package Cwd;
-require 5.000;
+use 5.006;
=head1 NAME
-getcwd - get pathname of current working directory
+Cwd - get pathname of current working directory
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Cwd;
- $dir = cwd;
+ my $dir = getcwd;
- use Cwd;
- $dir = getcwd;
+ use Cwd 'abs_path';
+ my $abs_path = abs_path($file);
- use Cwd;
- $dir = fastgetcwd;
+=head1 DESCRIPTION
- use Cwd 'chdir';
- chdir "/tmp";
- print $ENV{'PWD'};
+This module provides functions for determining the pathname of the
+current working directory. It is recommended that getcwd (or another
+*cwd() function) be used in I<all> code to ensure portability.
- use Cwd 'abs_path'; # aka realpath()
- print abs_path($ENV{'PWD'});
+By default, it exports the functions cwd(), getcwd(), fastcwd(), and
+fastgetcwd() into the caller's namespace.
- use Cwd 'fast_abs_path';
- print fast_abs_path($ENV{'PWD'});
-=head1 DESCRIPTION
+=head2 getcwd and friends
+
+Each of these functions are called without arguments and return the
+absolute path of the current working directory.
+
+=over 4
+
+=item getcwd
+
+ my $cwd = getcwd();
+
+Returns the current working directory.
+
+Re-implements the getcwd(3) (or getwd(3)) functions in Perl.
+
+Taint-safe.
+
+=item cwd
+
+ my $cwd = cwd();
+
+The cwd() is the most natural form for the current architecture. For
+most systems it is identical to `pwd` (but without the trailing line
+terminator).
+
+Taint-safe.
+
+=item fastcwd
+
+ my $cwd = fastcwd();
+
+A more dangerous version of getcwd(), but potentially faster.
+
+It might conceivably chdir() you out of a directory that it can't
+chdir() you back into. If fastcwd encounters a problem it will return
+undef but will probably leave you in a different directory. For a
+measure of extra security, if everything appears to have worked, the
+fastcwd() function will check that it leaves you in the same directory
+that it started in. If it has changed it will C<die> with the message
+"Unstable directory path, current directory changed
+unexpectedly". That should never happen.
+
+=item fastgetcwd
+
+ my $cwd = fastgetcwd();
+
+The fastgetcwd() function is provided as a synonym for cwd().
+
+=back
+
+
+=head2 abs_path and friends
+
+These functions are exported only on request. They each take a single
+argument and return the absolute pathname for it.
+
+=over 4
+
+=item abs_path
+
+ my $abs_path = abs_path($file);
+
+Uses the same algorithm as getcwd(). Symbolic links and relative-path
+components ("." and "..") are resolved to return the canonical
+pathname, just like realpath(3).
+
+Taint-safe.
+
+=item realpath
+
+ my $abs_path = realpath($file);
+
+A synonym for abs_path().
+
+Taint-safe.
+
+=item fast_abs_path
-The getcwd() function re-implements the getcwd(3) (or getwd(3)) functions
-in Perl.
-
-The abs_path() function takes a single argument and returns the
-absolute pathname for that argument. It uses the same algorithm
-as getcwd(). (Actually, getcwd() is abs_path(".")) Symbolic links
-and relative-path components ("." and "..") are resolved to return
-the canonical pathname, just like realpath(3). Also callable as
-realpath().
-
-The fastcwd() function looks the same as getcwd(), but runs faster.
-It's also more dangerous because it might conceivably chdir() you out
-of a directory that it can't chdir() you back into. If fastcwd
-encounters a problem it will return undef but will probably leave you
-in a different directory. For a measure of extra security, if
-everything appears to have worked, the fastcwd() function will check
-that it leaves you in the same directory that it started in. If it has
-changed it will C<die> with the message "Unstable directory path,
-current directory changed unexpectedly". That should never happen.
-
-The fast_abs_path() function looks the same as abs_path(), but runs faster.
-And like fastcwd() is more dangerous.
-
-The cwd() function looks the same as getcwd and fastgetcwd but is
-implemented using the most natural and safe form for the current
-architecture. For most systems it is identical to `pwd` (but without
-the trailing line terminator).
-
-It is recommended that cwd (or another *cwd() function) is used in
-I<all> code to ensure portability.
-
-If you ask to override your chdir() built-in function, then your PWD
-environment variable will be kept up to date. (See
-L<perlsub/Overriding Builtin Functions>.) Note that it will only be
-kept up to date if all packages which use chdir import it from Cwd.
