Platform specific operations on file and directory paths for POSIX
is IO::Spec
An object of this type is available via the variable $*SPEC
if the Raku interpreter is running on a Unix-like platform.
About this class and its related classes also see IO::Spec.
method abs2rel(IO::Path , IO::Path = --> Str)
Returns a string that represents $path
, but relative to $base
path. Both $path
and $base
may be relative paths. $base
defaults to $*CWD
.
method basename(Str --> Str)
Takes a path as a string and returns a possibly-empty portion after the last slash:
IO::Spec::Unix.basename("foo/bar/") .raku.say; # OUTPUT: «""»IO::Spec::Unix.basename("foo/bar/.").raku.say; # OUTPUT: «"."»IO::Spec::Unix.basename("foo/bar") .raku.say; # OUTPUT: «"bar"»
method canonpath(Str() , : --> Str)
Returns a string that is a canonical representation of $path
. If :$parent
is set to true, will also clean up references to parent directories. NOTE: the routine does not access the filesystem, so no symlinks are followed.
IO::Spec::Unix.canonpath("foo//../bar/../ber").say;# OUTPUT: «foo/../bar/../ber»IO::Spec::Unix.canonpath("foo///./../bar/../ber").say;# OUTPUT: «foo/../bar/../ber»IO::Spec::Unix.canonpath("foo///./../bar/../ber", :parent).say;# OUTPUT: «ber»
method catdir (* --> Str)
Concatenates multiple path fragments and returns the canonical representation of the resultant path as a string. The @parts
are Str
objects and are allowed to contain path separators.
IO::Spec::Unix.catdir(<foo/bar ber raku>).say; # OUTPUT: «foo/bar/ber/raku»
Alias for catdir
.
method catpath ($, Str , Str --> Str)
Takes two path fragments and concatenates them, adding or removing a path separator, if necessary. The first argument is ignored (it exists to maintain consistent interface with other IO::Spec types for systems that have volumes).
IO::Spec::Unix.catpath($, 'some/dir', 'and/more').say;# OUTPUT: «some/dir/and/more»
method curdir()
Returns a string representing the current directory:
say '.' eq .curdir; # OUTPUT: «True»
method curupdir()
Returns a Block
taking an argument. This block returns True
if its argument is neither the string representing the current directory nor the string representing the directory one up from the current one. It returns False
otherwise. This block is intended to be used with smartmatching.
say .curupdir;# OUTPUT: «-> str $dir { #`(Block|65335808) ... }»my = <. foo .. bar>;say .grep: ;# OUTPUT: «(foo bar)»
Neither foo
nor bar
are equal to the representation of the current or parent directory, that is why they are returned by grep
.
Note: Before Rakudo version 2020.06 a none
Junction was returned instead of a Block
.
method devnull(--> Str)
Returns the string "/dev/null"
representing the "Null device":
.devnull.IO.spurt: "foo bar baz";
method dir-sep(--> Str)
Returns the string "/"
representing canonical directory separator character.
IO::Spec::Unix.dir-sep.say; # OUTPUT: «/»
NOTE: Most users would want to use the higher-level routine IO::Path.extension
instead of this lower-level version.
method extension(Str --> Str)
Takes a string representing a base name and returns the characters after the last dot ("."
), or empty string if no dots are present. The routine makes no attempt to detect path separators and will return everything after the last dot.
.extension('foo.' ).raku.say; # OUTPUT: «""».extension('foo.txt' ).raku.say; # OUTPUT: «"txt"».extension('foo.tar.gz').raku.say; # OUTPUT: «"gz"».extension('foo' ).raku.say; # OUTPUT: «""».extension('bar.foo/foo').raku.say; # OUTPUT: «"foo/foo"»
method is-absolute(Str --> Bool)
Returns True
if the $path
starts with a slash ("/"
), even if it has combining character on it:
say IO::Spec::Unix.is-absolute: "/foo"; # OUTPUT: «True»say IO::Spec::Unix.is-absolute: "/\x[308]foo"; # OUTPUT: «True»say IO::Spec::Unix.is-absolute: "bar"; # OUTPUT: «False»
method join ($, Str , Str --> Str)
Similar to catpath
, takes two path fragments and concatenates them, adding or removing a path separator, if necessary, except it will return just $file
if both $dir
and $file
are string '/'
or if $dir
is the string '.'
. The first argument is ignored (it exists to maintain consistent interface with other IO::Spec
types for systems that have volumes).
