File::Find::Object::Rule(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation File::Find::Object::Rule(3pm)
NAME
File::Find::Object::Rule - Alternative interface to File::Find::Object
SYNOPSIS
use File::Find::Object::Rule;
# find all the subdirectories of a given directory
my @subdirs = File::Find::Object::Rule->directory->in( $directory );
# find all the .pm files in @INC
my @files = File::Find::Object::Rule->file()
->name( '*.pm' )
->in( @INC );
# as above, but without method chaining
my $rule = File::Find::Object::Rule->new;
$rule->file;
$rule->name( '*.pm' );
my @files = $rule->in( @INC );
DESCRIPTION
File::Find::Object::Rule is a friendlier interface to File::Find::Object . It allows you to build rules which specify the desired files
and directories.
WARNING : This module is a fork of version 0.30 of File::Find::Rule (which has been unmaintained for several years as of February, 2009),
and may still have some bugs due to its reliance on File::Find'isms. As such it is considered Alpha software. Please report any problems
with File::Find::Object::Rule to its RT CPAN Queue.
METHODS
"new"
A constructor. You need not invoke "new" manually unless you wish to, as each of the rule-making methods will auto-create a suitable
object if called as class methods.
finder
The File::Find::Object finder instance itself.
my @rules = @{$ffor->rules()};
The rules to match against. For internal use only.
Matching Rules
"name( @patterns )"
Specifies names that should match. May be globs or regular expressions.
$set->name( '*.mp3', '*.ogg' ); # mp3s or oggs
$set->name( qr/.(mp3|ogg)$/ ); # the same as a regex
$set->name( 'foo.bar' ); # just things named foo.bar
-X tests
Synonyms are provided for each of the -X tests. See "-X" in perlfunc for details. None of these methods take arguments.
Test | Method Test | Method
------|------------- ------|----------------
-r | readable -R | r_readable
-w | writeable -W | r_writeable
-w | writable -W | r_writable
-x | executable -X | r_executable
-o | owned -O | r_owned
| |
-e | exists -f | file
-z | empty -d | directory
-s | nonempty -l | symlink
| -p | fifo
-u | setuid -S | socket
-g | setgid -b | block
-k | sticky -c | character
| -t | tty
-M | modified |
-A | accessed -T | ascii
-C | changed -B | binary
Though some tests are fairly meaningless as binary flags ("modified", "accessed", "changed"), they have been included for completeness.
# find nonempty files
$rule->file,
->nonempty;
stat tests
The following "stat" based methods are provided: "dev", "ino", "mode", "nlink", "uid", "gid", "rdev", "size", "atime", "mtime",
"ctime", "blksize", and "blocks". See "stat" in perlfunc for details.
Each of these can take a number of targets, which will follow Number::Compare semantics.
$rule->size( 7 ); # exactly 7
$rule->size( ">7Ki" ); # larger than 7 * 1024 * 1024 bytes
$rule->size( ">=7" )
->size( "<=90" ); # between 7 and 90, inclusive
$rule->size( 7, 9, 42 ); # 7, 9 or 42
"any( @rules )"
"or( @rules )"
Allows shortcircuiting boolean evaluation as an alternative to the default and-like nature of combined rules. "any" and "or" are
interchangeable.
# find avis, movs, things over 200M and empty files
$rule->any( File::Find::Object::Rule->name( '*.avi', '*.mov' ),
File::Find::Object::Rule->size( '>200M' ),
File::Find::Object::Rule->file->empty,
);
"none( @rules )"
"not( @rules )"
Negates a rule. (The inverse of "any".) "none" and "not" are interchangeable.
# files that aren't 8.3 safe
$rule->file
->not( $rule->new->name( qr/^[^.]{1,8}(.[^.]{0,3})?$/ ) );
"prune"
Traverse no further. This rule always matches.
"discard"
Don't keep this file. This rule always matches.
"exec( &subroutine( $shortname, $path, $fullname ) )"
Allows user-defined rules. Your subroutine will be invoked with parameters of the name, the path you're in, and the full relative
filename. In addition, $_ is set to the current short name, but its use is discouraged since as opposed to File::Find::Rule,
File::Find::Object::Rule does not cd to the containing directory.
Return a true value if your rule matched.
# get things with long names
$rules->exec( sub { length > 20 } );
->grep( @specifiers );
Opens a file and tests it each line at a time.
For each line it evaluates each of the specifiers, stopping at the first successful match. A specifier may be a regular expression or
a subroutine. The subroutine will be invoked with the same parameters as an ->exec subroutine.
It is possible to provide a set of negative specifiers by enclosing them in anonymous arrays. Should a negative specifier match the
iteration is aborted and the clause is failed. For example:
$rule->grep( qr/^#!.*perl/, [ sub { 1 } ] );
Is a passing clause if the first line of a file looks like a perl shebang line.
"maxdepth( $level )"
Descend at most $level (a non-negative integer) levels of directories below the starting point.