+ my $abs_path = fast_abs_path($file);
+
+A more dangerous, but potentially faster version of abs_path.
+
+This function is B<Not> taint-safe : you can't use it in programs
+that work under taint mode.
+
+=back
+
+=head2 $ENV{PWD}
+
+If you ask to override your chdir() built-in function,
+
+ use Cwd qw(chdir);
+
+then your PWD environment variable will be kept up to date. Note that
+it will only be kept up to date if all packages which use chdir import
+it from Cwd.
+
+
+=head1 NOTES
+
+=over 4
+
+=item *
+
+Since the path seperators are different on some operating systems ('/'
+on Unix, ':' on MacPerl, etc...) we recommend you use the File::Spec
+modules wherever portability is a concern.
+
+=item *
+
+Actually, on Mac OS, the C<getcwd()>, C<fastgetcwd()> and C<fastcwd()>
+functions are all aliases for the C<cwd()> function, which, on Mac OS,
+calls `pwd`. Likewise, the C<abs_path()> function is an alias for
+C<fast_abs_path()>.
+
+=back
+
+=head1 SEE ALSO
+
+L<File::chdir>
=cut
use Carp;
-our $VERSION = '2.03';
+our $VERSION = '2.06';
use base qw/ Exporter /;
our @EXPORT = qw(cwd getcwd fastcwd fastgetcwd);
our @EXPORT_OK = qw(chdir abs_path fast_abs_path realpath fast_realpath);
+# sys_cwd may keep the builtin command
+
+# All the functionality of this module may provided by builtins,
+# there is no sense to process the rest of the file.
+# The best choice may be to have this in BEGIN, but how to return from BEGIN?
+
+if ($^O eq 'os2' && defined &sys_cwd && defined &sys_abspath) {
+ local $^W = 0;
+ *cwd = \&sys_cwd;
+ *getcwd = \&cwd;
+ *fastgetcwd = \&cwd;
+ *fastcwd = \&cwd;
+ *abs_path = \&sys_abspath;
+ *fast_abs_path = \&abs_path;
+ *realpath = \&abs_path;
+ *fast_realpath = \&abs_path;
+ return 1;
+}
+
+eval {
+ require XSLoader;
+ undef *Cwd::fastcwd; # avoid redefinition warning
+ XSLoader::load('Cwd');
+};
+
+
+# Find the pwd command in the expected locations. We assume these
+# are safe. This prevents _backtick_pwd() consulting $ENV{PATH}
+# so everything works under taint mode.
+my $pwd_cmd;
+foreach my $try (qw(/bin/pwd /usr/bin/pwd)) {
+ if( -x $try ) {
+ $pwd_cmd = $try;
+ last;
+ }
+}
+unless ($pwd_cmd) {
+ if (-x '/QOpenSys/bin/pwd') { # OS/400 PASE.
+ $pwd_cmd = '/QOpenSys/bin/pwd' ;
+ } else {
+ # Isn't this wrong? _backtick_pwd() will fail if somenone has
+ # pwd in their path but it is not /bin/pwd or /usr/bin/pwd?
+ # See [perl #16774]. --jhi
+ $pwd_cmd = 'pwd';
+ }
+}
# The 'natural and safe form' for UNIX (pwd may be setuid root)
-
sub _backtick_pwd {
- my $cwd = `pwd`;
+ local @ENV{qw(PATH IFS CDPATH ENV BASH_ENV)};
+ my $cwd = `$pwd_cmd`;
+ # Belt-and-suspenders in case someone said "undef $/".
+ local $/ = "\n";
# `pwd` may fail e.g. if the disk is full
chomp($cwd) if defined $cwd;
$cwd;
unless(defined &cwd) {
# The pwd command is not available in some chroot(2)'ed environments
- if(grep { -x "$_/pwd" } split(':', $ENV{PATH})) {
+ if( $^O eq 'MacOS' || (defined $ENV{PATH} &&
+ grep { -x "$_/pwd" } split(':', $ENV{PATH})) )
+ {
*cwd = \&_backtick_pwd;
}
else {
}
}
+# set a reasonable (and very safe) default for fastgetcwd, in case it
+# isn't redefined later (20001212 rspier)
+*fastgetcwd = \&cwd;
# By Brandon S. Allbery
#
abs_path('.');
}
+
# By John Bazik
#
# Usage: $cwd = &fastcwd;
$path = '/' . join('/', @path);
if ($^O eq 'apollo') { $path = "/".$path; }
# At this point $path may be tainted (if tainting) and chdir would fail.
- # To be more useful we untaint it then check that we landed where we started.
