Initial VMS patches
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / lib / File / Basename.pm
CommitLineData
a0d0e21e 1package File::Basename;
2
f06db76b 3=head1 NAME
4
f06db76b 5fileparse - split a pathname into pieces
6
7basename - extract just the filename from a path
8
9dirname - extract just the directory from a path
10
11=head1 SYNOPSIS
12
13 use File::Basename;
14
15 ($name,$path,$suffix) = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist)
16 fileparse_set_fstype($os_string);
17 $basename = basename($fullname,@suffixlist);
18 $dirname = dirname($fullname);
19
20 ($name,$path,$suffix) = fileparse("lib/File/Basename.pm","\.pm");
21 fileparse_set_fstype("VMS");
22 $basename = basename("lib/File/Basename.pm",".pm");
23 $dirname = dirname("lib/File/Basename.pm");
24
25=head1 DESCRIPTION
26
27These routines allow you to parse file specifications into useful
28pieces using the syntax of different operating systems.
29
30=over 4
31
32=item fileparse_set_fstype
33
34You select the syntax via the routine fileparse_set_fstype().
ee2ff9ea 35
f06db76b 36If the argument passed to it contains one of the substrings
68dc0745 37"VMS", "MSDOS", "MacOS", "AmigaOS" or "MSWin32", the file specification
55497cff 38syntax of that operating system is used in future calls to
39fileparse(), basename(), and dirname(). If it contains none of
40these substrings, UNIX syntax is used. This pattern matching is
f06db76b 41case-insensitive. If you've selected VMS syntax, and the file
42specification you pass to one of these routines contains a "/",
43they assume you are using UNIX emulation and apply the UNIX syntax
44rules instead, for that function call only.
45
ee2ff9ea 46If the argument passed to it contains one of the substrings "VMS",
68dc0745 47"MSDOS", "MacOS", "AmigaOS", "os2", "MSWin32" or "RISCOS", then the pattern
ee2ff9ea 48matching for suffix removal is performed without regard for case,
49since those systems are not case-sensitive when opening existing files
50(though some of them preserve case on file creation).
51
f06db76b 52If you haven't called fileparse_set_fstype(), the syntax is chosen
f0c6ccdf 53by examining the builtin variable C<$^O> according to these rules.
f06db76b 54
55=item fileparse
56
57The fileparse() routine divides a file specification into three
58parts: a leading B<path>, a file B<name>, and a B<suffix>. The
59B<path> contains everything up to and including the last directory
60separator in the input file specification. The remainder of the input
61file specification is then divided into B<name> and B<suffix> based on
62the optional patterns you specify in C<@suffixlist>. Each element of
63this list is interpreted as a regular expression, and is matched
64against the end of B<name>. If this succeeds, the matching portion of
65B<name> is removed and prepended to B<suffix>. By proper use of
66C<@suffixlist>, you can remove file types or versions for examination.
67
68You are guaranteed that if you concatenate B<path>, B<name>, and
7e2183d3 69B<suffix> together in that order, the result will denote the same
70file as the input file specification.
f06db76b 71
72=back
73
74=head1 EXAMPLES
75
76Using UNIX file syntax:
77
7e2183d3 78 ($base,$path,$type) = fileparse('/virgil/aeneid/draft.book7',
f06db76b 79 '\.book\d+');
80
81would yield
82
83 $base eq 'draft'
7e2183d3 84 $path eq '/virgil/aeneid/',
f0542300 85 $type eq '.book7'
f06db76b 86
87Similarly, using VMS syntax:
88
89 ($name,$dir,$type) = fileparse('Doc_Root:[Help]Rhetoric.Rnh',
90 '\..*');
91
92would yield
93
94 $name eq 'Rhetoric'
95 $dir eq 'Doc_Root:[Help]'
96 $type eq '.Rnh'
97
2ae324a7 98=over
99
f06db76b 100=item C<basename>
101
102The basename() routine returns the first element of the list produced
44a8e56a 103by calling fileparse() with the same arguments, except that it always
104quotes metacharacters in the given suffixes. It is provided for
105programmer compatibility with the UNIX shell command basename(1).
f06db76b 106
107=item C<dirname>
108
109The dirname() routine returns the directory portion of the input file
110specification. When using VMS or MacOS syntax, this is identical to the
111second element of the list produced by calling fileparse() with the same
7e2183d3 112input file specification. (Under VMS, if there is no directory information
113in the input file specification, then the current default device and
114directory are returned.) When using UNIX or MSDOS syntax, the return
f06db76b 115value conforms to the behavior of the UNIX shell command dirname(1). This
116is usually the same as the behavior of fileparse(), but differs in some
117cases. For example, for the input file specification F<lib/>, fileparse()
118considers the directory name to be F<lib/>, while dirname() considers the
119directory name to be F<.>).
120
2ae324a7 121=back
122
f06db76b 123=cut
124
b3eb6a9b 125
126## use strict;
127use re 'taint';
128
a0d0e21e 129require Exporter;
130@ISA = qw(Exporter);
748a9306 131@EXPORT = qw(fileparse fileparse_set_fstype basename dirname);
12cbd720 132use vars qw($VERSION $Fileparse_fstype $Fileparse_igncase);
133$VERSION = "2.6";
7e2183d3 134
a0d0e21e 135
136# fileparse_set_fstype() - specify OS-based rules used in future
137# calls to routines in this package
138#
ee2ff9ea 139# Currently recognized values: VMS, MSDOS, MacOS, AmigaOS, os2, RISCOS
140# Any other name uses Unix-style rules and is case-sensitive
a0d0e21e 141
142sub fileparse_set_fstype {
ee2ff9ea 143 my @old = ($Fileparse_fstype, $Fileparse_igncase);
44a8e56a 144 if (@_) {
145 $Fileparse_fstype = $_[0];
39e571d4 146 $Fileparse_igncase = ($_[0] =~ /^(?:MacOS|VMS|AmigaOS|os2|RISCOS|MSWin32|MSDOS)/i);
44a8e56a 147 }
148 wantarray ? @old : $old[0];
a0d0e21e 149}
150
151# fileparse() - parse file specification
152#
f0542300 153# Version 2.4 27-Sep-1996 Charles Bailey bailey@genetics.upenn.edu
a0d0e21e 154
155
156sub fileparse {
157 my($fullname,@suffices) = @_;
ee2ff9ea 158 my($fstype,$igncase) = ($Fileparse_fstype, $Fileparse_igncase);
7e2183d3 159 my($dirpath,$tail,$suffix,$basename);
12cbd720 160 my($taint) = substr($fullname,0,0); # Is $fullname tainted?
