+ is given,
# the value modifies the matching; see below.
#
# If optional keyword argument +base+ is given,
# its value specifies the base directory.
# Each pattern string specifies entries relative to the base directory;
# the default is <tt>'.'</tt>.
# The base directory is not prepended to the entry names in the result:
#
# Dir.glob(pattern, base: 'lib').take(5)
# # => ["abbrev.gemspec", "abbrev.rb", "base64.gemspec", "base64.rb", "benchmark.gemspec"]
# Dir.glob(pattern, base: 'lib/irb').take(5)
# # => ["cmd", "color.rb", "color_printer.rb", "completion.rb", "context.rb"]
#
# If optional keyword +sort+ is given, its value specifies whether
# the array is to be sorted; the default is +true+.
# Passing value +false+ with that keyword disables sorting
# (though the underlying file system may already have sorted the array).
#
# <b>Patterns</b>
#
# Each pattern string is expanded
# according to certain metacharacters;
# examples below use the {Ruby file tree}[rdoc-ref:Dir@About+the+Examples]:
#
# - <tt>'*'</tt>: Matches any substring in an entry name,
# similar in meaning to regexp <tt>/.*/mx</tt>;
# may be restricted by other values in the pattern strings:
#
# - <tt>'*'</tt> matches all entry names:
#
# Dir.glob('*').take(3) # => ["BSDL", "CONTRIBUTING.md", "COPYING"]
#
# - <tt>'c*'</tt> matches entry names beginning with <tt>'c'</tt>:
#
# Dir.glob('c*').take(3) # => ["CONTRIBUTING.md", "COPYING", "COPYING.ja"]
#
# - <tt>'*c'</tt> matches entry names ending with <tt>'c'</tt>:
#
# Dir.glob('*c').take(3) # => ["addr2line.c", "array.c", "ast.c"]
#
# - <tt>'\*c\*'</tt> matches entry names that contain <tt>'c'</tt>,
# even at the beginning or end:
#
# Dir.glob('*c*').take(3) # => ["CONTRIBUTING.md", "COPYING", "COPYING.ja"]
#
# Does not match Unix-like hidden entry names ("dot files").
# To include those in the matched entry names,
# use flag IO::FNM_DOTMATCH or something like <tt>'{*,.*}'</tt>.
#
# - <tt>'**'</tt>: Matches entry names recursively
# if followed by the slash character <tt>'/'</tt>:
#
# Dir.glob('**/').take(3) # => ["basictest/", "benchmark/", "benchmark/gc/"]
#
# If the string pattern contains other characters
# or is not followed by a slash character,
# it is equivalent to <tt>'*'</tt>.
#
# - <tt>'?'</tt> Matches any single character;
# similar in meaning to regexp <tt>/./</tt>:
#
# Dir.glob('io.?') # => ["io.c"]
#
# - <tt>'[_set_]'</tt>: Matches any one character in the string _set_;
# behaves like a {Regexp character class}[rdoc-ref:regexp.rdoc@Character+Classes],
# including set negation (<tt>'[^a-z]'</tt>):
#
# Dir.glob('*.[a-z][a-z]').take(3)
# # => ["CONTRIBUTING.md", "COPYING.ja", "KNOWNBUGS.rb"]
#
# - <tt>'{_abc_,_xyz_}'</tt>:
# Matches either string _abc_ or string _xyz_;
# behaves like {Regexp alternation}[rdoc-ref:regexp.rdoc@Alternation]:
#
# Dir.glob('{LEGAL,BSDL}') # => ["LEGAL", "BSDL"]
#
# More than two alternatives may be given.
