X-Git-Url: http://git.shadowcat.co.uk/gitweb/gitweb.cgi?a=blobdiff_plain;f=lib%2FFile%2FBasename.pm;h=4581e7e93c26c35070760d1e79e307abbb48913f;hb=d5448623582779336009dd8bafd91e2a4ca7c599;hp=7cbc6587aa23c75e86e12ad24587717e4d68ed59;hpb=ee2ff9ea616cd43b1dab6bbf9bdba0cdcfdf5a8b;p=p5sagit%2Fp5-mst-13.2.git diff --git a/lib/File/Basename.pm b/lib/File/Basename.pm index 7cbc658..4581e7e 100644 --- a/lib/File/Basename.pm +++ b/lib/File/Basename.pm @@ -34,17 +34,17 @@ pieces using the syntax of different operating systems. You select the syntax via the routine fileparse_set_fstype(). If the argument passed to it contains one of the substrings -"VMS", "MSDOS", "MacOS", or "AmigaOS", the file specification +"VMS", "MSDOS", "MacOS", "AmigaOS" or "MSWin32", the file specification syntax of that operating system is used in future calls to fileparse(), basename(), and dirname(). If it contains none of -these substrings, UNIX syntax is used. This pattern matching is +these substrings, Unix syntax is used. This pattern matching is case-insensitive. If you've selected VMS syntax, and the file specification you pass to one of these routines contains a "/", -they assume you are using UNIX emulation and apply the UNIX syntax +they assume you are using Unix emulation and apply the Unix syntax rules instead, for that function call only. If the argument passed to it contains one of the substrings "VMS", -"MSDOS", "MacOS", "AmigaOS", "os2", or "RISCOS", then the pattern +"MSDOS", "MacOS", "AmigaOS", "os2", "MSWin32" or "RISCOS", then the pattern matching for suffix removal is performed without regard for case, since those systems are not case-sensitive when opening existing files (though some of them preserve case on file creation). @@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ file as the input file specification. =head1 EXAMPLES -Using UNIX file syntax: +Using Unix file syntax: ($base,$path,$type) = fileparse('/virgil/aeneid/draft.book7', '\.book\d+'); @@ -95,12 +95,14 @@ would yield $dir eq 'Doc_Root:[Help]' $type eq '.Rnh' +=over + =item C The basename() routine returns the first element of the list produced by calling fileparse() with the same arguments, except that it always quotes metacharacters in the given suffixes. It is provided for -programmer compatibility with the UNIX shell command basename(1). +programmer compatibility with the Unix shell command basename(1). =item C @@ -109,22 +111,36 @@ specification. When using VMS or MacOS syntax, this is identical to the second element of the list produced by calling fileparse() with the same input file specification. (Under VMS, if there is no directory information in the input file specification, then the current default device and -directory are returned.) When using UNIX or MSDOS syntax, the return -value conforms to the behavior of the UNIX shell command dirname(1). This +directory are returned.) When using Unix or MSDOS syntax, the return +value conforms to the behavior of the Unix shell command dirname(1). This is usually the same as the behavior of fileparse(), but differs in some cases. For example, for the input file specification F, fileparse() considers the directory name to be F, while dirname() considers the directory name to be F<.>). +=back + =cut -require 5.002; + +## use strict; +# A bit of juggling to insure that C always works, since +# File::Basename is used during the Perl build, when the re extension may +# not be available. +BEGIN { + unless (eval { require re; }) + { eval ' sub re::import { $^H |= 0x00100000; } ' } + import re 'taint'; +} + + + +use 5.005_64; +our(@ISA, @EXPORT, $VERSION, $Fileparse_fstype, $Fileparse_igncase); require Exporter; @ISA = qw(Exporter); @EXPORT = qw(fileparse fileparse_set_fstype basename dirname); -#use strict; -#use vars qw($VERSION $Fileparse_fstype $Fileparse_igncase); -$VERSION = "2.4"; +$VERSION = "2.6"; # fileparse_set_fstype() - specify OS-based rules used in future @@ -137,7 +153,7 @@ sub fileparse_set_fstype { my @old = ($Fileparse_fstype, $Fileparse_igncase); if (@_) { $Fileparse_fstype = $_[0]; - $Fileparse_igncase = ($_[0] =~ /^(?:MacOS|VMS|AmigaOS|os2|RISCOS)/i); + $Fileparse_igncase = ($_[0] =~ /^(?:MacOS|VMS|AmigaOS|os2|RISCOS|MSWin32|MSDOS)/i); } wantarray ? @old : $old[0]; } @@ -151,25 +167,32 @@ sub fileparse { my($fullname,@suffices) = @_; my($fstype,$igncase) = ($Fileparse_fstype, $Fileparse_igncase); my($dirpath,$tail,$suffix,$basename); + my($taint) = substr($fullname,0,0); # Is $fullname tainted? if ($fstype =~ /^VMS/i) { if ($fullname =~ m#/#) { $fstype = '' } # We're doing Unix emulation else { - ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^(.*[:>\]])?(.*)/); + ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^(.*[:>\]])?(.*)/s); + $dirpath ||= ''; # should always be defined } } - if ($fstype =~ /^MSDOS/i) { - ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^(.*[:\\\/])?(.*)/); - $dirpath .= '.\\' unless $dirpath =~ /[\\\/]$/; + if ($fstype =~ /^MS(DOS|Win32)/i) { + ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^((?:.*[:\\\/])?)(.*)/s); + $dirpath .= '.\\' unless $dirpath =~ /[\\\/]\z/; } - elsif ($fstype =~ /^MacOS/i) { - ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^(.*:)?(.*)/); + elsif ($fstype =~ /^MacOS/si) { + ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^(.*:)?(.*)/s); } elsif ($fstype =~ /^AmigaOS/i) { - ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /(.*[:\/])?(.*)/); + ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /(.*[:\/])?(.*)/s); + $dirpath = './' unless $dirpath; } elsif ($fstype !~ /^VMS/i) { # default to Unix - ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ m#^(.*/)?(.*)#); + ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ m#^(.*/)?(.*)#s); + if ($^O eq 'VMS' and $fullname =~ m:/[^/]+/000000/?:) { + # dev:[000000] is top of VMS tree, similar to Unix '/' + ($basename,$dirpath) = ('',$fullname); + } $dirpath = './' unless $dirpath; } @@ -177,13 +200,16 @@ sub fileparse { $tail = ''; foreach $suffix (@suffices) { my $pat = ($igncase ? '(?i)' : '') . "($suffix)\$"; - if ($basename =~ s/$pat//) { + if ($basename =~ s/$pat//s) { + $taint .= substr($suffix,0,0); $tail = $1 . $tail; } } } - wantarray ? ($basename,$dirpath,$tail) : $basename; + $tail .= $taint if defined $tail; # avoid warning if $tail == undef + wantarray ? ($basename . $taint, $dirpath . $taint, $tail) + : $basename . $taint; } @@ -212,23 +238,30 @@ sub dirname { } if ($fstype =~ /MacOS/i) { return $dirname } elsif ($fstype =~ /MSDOS/i) { - $dirname =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*$/$1/; + $dirname =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*\z/$1/; + unless( length($basename) ) { + ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname; + $dirname =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*\z/$1/; + } + } + elsif ($fstype =~ /MSWin32/i) { + $dirname =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*\z/$1/; unless( length($basename) ) { ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname; - $dirname =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*$/$1/; + $dirname =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*\z/$1/; } } elsif ($fstype =~ /AmigaOS/i) { - if ( $dirname =~ /:$/) { return $dirname } + if ( $dirname =~ /:\z/) { return $dirname } chop $dirname; - $dirname =~ s#[^:/]+$## unless length($basename); + $dirname =~ s#[^:/]+\z## unless length($basename); } else { - $dirname =~ s:(.)/*$:$1:; + $dirname =~ s:(.)/*\z:$1:s; unless( length($basename) ) { local($File::Basename::Fileparse_fstype) = $fstype; ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname; - $dirname =~ s:(.)/*$:$1:; + $dirname =~ s:(.)/*\z:$1:s; } }