a0d0e21e 161
162 if ($fstype =~ /^VMS/i) {
163 if ($fullname =~ m#/#) { $fstype = '' } # We're doing Unix emulation
164 else {
b3eb6a9b 165 ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^(.*[:>\]])?(.*)/);
12cbd720 166 $dirpath ||= ''; # should always be defined
a0d0e21e 167 }
168 }
96e4d5b1 169 if ($fstype =~ /^MS(DOS|Win32)/i) {
b3eb6a9b 170 ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^((?:.*[:\\\/])?)(.*)/);
42568e28 171 $dirpath .= '.\\' unless $dirpath =~ /[\\\/]$/;
a0d0e21e 172 }
7e2183d3 173 elsif ($fstype =~ /^MacOS/i) {
b3eb6a9b 174 ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^(.*:)?(.*)/);
a0d0e21e 175 }
55497cff 176 elsif ($fstype =~ /^AmigaOS/i) {
b3eb6a9b 177 ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /(.*[:\/])?(.*)/);
a3156fc3 178 $dirpath = './' unless $dirpath;
55497cff 179 }
748a9306 180 elsif ($fstype !~ /^VMS/i) { # default to Unix
b3eb6a9b 181 ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ m#^(.*/)?(.*)#);
491527d0 182 if ($^O eq 'VMS' and $fullname =~ m:/[^/]+/000000/?:) {
183 # dev:[000000] is top of VMS tree, similar to Unix '/'
184 ($basename,$dirpath) = ('',$fullname);
185 }
f0c6ccdf 186 $dirpath = './' unless $dirpath;
a0d0e21e 187 }
188
189 if (@suffices) {
f06db76b 190 $tail = '';
a0d0e21e 191 foreach $suffix (@suffices) {
ee2ff9ea 192 my $pat = ($igncase ? '(?i)' : '') . "($suffix)\$";
b3eb6a9b 193 if ($basename =~ s/$pat//) {
12cbd720 194 $taint .= substr($suffix,0,0);
44a8e56a 195 $tail = $1 . $tail;
a0d0e21e 196 }
197 }
198 }
199
12cbd720 200 $tail .= $taint if defined $tail; # avoid warning if $tail == undef
201 wantarray ? ($basename . $taint, $dirpath . $taint, $tail)
202 : $basename . $taint;
a0d0e21e 203}
204
205
206# basename() - returns first element of list returned by fileparse()
207
208sub basename {
748a9306 209 my($name) = shift;
210 (fileparse($name, map("\Q$_\E",@_)))[0];
a0d0e21e 211}
7e2183d3 212
a0d0e21e 213
214# dirname() - returns device and directory portion of file specification
215# Behavior matches that of Unix dirname(1) exactly for Unix and MSDOS
748a9306 216# filespecs except for names ending with a separator, e.g., "/xx/yy/".
217# This differs from the second element of the list returned
a0d0e21e 218# by fileparse() in that the trailing '/' (Unix) or '\' (MSDOS) (and
219# the last directory name if the filespec ends in a '/' or '\'), is lost.
220
221sub dirname {
222 my($basename,$dirname) = fileparse($_[0]);
223 my($fstype) = $Fileparse_fstype;
224
225 if ($fstype =~ /VMS/i) {
748a9306 226 if ($_[0] =~ m#/#) { $fstype = '' }
7e2183d3 227 else { return $dirname || $ENV{DEFAULT} }
a0d0e21e 228 }
229 if ($fstype =~ /MacOS/i) { return $dirname }
230 elsif ($fstype =~ /MSDOS/i) {
b3eb6a9b 231 $dirname =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*$/$1/;
42568e28 232 unless( length($basename) ) {
233 ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname;
b3eb6a9b 234 $dirname =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*$/$1/;
42568e28 235 }
a0d0e21e 236 }
68dc0745 237 elsif ($fstype =~ /MSWin32/i) {
b3eb6a9b 238 $dirname =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*$/$1/;
68dc0745 239 unless( length($basename) ) {
240 ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname;
b3eb6a9b 241 $dirname =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*$/$1/;
68dc0745 242 }
243 }
55497cff 244 elsif ($fstype =~ /AmigaOS/i) {
245 if ( $dirname =~ /:$/) { return $dirname }
246 chop $dirname;
b3eb6a9b 247 $dirname =~ s#[^:/]+$## unless length($basename);
55497cff 248 }
a0d0e21e 249 else {
42568e28 250 $dirname =~ s:(.)/*$:$1:;
251 unless( length($basename) ) {
252 local($File::Basename::Fileparse_fstype) = $fstype;
253 ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname;
b3eb6a9b 254 $dirname =~ s:(.)/*$:$1:;
42568e28 255 }
a0d0e21e 256 }
257
258 $dirname;
259}
260
44a8e56a 261fileparse_set_fstype $^O;
a0d0e21e 262
2631;