#
# - <tt>\\</tt>: Escapes the following metacharacter.
#
# Note that on Windows, the backslash character may not be used
# in a string pattern:
# <tt>Dir['c:\\foo*']</tt> will not work, use <tt>Dir['c:/foo*']</tt> instead.
#
# More examples (using the {simple file tree}[rdoc-ref:Dir@About+the+Examples]):
#
# # We're in the example directory.
# File.basename(Dir.pwd) # => "example"
# Dir.glob('config.?') # => ["config.h"]
# Dir.glob('*.[a-z][a-z]') # => ["main.rb"]
# Dir.glob('*.[^r]*') # => ["config.h"]
# Dir.glob('*.{rb,h}') # => ["main.rb", "config.h"]
# Dir.glob('*') # => ["config.h", "lib", "main.rb"]
# Dir.glob('*', File::FNM_DOTMATCH) # => [".", "config.h", "lib", "main.rb"]
# Dir.glob(["*.rb", "*.h"]) # => ["main.rb", "config.h"]
#
# Dir.glob('**/*.rb')
# => ["lib/song/karaoke.rb", "lib/song.rb", "main.rb"]
#
# Dir.glob('**/*.rb', base: 'lib') # => ["song/karaoke.rb", "song.rb"]
#
# Dir.glob('**/lib') # => ["lib"]
#
# Dir.glob('**/lib/**/*.rb') # => ["lib/song/karaoke.rb", "lib/song.rb"]
#
# Dir.glob('**/lib/*.rb') # => ["lib/song.rb"]
#
# <b>Flags</b>
#
# If optional keyword argument +flags+ is given (the default is zero -- no flags),
# its value should be the bitwise OR of one or more of the constants
# defined in module File::Constants.
#
# Example:
#
# flags = File::FNM_EXTGLOB | File::FNM_DOTMATCH
#
# Specifying flags can extend, restrict, or otherwise modify the matching.
#
# The flags for this method (other constants in File::Constants do not apply):
#
# - File::FNM_DOTMATCH:
# specifies that entry names beginning with <tt>'.'</tt>
# should be considered for matching:
#
# Dir.glob('*').take(5)
# # => ["BSDL", "CONTRIBUTING.md", "COPYING", "COPYING.ja", "GPL"]
# Dir.glob('*', flags: File::FNM_DOTMATCH).take(5)
# # => [".", ".appveyor.yml", ".cirrus.yml", ".dir-locals.el", ".document"]
#
# - File::FNM_EXTGLOB:
# enables the pattern extension
# <tt>'{_a_,_b_}'</tt>, which matches pattern _a_ and pattern _b_;
# behaves like a
# {regexp union}[rdoc-ref:Regexp.union]
# (e.g., <tt>'(?:_a_|_b_)'</tt>):
#
# pattern = '{LEGAL,BSDL}'
# Dir.glob(pattern) # => ["LEGAL", "BSDL"]
#
# - File::FNM_NOESCAPE:
# specifies that escaping with the backslash character <tt>'\'</tt>
# is disabled; the character is not an escape character.
#
# - File::FNM_PATHNAME:
# specifies that metacharacters <tt>'*'</tt> and <tt>'?'</tt>
# do not match directory separators.
#
# - File::FNM_SHORTNAME:
# specifies that patterns may match short names if they exist; Windows only.
#
def self.glob(pattern, _flags = 0, flags: _flags, base: nil, sort: true)
Primitive.dir_s_glob(pattern, flags, base, sort)
