Provided by: libfile-wildcard-perl_0.11-4_all bug

NAME

       File::Wildcard - Enhanced glob processing

SYNOPSIS

         use File::Wildcard;
         my $foo = File::Wildcard->new(path => "/home/me///core");
         while (my $file = $foo->next) {
            unlink $file;
         }

DESCRIPTION

       When looking at how various operating systems do filename wildcard expansion (globbing), VMS has a nice
       syntax which allows expansion and searching of whole directory trees. It would be nice if other operating
       systems had something like this built in. The best Unix can manage is through the utility program "find".

       This module provides this facility to Perl. Whereas native VMS syntax uses the ellipsis "...", this will
       not fit in with POSIX filenames, as ... is a valid (though somewhat strange) filename. Instead, the
       construct "///" is used as this cannot syntactically be part of a filename, as you do not get three
       concurrent filename separators with nothing between (three slashes are used to avoid confusion with
       //node/path/name syntax).

       You don't have to use this syntax, as you can do the splitting yourself and pass in an arrayref as your
       path.

       The module also forms a regular expression for the whole of the wildcard string, and binds a series of
       back references ($1, $2 etc.) which are available to construct new filenames.

   new
       "File::Wildcard-"new( $wildcard, [,option => value,...]);>

         my $foo = File::Wildcard->new( path => "/home/me///core");
         my $srcfnd = File::Wildcard->new( path => "src///*.cpp",
                      match => qr(^src/(.*?)\.cpp$),
                      derive => ['src/$1.o','src/$1.hpp']);

       This is the constructor for File::Wildcard objects. At a simple level, pass a single wildcard string as a
       path.

       For more complicated operations, you can supply your own match regexp, or use the derive option to
       specify regular expression captures to form the basis of other filenames that are constructed for you.

       The $srcfnd example gives you object files and header files corresponding to C++ source files.

       Here are the options that are available:

       "path"
           This  is the input parameter that specifies the range of files that will be looked at. This is a glob
           spec which can also contain the ellipsis '///' (it could contain more  than  one  ellipsis,  but  the
           benefit of this is questionable, and multiple ellipsi would cause a performance hit).

           Note  that the path can be relative or absolute. new will do the right thing, working out that a path
           starting with '/' is absolute. In order to recurse from  the  current  directory  downwards,  specify
           './//foo'.

           As  an  alternative,  you  can supply an arrayref with the path constituents already split. If you do
           this, you need to tell new if the path is absolute.  Include an empty string  for  an  ellipsis.  For
           example:

             'foo///bar/*.c' is equivalent to ['foo','','bar','*.c']

           You  can  also construct a File::Wildcard without a path. A call to next will return undef, but paths
           can be added using the append and prepend methods.

       "absolute"
           This is ignored unless you are using a pre split path. If you are passing a string as the  path,  new
           will work out whether the path is absolute or relative. Pass a true value for absolute paths.

           If  your  original  filespec started with '/' before you split it, specify absolute => 1. absolute is
           not required for Windows if the path contains a drive specification, e.g. C:/foo/bar.

       "case_insensitive"
           By default, the module will use Filesys::Type to determine whether the file system of  your  wildcard
           is  defined. This is an optional module (see Module::Optional), and File::Wildcard will guess at case
           sensitivity based on your operating system. This will not always be correct, as the file system might
           be VFAT mounted on Linux or ODS-5 on VMS.

           Specifying the option "case_insensitive" explicitly forces this behaviour on the wildcard.

           Note that File::Wildcard will use the file system of the current working directory if the path is not
           absolute. If the path is absolute, you should specify the case_sensitivity option explicitly.

       "exclude"
           You can provide a regexp to apply to any generated paths, which will cause any matching paths not  to
           be processed. If the root of a directory tree matches, no processing is done on the entire tree.

           This option can be useful for excluding version control repositories, e.g.

             exclude => qr/.svn/

       "match"
           Optional. If you do not specify a regexp, you get all the files that match the glob; in addition, new
           will set up a regexp for you, to provide a capture for each wildcard used in the path.

           If you do provide a match parameter, this will be used instead, and will filter the results.

       "derive"
           Supply  an  arrayref  with  a  list of derived filenames, which will be constructed for each matching
           file. This causes next to return an arrayref instead of a scalar.

       "follow"
           If given a true value indicates that symbolic links are to be followed. Otherwise, the symbolic  link
           target itself is presented, but the ellipsis will not traverse the link.

           This module detects a looping symlink that points to a directory higher up, and will only present the
           tree once.

       "ellipsis_order"
           This  can take one of the following values: normal, breadth-first, inside-out.  The default option is
           normal. This controls how File::Wildcard handles the ellipsis. The default is a  normal  depth  first
           search, presenting the name of each containing directory before the contents.

           The inside-out order presents the contents of directories first before the directory, which is useful
           when  you  want to remove files and directories (all O/S require directories to be empty before rmdir
           will work). See t/03_absolute.t as this uses inside-out order to tidy up after the test.

           Breadth-first is rarely needed (but I do have an application  for  it).  Here,  the  whole  directory
           contents is presented before traversing any subdirectories.

