File | /opt/wise/lib/perl5/5.10.0/File/Basename.pm | Statements Executed | 97 | Total Time | 0.00218 seconds |
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3 | 2 | 2 | 0.00011 | 0.00011 | File::Basename:: | fileparse |
1 | 1 | 1 | 8.0e-5 | 8.0e-5 | File::Basename:: | fileparse_set_fstype |
1 | 1 | 1 | 2.6e-5 | 2.6e-5 | File::Basename:: | _strip_trailing_sep |
1 | 1 | 1 | 2.1e-5 | 8.3e-5 | File::Basename:: | basename |
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | File::Basename:: | BEGIN |
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | File::Basename:: | dirname |
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1 | =head1 NAME | |||
2 | ||||
3 | File::Basename - Parse file paths into directory, filename and suffix. | |||
4 | ||||
5 | =head1 SYNOPSIS | |||
6 | ||||
7 | use File::Basename; | |||
8 | ||||
9 | ($name,$path,$suffix) = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist); | |||
10 | $name = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist); | |||
11 | ||||
12 | $basename = basename($fullname,@suffixlist); | |||
13 | $dirname = dirname($fullname); | |||
14 | ||||
15 | ||||
16 | =head1 DESCRIPTION | |||
17 | ||||
18 | These routines allow you to parse file paths into their directory, filename | |||
19 | and suffix. | |||
20 | ||||
21 | B<NOTE>: C<dirname()> and C<basename()> emulate the behaviours, and | |||
22 | quirks, of the shell and C functions of the same name. See each | |||
23 | function's documentation for details. If your concern is just parsing | |||
24 | paths it is safer to use L<File::Spec>'s C<splitpath()> and | |||
25 | C<splitdir()> methods. | |||
26 | ||||
27 | It is guaranteed that | |||
28 | ||||
29 | # Where $path_separator is / for Unix, \ for Windows, etc... | |||
30 | dirname($path) . $path_separator . basename($path); | |||
31 | ||||
32 | is equivalent to the original path for all systems but VMS. | |||
33 | ||||
34 | ||||
35 | =cut | |||
36 | ||||
37 | ||||
38 | package File::Basename; | |||
39 | ||||
40 | # A bit of juggling to insure that C<use re 'taint';> always works, since | |||
41 | # File::Basename is used during the Perl build, when the re extension may | |||
42 | # not be available. | |||
43 | BEGIN { | |||
44 | 3 | 0.00022 | 7.5e-5 | unless (eval { require re; }) |
45 | { eval ' sub re::import { $^H |= 0x00100000; } ' } # HINT_RE_TAINT | |||
46 | import re 'taint'; # spent 42µs making 1 call to re::import | |||
47 | 1 | 3.2e-5 | 3.2e-5 | } |
48 | ||||
49 | ||||
50 | 3 | 3.0e-5 | 1.0e-5 | use strict; # spent 10µs making 1 call to strict::import |
51 | 3 | 5.5e-5 | 1.8e-5 | use 5.006; |
52 | 3 | 0.00158 | 0.00053 | use warnings; # spent 20µs making 1 call to warnings::import |
53 | 1 | 1.0e-6 | 1.0e-6 | our(@ISA, @EXPORT, $VERSION, $Fileparse_fstype, $Fileparse_igncase); |
54 | 1 | 1.0e-6 | 1.0e-6 | require Exporter; |
55 | 1 | 6.0e-6 | 6.0e-6 | @ISA = qw(Exporter); |
56 | 1 | 1.0e-6 | 1.0e-6 | @EXPORT = qw(fileparse fileparse_set_fstype basename dirname); |
57 | 1 | 1.0e-6 | 1.0e-6 | $VERSION = "2.76"; |
58 | ||||
59 | 1 | 7.0e-6 | 7.0e-6 | fileparse_set_fstype($^O); # spent 80µs making 1 call to File::Basename::fileparse_set_fstype |
60 | ||||
61 | ||||
62 | =over 4 | |||
63 | ||||
64 | =item C<fileparse> | |||
65 | X<fileparse> | |||
66 | ||||
67 | my($filename, $directories, $suffix) = fileparse($path); | |||
68 | my($filename, $directories, $suffix) = fileparse($path, @suffixes); | |||
69 | my $filename = fileparse($path, @suffixes); | |||
70 | ||||
71 | The C<fileparse()> routine divides a file path into its $directories, $filename | |||
72 | and (optionally) the filename $suffix. | |||
73 | ||||
74 | $directories contains everything up to and including the last | |||
75 | directory separator in the $path including the volume (if applicable). | |||
76 | The remainder of the $path is the $filename. | |||
77 | ||||
78 | # On Unix returns ("baz", "/foo/bar/", "") | |||
79 | fileparse("/foo/bar/baz"); | |||
80 | ||||
81 | # On Windows returns ("baz", "C:\foo\bar\", "") | |||
82 | fileparse("C:\foo\bar\baz"); | |||