end
end
class << File
# call-seq:
# File.fnmatch( pattern, path, [flags] ) -> (true or false)
# File.fnmatch?( pattern, path, [flags] ) -> (true or false)
#
# Returns true if +path+ matches against +pattern+. The pattern is not a
# regular expression; instead it follows rules similar to shell filename
# globbing. It may contain the following metacharacters:
#
# <code>*</code>::
# Matches any file. Can be restricted by other values in the glob.
# Equivalent to <code>/.*/x</code> in regexp.
#
# <code>*</code>:: Matches all regular files
# <code>c*</code>:: Matches all files beginning with <code>c</code>
# <code>*c</code>:: Matches all files ending with <code>c</code>
# <code>\*c*</code>:: Matches all files that have <code>c</code> in them
# (including at the beginning or end).
#
# To match hidden files (that start with a <code>.</code>) set the
# File::FNM_DOTMATCH flag.
#
# <code>**</code>::
# Matches directories recursively or files expansively.
#
# <code>?</code>::
# Matches any one character. Equivalent to <code>/.{1}/</code> in regexp.
#
# <code>[set]</code>::
# Matches any one character in +set+. Behaves exactly like character sets
# in Regexp, including set negation (<code>[^a-z]</code>).
#
# <code>\\</code>::
# Escapes the next metacharacter.
#
# <code>{a,b}</code>::
# Matches pattern a and pattern b if File::FNM_EXTGLOB flag is enabled.
# Behaves like a Regexp union (<code>(?:a|b)</code>).
#
# +flags+ is a bitwise OR of the <code>FNM_XXX</code> constants. The same
# glob pattern and flags are used by Dir::glob.
#
# Examples:
#
# File.fnmatch('cat', 'cat') #=> true # match entire string
# File.fnmatch('cat', 'category') #=> false # only match partial string
#
# File.fnmatch('c{at,ub}s', 'cats') #=> false # { } isn't supported by default
# File.fnmatch('c{at,ub}s', 'cats', File::FNM_EXTGLOB) #=> true # { } is supported on FNM_EXTGLOB
#
# File.fnmatch('c?t', 'cat') #=> true # '?' match only 1 character
# File.fnmatch('c??t', 'cat') #=> false # ditto
# File.fnmatch('c*', 'cats') #=> true # '*' match 0 or more characters
# File.fnmatch('c*t', 'c/a/b/t') #=> true # ditto
# File.fnmatch('ca[a-z]', 'cat') #=> true # inclusive bracket expression
# File.fnmatch('ca[^t]', 'cat') #=> false # exclusive bracket expression ('^' or '!')
#
# File.fnmatch('cat', 'CAT') #=> false # case sensitive
# File.fnmatch('cat', 'CAT', File::FNM_CASEFOLD) #=> true # case insensitive
# File.fnmatch('cat', 'CAT', File::FNM_SYSCASE) #=> true or false # depends on the system default
#
# File.fnmatch('?', '/', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> false # wildcard doesn't match '/' on FNM_PATHNAME
# File.fnmatch('*', '/', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> false # ditto
# File.fnmatch('[/]', '/', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> false # ditto
#
# File.fnmatch('\?', '?') #=> true # escaped wildcard becomes ordinary
# File.fnmatch('\a', 'a') #=> true # escaped ordinary remains ordinary
# File.fnmatch('\a', '\a', File::FNM_NOESCAPE) #=> true # FNM_NOESCAPE makes '\' ordinary
# File.fnmatch('[\?]', '?') #=> true # can escape inside bracket expression
#
# File.fnmatch('*', '.profile') #=> false # wildcard doesn't match leading
# File.fnmatch('*', '.profile', File::FNM_DOTMATCH) #=> true # period by default.
# File.fnmatch('.*', '.profile') #=> true
#
# File.fnmatch('**/*.rb', 'main.rb') #=> false
# File.fnmatch('**/*.rb', './main.rb') #=> false
# File.fnmatch('**/*.rb', 'lib/song.rb') #=> true
# File.fnmatch('**.rb', 'main.rb') #=> true
# File.fnmatch('**.rb', './main.rb') #=> false
# File.fnmatch('**.rb', 'lib/song.rb') #=> true
# File.fnmatch('*', 'dave/.profile') #=> true
#
# File.fnmatch('**/foo', 'a/b/c/foo', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> true
# File.fnmatch('**/foo', '/a/b/c/foo', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> true
# File.fnmatch('**/foo', 'c:/a/b/c/foo', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> true
# File.fnmatch('**/foo', 'a/.b/c/foo', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> false
# File.fnmatch('**/foo', 'a/.b/c/foo', File::FNM_PATHNAME | File::FNM_DOTMATCH) #=> true
def fnmatch(pattern, path, flags = 0)
end
alias fnmatch? fnmatch
end if false