           Consider the following tree:
              a/
              a/bar/
              a/bar/drink
              a/foo/
              a/foo/lish

           breadth-first  will  give  the  following  order: qw(a/ a/bar/ a/foo/ a/bar/drink a/foo/lish). normal
           gives the order in which the files are listed.  inside-out gives the following: qw(a/bar/drink a/bar/
           a/foo/lish a/foo/ a/).

       "sort"
           By default, globbing returns the list of files in the  order  in  which  they  are  returned  by  the
           dirhandle  (internally).  If  you  specify  sort => 1, the files are sorted into ASCII sequence (case
           insensitively if we are operating that way). If you specify  a  CODEREF,  this  will  be  used  as  a
           comparison routine. Note that this takes its operands in @_, not in $a and $b.

       "debug" and "debug_output"
           You can enable a trace of the internal states of File::Wildcard by setting debug to a true value. Set
           debug_output  to an open filehandle to get the trace in a file. If you are submitting bug reports for
           File::Wildcard, attaching debug trace files would be very useful.

           debug_output defaults to STDERR.

   match
         my $foo_re = $foo->match;
         $foo->match('bar/core');

       This is a get and set method that gives access to the match regexp  that  the  File::Wildcard  object  is
       using.  It  is possible to change the regex on the fly in the middle of a search (though I don't know why
       anyone would want to do this).

   append
         $foo->append(path => '/home/me///*.tmp');

       appends a path to an object's todo list. This will be globbed after the object  has  finished  processing
       the existing wildcards.

   prepend
         $srcfnd->prepend(path => $include_file);

       This  is  similar to append, but prepends the path to the todo list. In other words, the current wildcard
       operation is interrupted to serve the new path, then the previous wildcard operation is resumed when this
       is exhausted.

   next
         while (my $core = $foo->next) {
             unlink $core;
         }
         my ($src,$obj,$hdr) = @{$srcfnd->next};

       The "next" method is an iterator, which returns successive files. Returns matching files if there was  no
       derive  option  passed  to new. If there was a derive option, returns an arrayref containing the matching
       filespec and all derived filespecs. The derived filespecs do not have to exist.

       Note that "next" maintains an internal cursor, which retains context and state information. Beware if the
       contents of directories are changing while you  are  iterating  with  next;  you  may  get  unpredictable
       results.  If you are intending to change the contents of the directories you are scanning (with unlink or
       rename), you are better off deferring this operation until you have processed the  whole  tree.  For  the
       pending  delete  or rename operations, you could always use another File::Wildcard object - see the spike
       example below:

   all
         my @cores = $foo->all;

       "all" returns an array of matching files, in the simple case. Returns an  array  of  arrays  if  you  are
       constructing new filenames, like the $srcfnd example.

       Beware of the performance and memory implications of using "all". The method will not return until it has
       read the entire directory tree. Use of the "all" method is not recommended for traversing large directory
       trees and whole file systems. Consider coding the traversal using the iterator "next" instead.

   reset
       "reset"  causes  the  wildcard context to be set to re-read the first filename again. Note that this will
       cause directory contents to be re-read.

       Note also that this will cause the path to revert to the original path specified to new.  Any  additional
       paths appended or prepended will be forgotten.

   close
       Release  all directory handles associated with the File::Wildcard object.  An object that has been closed
       will be garbage collected once it goes out of scope. Wildcards that have been exhausted are automatically
       closed, (i.e. "all" was used, or c<next> returned undef).

       Subsequent calls to "next" will return undef. It is possible to call "reset" after "close"  on  the  same
       File::Wildcard object, which will cause it to be reopened.

EXAMPLES

The spike

             my $todo = File::Wildcard->new;

             ...

             $todo->append(path => $file);

             ...

             while (my $file = $todo->next) {
             ...
             }

           You  can  use an empty wildcard to store a list of filenames for later processing. The order in which
           they will be seen depends on whether append or prepend is used.

       •   Shell style globbing

             my $wc_args = File::Wildcard->new;

             $wc_args->append(path => $_) for @ARGV;

             while ($wc_args->next) {
             ...
             }

           On Unix, file wildcards on the command line are globbed by the shell before perl  sees  them,  unless
           the  wildcards  are  escaped  or  quoted. This is not true of other operating systems. MS-DOS does no
           globbing at all for example.

           File::Wildcard gives you the bonus of elliptic globbing with '///'.

CAVEAT

       This module takes POSIX filenames, which use forward slash '/' as a path separator. All operating systems
       that run Perl can manage this type of path. The module is not designed to work with  native  file  specs.
       If  you  want  to  write  code  that is portable, convert native filespecs to the POSIX form. There is of
       course no difference on Unix platforms.

BUGS

       Please report bugs to http://rt.cpan.org

AUTHOR

               Ivor Williams
               ivorw-file-wildcard010 at xemaps.com

COPYRIGHT

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under  the  same  terms  as  Perl
       itself.

       The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.

SEE ALSO

       glob(3), File::Find, File::Find::Rule.

perl v5.36.0                                       2022-12-12                                File::Wildcard(3pm)