IO::Spec::Unix.join($, 'foo', 'bar').say; # OUTPUT: «foo/bar»IO::Spec::Unix.join($, '/', '/').say; # OUTPUT: «/»IO::Spec::Unix.join($, '.', 'foo').say; # OUTPUT: «foo»say .join(True,".","/foo"); # OUTPUT: «/foo»
method path(--> Seq)
Splits the value of %*ENV<PATH>
on colons (":"
), replaces empty parts with "."
, and returns a Seq with each of the resultant parts. Returns an empty Seq if %*ENV<PATH>
is not set or is an empty string.
<PATH> = 'foo:bar/ber::foo:';IO::Spec::Unix.path.raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("foo", "bar/ber", ".", "foo", ".").Seq»
method rel2abs(Str() , = --> Str)
Returns a string representing $path
converted to absolute path, based at $base
, which defaults to $*CWD
. If $base
is not an absolute path, it will be made absolute relative to $*CWD
, unless $*CWD
and $base
are the same.
say ; # OUTPUT: «"/home/camelia".IO»say IO::Spec::Unix.rel2abs: 'foo'; # OUTPUT: «/home/camelia/foo»say IO::Spec::Unix.rel2abs: './'; # OUTPUT: «/home/camelia»say IO::Spec::Unix.rel2abs: 'foo/../../'; # OUTPUT: «/home/camelia/foo/../..»say IO::Spec::Unix.rel2abs: '/foo/'; # OUTPUT: «/foo»say IO::Spec::Unix.rel2abs: 'foo', 'bar'; # OUTPUT: «/home/camelia/bar/foo»say IO::Spec::Unix.rel2abs: './', '/bar'; # OUTPUT: «/bar»say IO::Spec::Unix.rel2abs: '/foo/', 'bar'; # OUTPUT: «/foo»say IO::Spec::Unix.rel2abs: 'foo/../../', 'bar';# OUTPUT: «/home/camelia/bar/foo/../..»
method rootdir(--> Str)
Returns string '/'
, representing root directory.
method split(IO::Spec::Unix: Cool )
Creates a IO::Path::Parts
for $path
, with an empty string as its volume
attribute's value.
IO::Spec::Unix.split('C:/foo/bar.txt').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «IO::Path::Parts.new("","C:/foo","bar.txt")»IO::Spec::Unix.split('/foo/').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «IO::Path::Parts.new("","/","foo")»IO::Spec::Unix.split('///').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «IO::Path::Parts.new("","/","/")»IO::Spec::Unix.split('./').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «IO::Path::Parts.new("",".",".")»IO::Spec::Unix.split('.').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «IO::Path::Parts.new("",".",".")»IO::Spec::Unix.split('').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «IO::Path::Parts.new("","","")»
Note: Before Rakudo version 2020.06 this method split the given $path
into "volume", "dirname", and "basename" and returned the result as a List of three Pairs, in that order.
method splitdir(Cool --> List)
Splits the given $path
on slashes.
IO::Spec::Unix.splitdir('C:\foo/bar.txt').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("C:\\foo", "bar.txt")»IO::Spec::Unix.splitdir('/foo/').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("", "foo", "")»IO::Spec::Unix.splitdir('///').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("", "", "", "")»IO::Spec::Unix.splitdir('./').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «(".", "")»IO::Spec::Unix.splitdir('.').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «(".",)»IO::Spec::Unix.splitdir('').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("",)»
method splitpath(Cool , : --> List)
Splits the given $path
into a list of 3 strings: volume, dirname, and file. The volume is always an empty string, returned for API compatibility with other IO::Spec types. If :$nofile
named argument is set to True
, the content of the file string is undefined and should be ignored; this is a means to get a performance boost, as implementations may use faster code path when file is not needed.
IO::Spec::Unix.splitpath('C:\foo/bar.txt').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("", "C:\\foo/", "bar.txt")»IO::Spec::Unix.splitpath('C:\foo/bar.txt', :nofile).raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("", "C:\\foo/bar.txt", "")»IO::Spec::Unix.splitpath('/foo/').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("", "/foo/", "")»IO::Spec::Unix.splitpath('/foo/', :nofile).raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("", "/foo/", "")»IO::Spec::Unix.splitpath('///').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("", "///", "")»IO::Spec::Unix.splitpath('./').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("", "./", "")»IO::Spec::Unix.splitpath('.').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("", "", ".")»IO::Spec::Unix.splitpath('').raku.say;# OUTPUT: «("", "", "")»
method tmpdir(--> IO::Path)
Attempts to locate a system's temporary directory by checking several typical directories and environmental variables. Uses current directory if no suitable directories are found.
method updir()
Returns a string representing the directory one up from current:
say '..' eq .updir; # OUTPUT: «True»