Commit | Line | Data |
f716a1dd |
1 | # File/Copy.pm. Written in 1994 by Aaron Sherman <ajs@ajs.com>. This |
2 | # source code has been placed in the public domain by the author. |
3 | # Please be kind and preserve the documentation. |
4 | # |
71be2cbc |
5 | # Additions copyright 1996 by Charles Bailey. Permission is granted |
6 | # to distribute the revised code under the same terms as Perl itself. |
f716a1dd |
7 | |
8 | package File::Copy; |
9 | |
3b825e41 |
10 | use 5.006; |
71be2cbc |
11 | use strict; |
b395063c |
12 | use warnings; |
f716a1dd |
13 | use Carp; |
6c254d95 |
14 | use File::Spec; |
96a91e01 |
15 | use Config; |
17f410f9 |
16 | our(@ISA, @EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK, $VERSION, $Too_Big, $Syscopy_is_copy); |
17 | sub copy; |
18 | sub syscopy; |
19 | sub cp; |
20 | sub mv; |
71be2cbc |
21 | |
22 | # Note that this module implements only *part* of the API defined by |
23 | # the File/Copy.pm module of the File-Tools-2.0 package. However, that |
24 | # package has not yet been updated to work with Perl 5.004, and so it |
25 | # would be a Bad Thing for the CPAN module to grab it and replace this |
26 | # module. Therefore, we set this module's version higher than 2.0. |
88d01e8d |
27 | $VERSION = '2.05'; |
f716a1dd |
28 | |
71be2cbc |
29 | require Exporter; |
30 | @ISA = qw(Exporter); |
31 | @EXPORT = qw(copy move); |
32 | @EXPORT_OK = qw(cp mv); |
f716a1dd |
33 | |
441496b2 |
34 | $Too_Big = 1024 * 1024 * 2; |
f716a1dd |
35 | |
6c254d95 |
36 | sub _catname { |
71be2cbc |
37 | my($from, $to) = @_; |
38 | if (not defined &basename) { |
39 | require File::Basename; |
40 | import File::Basename 'basename'; |
41 | } |
6c254d95 |
42 | |
43 | if ($^O eq 'MacOS') { |
44 | # a partial dir name that's valid only in the cwd (e.g. 'tmp') |
45 | $to = ':' . $to if $to !~ /:/; |
46 | } |
47 | |
48 | return File::Spec->catfile($to, basename($from)); |
f716a1dd |
49 | } |
50 | |
51 | sub copy { |
71be2cbc |
52 | croak("Usage: copy(FROM, TO [, BUFFERSIZE]) ") |
f716a1dd |
53 | unless(@_ == 2 || @_ == 3); |
54 | |
55 | my $from = shift; |
56 | my $to = shift; |
71be2cbc |
57 | |
58 | my $from_a_handle = (ref($from) |
59 | ? (ref($from) eq 'GLOB' |
d704f39a |
60 | || UNIVERSAL::isa($from, 'GLOB') |
61 | || UNIVERSAL::isa($from, 'IO::Handle')) |
71be2cbc |
62 | : (ref(\$from) eq 'GLOB')); |
63 | my $to_a_handle = (ref($to) |
64 | ? (ref($to) eq 'GLOB' |
d704f39a |
65 | || UNIVERSAL::isa($to, 'GLOB') |
66 | || UNIVERSAL::isa($to, 'IO::Handle')) |
71be2cbc |
67 | : (ref(\$to) eq 'GLOB')); |
68 | |
96a91e01 |
69 | if ($from eq $to) { # works for references, too |
70 | croak("'$from' and '$to' are identical (not copied)"); |
71 | } |
72 | |
73 | if ($Config{d_symlink} && $Config{d_readlink} && |
74 | !($^O eq 'Win32' || $^O eq 'os2' || $^O eq 'vms')) { |
5d3e98de |
75 | no warnings 'io'; # don't warn if -l on filehandle |
a93b80c9 |
76 | if ((-e $from && -l $from) || (-e $to && -l $to)) { |
96a91e01 |
77 | my @fs = stat($from); |
78 | my @ts = stat($to); |
a93b80c9 |
79 | if (@fs && @ts && $fs[0] == $ts[0] && $fs[1] == $ts[1]) { |
96a91e01 |
80 | croak("'$from' and '$to' are identical (not copied)"); |
81 | } |
82 | } |
83 | } |
84 | |
71be2cbc |
85 | if (!$from_a_handle && !$to_a_handle && -d $to && ! -d $from) { |
86 | $to = _catname($from, $to); |
87 | } |
88 | |
1a04d035 |
89 | if (defined &syscopy && !$Syscopy_is_copy |
e6434134 |
90 | && !$to_a_handle |
1d84e8df |
91 | && !($from_a_handle && $^O eq 'os2' ) # OS/2 cannot handle handles |