- $path = $1 if $path =~ /^(.*)\z/s; # untaint
- CORE::chdir($path) || return undef;
+ # Untaint it then check that we landed where we started.
+ $path =~ /^(.*)\z/s # untaint
+ && CORE::chdir($1) or return undef;
($cdev, $cino) = stat('.');
die "Unstable directory path, current directory changed unexpectedly"
if $cdev != $orig_cdev || $cino != $orig_cino;
}
sub chdir {
- my $newdir = @? ? shift : ''; # allow for no arg (chdir to HOME dir)
+ my $newdir = @_ ? shift : ''; # allow for no arg (chdir to HOME dir)
$newdir =~ s|///*|/|g unless $^O eq 'MSWin32';
chdir_init() unless $chdir_init;
+ my $newpwd;
+ if ($^O eq 'MSWin32') {
+ # get the full path name *before* the chdir()
+ $newpwd = Win32::GetFullPathName($newdir);
+ }
+
return 0 unless CORE::chdir $newdir;
+
if ($^O eq 'VMS') {
return $ENV{'PWD'} = $ENV{'DEFAULT'}
}
+ elsif ($^O eq 'MacOS') {
+ return $ENV{'PWD'} = cwd();
+ }
elsif ($^O eq 'MSWin32') {
- $ENV{'PWD'} = Win32::GetFullPathName($newdir);
+ $ENV{'PWD'} = $newpwd;
return 1;
}
1;
}
-# Taken from Cwd.pm It is really getcwd with an optional
-# parameter instead of '.'
-#
-sub abs_path
+# In case the XS version doesn't load.
+*abs_path = \&_perl_abs_path unless defined &abs_path;
+sub _perl_abs_path
{
my $start = @_ ? shift : '.';
my($dotdots, $cwd, @pst, @cst, $dir, @tst);
$cwd;
}
+
# added function alias for those of us more
# used to the libc function. --tchrist 27-Jan-00
*realpath = \&abs_path;
sub fast_abs_path {
my $cwd = getcwd();
- my $path = @_ ? shift : '.';
- CORE::chdir($path) || croak "Cannot chdir to $path:$!";
+ require File::Spec;
+ my $path = @_ ? shift : File::Spec->curdir;
+ CORE::chdir($path) || croak "Cannot chdir to $path: $!";
my $realpath = getcwd();
- CORE::chdir($cwd) || croak "Cannot chdir back to $cwd:$!";
+ -d $cwd && CORE::chdir($cwd) ||
+ croak "Cannot chdir back to $cwd: $!";
$realpath;
}
}
sub _qnx_cwd {
+ local $ENV{PATH} = '';
+ local $ENV{CDPATH} = '';
+ local $ENV{ENV} = '';
$ENV{'PWD'} = `/usr/bin/fullpath -t`;
chop $ENV{'PWD'};
return $ENV{'PWD'};
}
sub _qnx_abs_path {
+ local $ENV{PATH} = '';
+ local $ENV{CDPATH} = '';
+ local $ENV{ENV} = '';
my $path = @_ ? shift : '.';
my $realpath=`/usr/bin/fullpath -t $path`;
chop $realpath;
*fastcwd = \&_NT_cwd;
*fastgetcwd = \&_NT_cwd;
*abs_path = \&fast_abs_path;
+ *realpath = \&fast_abs_path;
}
elsif ($^O eq 'os2') {
# sys_cwd may keep the builtin command
*fastcwd = \&_dos_cwd;
*abs_path = \&fast_abs_path;
}
- elsif ($^O eq 'qnx') {
+ elsif ($^O =~ m/^(?:qnx|nto)$/ ) {
*cwd = \&_qnx_cwd;
*getcwd = \&_qnx_cwd;
*fastgetcwd = \&_qnx_cwd;
*fastcwd = \&_epoc_cwd;
*abs_path = \&fast_abs_path;
}
+ elsif ($^O eq 'MacOS') {
+ *getcwd = \&cwd;
+ *fastgetcwd = \&cwd;
+ *fastcwd = \&cwd;
+ *abs_path = \&fast_abs_path;
+ }
}
-# package main; eval join('',<DATA>) || die $@; # quick test
1;
-
-__END__
-BEGIN { import Cwd qw(:DEFAULT chdir); }
-print join("\n", cwd, getcwd, fastcwd, "");
-chdir('..');
-print join("\n", cwd, getcwd, fastcwd, "");
-print "$ENV{PWD}\n";