May be invoked many times per rule, but only the most recent value is used.
"mindepth( $level )"
Do not apply any tests at levels less than $level (a non-negative integer).
"extras( \%extras )"
Specifies extra values to pass through to "File::File::find" as part of the options hash.
For example this allows you to specify following of symlinks like so:
my $rule = File::Find::Object::Rule->extras({ follow => 1 });
May be invoked many times per rule, but only the most recent value is used.
"relative"
Trim the leading portion of any path found
"not_*"
Negated version of the rule. An effective shortand related to ! in the procedural interface.
$foo->not_name('*.pl');
$foo->not( $foo->new->name('*.pl' ) );
Query Methods
"in( @directories )"
Evaluates the rule, returns a list of paths to matching files and directories.
"start( @directories )"
Starts a find across the specified directories. Matching items may then be queried using "match". This allows you to use a rule as an
iterator.
my $rule = File::Find::Object::Rule->file->name("*.jpeg")->start( "/web" );
while ( my $image = $rule->match ) {
...
}
"match"
Returns the next file which matches, false if there are no more.
Extensions
Extension modules are available from CPAN in the File::Find::Object::Rule namespace. In order to use these extensions either use them
directly:
use File::Find::Object::Rule::ImageSize;
use File::Find::Object::Rule::MMagic;
# now your rules can use the clauses supplied by the ImageSize and
# MMagic extension
or, specify that File::Find::Object::Rule should load them for you:
use File::Find::Object::Rule qw( :ImageSize :MMagic );
For notes on implementing your own extensions, consult File::Find::Object::Rule::Extending
Further examples
Finding perl scripts
my $finder = File::Find::Object::Rule->or
(
File::Find::Object::Rule->name( '*.pl' ),
File::Find::Object::Rule->exec(
sub {
if (open my $fh, $_) {
my $shebang = <$fh>;
close $fh;
return $shebang =~ /^#!.*perl/;
}
return 0;
} ),
);
Based upon this message http://use.perl.org/comments.pl?sid=7052&cid=10842
ignore CVS directories
my $rule = File::Find::Object::Rule->new;
$rule->or($rule->new
->directory
->name('CVS')
->prune
->discard,
$rule->new);
Note here the use of a null rule. Null rules match anything they see, so the effect is to match (and discard) directories called 'CVS'
or to match anything.
TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE
File::Find::Object::Rule also gives you a procedural interface. This is documented in File::Find::Object::Rule::Procedural
EXPORTS
find
rule
Tests
accessed
Corresponds to "-A".
ascii
Corresponds to "-T".
atime
See "stat tests".
binary
Corresponds to "-b".
blksize
See "stat tests".
block
Corresponds to "-b".
blocks
See "stat tests".
changed
Corresponds to "-C".
character
Corresponds to "-c".
ctime
See "stat tests".
dev
See "stat tests".
directory
Corresponds to "-d".
empty
Corresponds to "-z".
executable
Corresponds to "-x".
exists
Corresponds to "-e".
fifo
Corresponds to "-p".
file
Corresponds to "-f".
gid
See "stat tests".
ino
See "stat tests".
mode
See "stat tests".
modified
Corresponds to "-M".
mtime
See "stat tests".
nlink
See "stat tests".
r_executable
Corresponds to "-X".
r_owned
Corresponds to "-O".
nonempty
A predicate that determines if the file is empty. Uses "-s".
owned
Corresponds to "-o".
r_readable
Corresponds to "-R".
r_writeable
r_writable
Corresponds to "-W".
rdev
See "stat tests".
readable
Corresponds to "-r".
setgid
Corresponds to "-g".
setuid
Corresponds to "-u".
size
See stat tests.
socket
Corresponds to "-S".
sticky
Corresponds to "-k".
symlink
Corresponds to "-l".
uid
See "stat tests".
tty
Corresponds to "-t".
writable()
Corresponds to "-w".
BUGS
The code relies on qr// compiled regexes, therefore this module requires perl version 5.005_03 or newer.
Currently it isn't possible to remove a clause from a rule object. If this becomes a significant issue it will be addressed.
AUTHOR
Richard Clamp <richardc@unixbeard.net> with input gained from this use.perl discussion: http://use.perl.org/~richardc/journal/6467
Additional proofreading and input provided by Kake, Greg McCarroll, and Andy Lester andy@petdance.com.
Ported to use File::Find::Object as File::Find::Object::Rule by Shlomi Fish.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006 Richard Clamp. All Rights Reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
File::Find::Object, Text::Glob, Number::Compare, find(1)
If you want to know about the procedural interface, see File::Find::Object::Rule::Procedural, and if you have an idea for a neat extension
File::Find::Object::Rule::Extending
KNOWN BUGS
The tests don't run successfully when directly inside a Subversion checkout, due to the presence of ".svn" directories. "./Build disttest"
or "./Build distruntest" run fine.
perl v5.14.2 2012-05-05 File::Find::Object::Rule(3pm)