92 | && !($from_a_handle && $^O eq 'mpeix') # and neither can MPE/iX. |
7509b657 |
93 | && !($from_a_handle && $^O eq 'MSWin32') |
fa648be5 |
94 | && !($from_a_handle && $^O eq 'MacOS') |
2986a63f |
95 | && !($from_a_handle && $^O eq 'NetWare') |
1a04d035 |
96 | ) |
71be2cbc |
97 | { |
98 | return syscopy($from, $to); |
99 | } |
100 | |
101 | my $closefrom = 0; |
102 | my $closeto = 0; |
f716a1dd |
103 | my ($size, $status, $r, $buf); |
48a5c399 |
104 | local($\) = ''; |
f716a1dd |
105 | |
23ba2776 |
106 | my $from_h; |
71be2cbc |
107 | if ($from_a_handle) { |
23ba2776 |
108 | $from_h = $from; |
f716a1dd |
109 | } else { |
fa648be5 |
110 | $from = _protect($from) if $from =~ /^\s/s; |
23ba2776 |
111 | $from_h = \do { local *FH }; |
112 | open($from_h, "< $from\0") or goto fail_open1; |
113 | binmode $from_h or die "($!,$^E)"; |
f716a1dd |
114 | $closefrom = 1; |
1a04d035 |
115 | } |
116 | |
23ba2776 |
117 | my $to_h; |
71be2cbc |
118 | if ($to_a_handle) { |
23ba2776 |
119 | $to_h = $to; |
1a04d035 |
120 | } else { |
fa648be5 |
121 | $to = _protect($to) if $to =~ /^\s/s; |
23ba2776 |
122 | $to_h = \do { local *FH }; |
123 | open($to_h,"> $to\0") or goto fail_open2; |
124 | binmode $to_h or die "($!,$^E)"; |
71be2cbc |
125 | $closeto = 1; |
1a04d035 |
126 | } |
f716a1dd |
127 | |
128 | if (@_) { |
129 | $size = shift(@_) + 0; |
130 | croak("Bad buffer size for copy: $size\n") unless ($size > 0); |
131 | } else { |
025a6ea3 |
132 | $size = tied(*$from_h) ? 0 : -s $from_h || 0; |
f716a1dd |
133 | $size = 1024 if ($size < 512); |
441496b2 |
134 | $size = $Too_Big if ($size > $Too_Big); |
f716a1dd |
135 | } |
136 | |
71be2cbc |
137 | $! = 0; |
138 | for (;;) { |
139 | my ($r, $w, $t); |
23ba2776 |
140 | defined($r = sysread($from_h, $buf, $size)) |
71be2cbc |
141 | or goto fail_inner; |
142 | last unless $r; |
143 | for ($w = 0; $w < $r; $w += $t) { |
23ba2776 |
144 | $t = syswrite($to_h, $buf, $r - $w, $w) |
71be2cbc |
145 | or goto fail_inner; |
f716a1dd |
146 | } |
147 | } |
71be2cbc |
148 | |
23ba2776 |
149 | close($to_h) || goto fail_open2 if $closeto; |
150 | close($from_h) || goto fail_open1 if $closefrom; |
71be2cbc |
151 | |
48a5c399 |
152 | # Use this idiom to avoid uninitialized value warning. |
f716a1dd |
153 | return 1; |
1a04d035 |
154 | |
f716a1dd |
155 | # All of these contortions try to preserve error messages... |
156 | fail_inner: |
157 | if ($closeto) { |
158 | $status = $!; |
159 | $! = 0; |
23ba2776 |
160 | close $to_h; |
f716a1dd |
161 | $! = $status unless $!; |
162 | } |
163 | fail_open2: |
164 | if ($closefrom) { |
165 | $status = $!; |
166 | $! = 0; |
23ba2776 |
167 | close $from_h; |
f716a1dd |
168 | $! = $status unless $!; |
169 | } |
170 | fail_open1: |
f716a1dd |
171 | return 0; |
172 | } |
9b957b78 |
173 | |
441496b2 |
174 | sub move { |
71be2cbc |
175 | my($from,$to) = @_; |
176 | my($copied,$fromsz,$tosz1,$tomt1,$tosz2,$tomt2,$sts,$ossts); |
441496b2 |
177 | |
71be2cbc |
178 | if (-d $to && ! -d $from) { |
179 | $to = _catname($from, $to); |
180 | } |
181 | |
182 | ($tosz1,$tomt1) = (stat($to))[7,9]; |
183 | $fromsz = -s $from; |
e6434134 |
184 | if ($^O eq 'os2' and defined $tosz1 and defined $fromsz) { |
185 | # will not rename with overwrite |
186 | unlink $to; |
187 | } |
71be2cbc |
188 | return 1 if rename $from, $to; |
189 | |
190 | ($sts,$ossts) = ($! + 0, $^E + 0); |
191 | # Did rename return an error even though it succeeded, because $to |
192 | # is on a remote NFS file system, and NFS lost the server's ack? |
193 | return 1 if defined($fromsz) && !-e $from && # $from disappeared |
194 | (($tosz2,$tomt2) = (stat($to))[7,9]) && # $to's there |
195 | ($tosz1 != $tosz2 or $tomt1 != $tomt2) && # and changed |
196 | $tosz2 == $fromsz; # it's all there |
1a04d035 |
197 | |
71be2cbc |
198 | ($tosz1,$tomt1) = (stat($to))[7,9]; # just in case rename did something |
199 | return 1 if ($copied = copy($from,$to)) && unlink($from); |
1a04d035 |
200 | |
71be2cbc |
201 | ($tosz2,$tomt2) = ((stat($to))[7,9],0,0) if defined $tomt1; |
202 | unlink($to) if !defined($tomt1) or $tomt1 != $tomt2 or $tosz1 != $tosz2; |
203 | ($!,$^E) = ($sts,$ossts); |
204 | return 0; |
441496b2 |
205 | } |
9b957b78 |
206 | |
71be2cbc |
207 | *cp = \© |
208 | *mv = \&move; |
209 | |
fa648be5 |
210 | |
211 | if ($^O eq 'MacOS') { |
212 | *_protect = sub { MacPerl::MakeFSSpec($_[0]) }; |
213 | } else { |
214 | *_protect = sub { "./$_[0]" }; |
215 | } |
216 | |
9b957b78 |
217 | # &syscopy is an XSUB under OS/2 |
1d84e8df |
218 | unless (defined &syscopy) { |
219 | if ($^O eq 'VMS') { |
220 | *syscopy = \&rmscopy; |
221 | } elsif ($^O eq 'mpeix') { |
222 | *syscopy = sub { |
3f5ee302 |
223 | return 0 unless @_ == 2; |
1d84e8df |
224 | # Use the MPE cp program in order to |
225 | # preserve MPE file attributes. |
226 | return system('/bin/cp', '-f', $_[0], $_[1]) == 0; |
227 | }; |
7509b657 |
228 | } elsif ($^O eq 'MSWin32') { |
229 | *syscopy = sub { |
230 | return 0 unless @_ == 2; |
231 | return Win32::CopyFile(@_, 1); |
232 | }; |
fa648be5 |
233 | } elsif ($^O eq 'MacOS') { |
234 | require Mac::MoreFiles; |
235 | *syscopy = sub { |
236 | my($from, $to) = @_; |
237 | my($dir, $toname); |
238 | |
239 | return 0 unless -e $from; |
240 | |
241 | if ($to =~ /(.*:)([^:]+):?$/) { |
242 | ($dir, $toname) = ($1, $2); |
243 | } else { |
244 | ($dir, $toname) = (":", $to); |
245 | } |
246 | |
247 | unlink($to); |
248 | Mac::MoreFiles::FSpFileCopy($from, $dir, $toname, 1); |
249 | }; |
1d84e8df |
250 | } else { |
1a04d035 |
251 | $Syscopy_is_copy = 1; |
1d84e8df |
252 | *syscopy = \© |
253 | } |
254 | } |
f716a1dd |
255 | |
256 | 1; |
257 | |
258 | __END__ |
a5f75d66 |
259 | |
f716a1dd |
260 | =head1 NAME |
261 | |
262 | File::Copy - Copy files or filehandles |
263 | |
a5f75d66 |
264 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
f716a1dd |
265 | |
266 | use File::Copy; |
267 | |
268 | copy("file1","file2"); |
269 | copy("Copy.pm",\*STDOUT);' |
441496b2 |
270 | move("/dev1/fileA","/dev2/fileB"); |
f716a1dd |
271 | |
272 | use POSIX; |
273 | use File::Copy cp; |
274 | |
23f3aea0 |
275 | $n = FileHandle->new("/a/file","r"); |
f716a1dd |
276 | cp($n,"x");' |
277 | |
278 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
279 | |
441496b2 |
280 | The File::Copy module provides two basic functions, C<copy> and |
281 | C<move>, which are useful for getting the contents of a file from |
282 | one place to another. |
283 | |
284 | =over 4 |
285 | |
286 | =item * |
287 | |
288 | The C<copy> function takes two |
f716a1dd |
289 | parameters: a file to copy from and a file to copy to. Either |
290 | argument may be a string, a FileHandle reference or a FileHandle |
291 | glob. Obviously, if the first argument is a filehandle of some |
292 | sort, it will be read from, and if it is a file I<name> it will |
293 | be opened for reading. Likewise, the second argument will be |
96a91e01 |
294 | written to (and created if need be). Trying to copy a file on top |
295 | of itself is a fatal error. |
71be2cbc |
296 | |
297 | B<Note that passing in |
9b957b78 |
298 | files as handles instead of names may lead to loss of information |
299 | on some operating systems; it is recommended that you use file |
e6434134 |
300 | names whenever possible.> Files are opened in binary mode where |
8dcee03e |
301 | applicable. To get a consistent behaviour when copying from a |
e6434134 |
302 | filehandle to a file, use C<binmode> on the filehandle. |
f716a1dd |
303 | |
304 | An optional third parameter can be used to specify the buffer |
305 | size used for copying. This is the number of bytes from the |
306 | first file, that wil be held in memory at any given time, before |
307 | being written to the second file. The default buffer size depends |
308 | upon the file, but will generally be the whole file (up to 2Mb), or |
309 | 1k for filehandles that do not reference files (eg. sockets). |
310 | |
311 | You may use the syntax C<use File::Copy "cp"> to get at the |
312 | "cp" alias for this function. The syntax is I<exactly> the same. |
313 | |
441496b2 |
314 | =item * |
315 | |
316 | The C<move> function also takes two parameters: the current name |
71be2cbc |
317 | and the intended name of the file to be moved. If the destination |
318 | already exists and is a directory, and the source is not a |
319 | directory, then the source file will be renamed into the directory |
320 | specified by the destination. |
321 | |
322 | If possible, move() will simply rename the file. Otherwise, it copies |
323 | the file to the new location and deletes the original. If an error occurs |
324 | during this copy-and-delete process, you may be left with a (possibly partial) |
441496b2 |
325 | copy of the file under the destination name. |
326 | |
327 | You may use the "mv" alias for this function in the same way that |
328 | you may use the "cp" alias for C<copy>. |
329 | |
330 | =back |
331 | |
9b957b78 |
332 | File::Copy also provides the C<syscopy> routine, which copies the |
333 | file specified in the first parameter to the file specified in the |
334 | second parameter, preserving OS-specific attributes and file |
335 | structure. For Unix systems, this is equivalent to the simple |
336 | C<copy> routine. For VMS systems, this calls the C<rmscopy> |
337 | routine (see below). For OS/2 systems, this calls the C<syscopy> |
7509b657 |
338 | XSUB directly. For Win32 systems, this calls C<Win32::CopyFile>. |
9b957b78 |
339 | |
7509b657 |
340 | =head2 Special behaviour if C<syscopy> is defined (OS/2, VMS and Win32) |
9b957b78 |
341 | |
71be2cbc |
342 | If both arguments to C<copy> are not file handles, |
343 | then C<copy> will perform a "system copy" of |
9b957b78 |
344 | the input file to a new output file, in order to preserve file |
345 | attributes, indexed file structure, I<etc.> The buffer size |
71be2cbc |
346 | parameter is ignored. If either argument to C<copy> is a |
347 | handle to an opened file, then data is copied using Perl |
9b957b78 |
348 | operators, and no effort is made to preserve file attributes |
349 | or record structure. |
350 | |
55497cff |
351 | The system copy routine may also be called directly under VMS and OS/2 |
352 | as C<File::Copy::syscopy> (or under VMS as C<File::Copy::rmscopy>, which |
71be2cbc |
353 | is the routine that does the actual work for syscopy). |
9b957b78 |
354 | |
441496b2 |
355 | =over 4 |
55497cff |
356 | |
9b957b78 |
357 | =item rmscopy($from,$to[,$date_flag]) |
358 | |
71be2cbc |
359 | The first and second arguments may be strings, typeglobs, typeglob |
360 | references, or objects inheriting from IO::Handle; |
361 | they are used in all cases to obtain the |
9b957b78 |
362 | I<filespec> of the input and output files, respectively. The |
363 | name and type of the input file are used as defaults for the |
364 | output file, if necessary. |
365 | |
366 | A new version of the output file is always created, which |
367 | inherits the structure and RMS attributes of the input file, |
368 | except for owner and protections (and possibly timestamps; |
369 | see below). All data from the input file is copied to the |
370 | output file; if either of the first two parameters to C<rmscopy> |
371 | is a file handle, its position is unchanged. (Note that this |
372 | means a file handle pointing to the output file will be |
373 | associated with an old version of that file after C<rmscopy> |
374 | returns, not the newly created version.) |
375 | |
376 | The third parameter is an integer flag, which tells C<rmscopy> |
1fef88e7 |
377 | how to handle timestamps. If it is E<lt> 0, none of the input file's |
378 | timestamps are propagated to the output file. If it is E<gt> 0, then |
9b957b78 |
379 | it is interpreted as a bitmask: if bit 0 (the LSB) is set, then |
380 | timestamps other than the revision date are propagated; if bit 1 |
381 | is set, the revision date is propagated. If the third parameter |
382 | to C<rmscopy> is 0, then it behaves much like the DCL COPY command: |
383 | if the name or type of the output file was explicitly specified, |
384 | then no timestamps are propagated, but if they were taken implicitly |
385 | from the input filespec, then all timestamps other than the |
386 | revision date are propagated. If this parameter is not supplied, |
387 | it defaults to 0. |
388 | |
389 | Like C<copy>, C<rmscopy> returns 1 on success. If an error occurs, |
390 | it sets C<$!>, deletes the output file, and returns 0. |
391 | |
55497cff |
392 | =back |
393 | |
f716a1dd |
394 | =head1 RETURN |
395 | |
441496b2 |
396 | All functions return 1 on success, 0 on failure. |
397 | $! will be set if an error was encountered. |
f716a1dd |
398 | |
6c254d95 |
399 | =head1 NOTES |
400 | |
401 | =over 4 |
402 | |
403 | =item * |
404 | |
405 | On Mac OS (Classic), the path separator is ':', not '/', and the |
406 | current directory is denoted as ':', not '.'. You should be careful |
407 | about specifying relative pathnames. While a full path always begins |
408 | with a volume name, a relative pathname should always begin with a |
409 | ':'. If specifying a volume name only, a trailing ':' is required. |
410 | |
411 | E.g. |
412 | |
413 | copy("file1", "tmp"); # creates the file 'tmp' in the current directory |
414 | copy("file1", ":tmp:"); # creates :tmp:file1 |
415 | copy("file1", ":tmp"); # same as above |
416 | copy("file1", "tmp"); # same as above, if 'tmp' is a directory (but don't do |
417 | # that, since it may cause confusion, see example #1) |
418 | copy("file1", "tmp:file1"); # error, since 'tmp:' is not a volume |
419 | copy("file1", ":tmp:file1"); # ok, partial path |
420 | copy("file1", "DataHD:"); # creates DataHD:file1 |
421 | |
422 | move("MacintoshHD:fileA", "DataHD:fileB"); # moves (don't copies) files from one |
423 | # volume to another |
424 | |
425 | =back |
426 | |
f716a1dd |
427 | =head1 AUTHOR |
428 | |
441496b2 |
429 | File::Copy was written by Aaron Sherman I<E<lt>ajs@ajs.comE<gt>> in 1995, |
bd3fa61c |
430 | and updated by Charles Bailey I<E<lt>bailey@newman.upenn.eduE<gt>> in 1996. |
f716a1dd |
431 | |
432 | =cut |
441496b2 |
433 | |