83 | ||||
84 | # On Unix returns ("", "/foo/bar/baz/", "") | |||
85 | fileparse("/foo/bar/baz/"); | |||
86 | ||||
87 | If @suffixes are given each element is a pattern (either a string or a | |||
88 | C<qr//>) matched against the end of the $filename. The matching | |||
89 | portion is removed and becomes the $suffix. | |||
90 | ||||
91 | # On Unix returns ("baz", "/foo/bar", ".txt") | |||
92 | fileparse("/foo/bar/baz.txt", qr/\.[^.]*/); | |||
93 | ||||
94 | If type is non-Unix (see C<fileparse_set_fstype()>) then the pattern | |||
95 | matching for suffix removal is performed case-insensitively, since | |||
96 | those systems are not case-sensitive when opening existing files. | |||
97 | ||||
98 | You are guaranteed that C<$directories . $filename . $suffix> will | |||
99 | denote the same location as the original $path. | |||
100 | ||||
101 | =cut | |||
102 | ||||
103 | ||||
104 | # spent 109µs within File::Basename::fileparse which was called 3 times, avg 36µs/call:
# 2 times (73µs+0) by WISE::UtilsLight::whichami at line 825 of /wise/base/deliv/dev/lib/perl/WISE/UtilsLight.pm, avg 36µs/call
# once (36µs+0) by File::Basename::basename at line 222 | |||
105 | 48 | 9.1e-5 | 1.9e-6 | my($fullname,@suffices) = @_; |
106 | ||||
107 | unless (defined $fullname) { | |||
108 | require Carp; | |||
109 | Carp::croak("fileparse(): need a valid pathname"); | |||
110 | } | |||
111 | ||||
112 | my $orig_type = ''; | |||
113 | my($type,$igncase) = ($Fileparse_fstype, $Fileparse_igncase); | |||
114 | ||||
115 | my($taint) = substr($fullname,0,0); # Is $fullname tainted? | |||
116 | ||||
117 | if ($type eq "VMS" and $fullname =~ m{/} ) { | |||
118 | # We're doing Unix emulation | |||
119 | $orig_type = $type; | |||
120 | $type = 'Unix'; | |||
121 | } | |||
122 | ||||
123 | my($dirpath, $basename); | |||
124 | ||||
125 | if (grep { $type eq $_ } qw(MSDOS DOS MSWin32 Epoc)) { | |||
126 | ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^((?:.*[:\\\/])?)(.*)/s); | |||
127 | $dirpath .= '.\\' unless $dirpath =~ /[\\\/]\z/; | |||
128 | } | |||
129 | elsif ($type eq "OS2") { | |||
130 | ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ m#^((?:.*[:\\/])?)(.*)#s); | |||
131 | $dirpath = './' unless $dirpath; # Can't be 0 | |||
132 | $dirpath .= '/' unless $dirpath =~ m#[\\/]\z#; | |||
133 | } | |||
134 | elsif ($type eq "MacOS") { | |||
135 | ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^(.*:)?(.*)/s); | |||
136 | $dirpath = ':' unless $dirpath; | |||
137 | } | |||
138 | elsif ($type eq "AmigaOS") { | |||
139 | ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /(.*[:\/])?(.*)/s); | |||
140 | $dirpath = './' unless $dirpath; | |||
141 | } | |||
142 | elsif ($type eq 'VMS' ) { | |||
143 | ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^(.*[:>\]])?(.*)/s); | |||
144 | $dirpath ||= ''; # should always be defined | |||
145 | } | |||
146 | else { # Default to Unix semantics. | |||
147 | ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ m{^(.*/)?(.*)}s); | |||
148 | if ($orig_type eq 'VMS' and $fullname =~ m{^(/[^/]+/000000(/|$))(.*)}) { | |||
149 | # dev:[000000] is top of VMS tree, similar to Unix '/' | |||
150 | # so strip it off and treat the rest as "normal" | |||
151 | my $devspec = $1; | |||
152 | my $remainder = $3; | |||
153 | ($dirpath,$basename) = ($remainder =~ m{^(.*/)?(.*)}s); | |||
154 | $dirpath ||= ''; # should always be defined | |||
155 | $dirpath = $devspec.$dirpath; | |||
156 | } | |||
157 | $dirpath = './' unless $dirpath; | |||
158 | } | |||
159 | ||||
160 | ||||
161 | my $tail = ''; | |||
162 | my $suffix = ''; | |||
163 | if (@suffices) { | |||
164 | foreach $suffix (@suffices) { | |||
165 | my $pat = ($igncase ? '(?i)' : '') . "($suffix)\$"; | |||
166 | if ($basename =~ s/$pat//s) { | |||
167 | $taint .= substr($suffix,0,0); | |||
168 | $tail = $1 . $tail; | |||
169 | } | |||
170 | } | |||
171 | } | |||
172 | ||||
173 | # Ensure taint is propgated from the path to its pieces. | |||
174 | $tail .= $taint; | |||
175 | wantarray ? ($basename .= $taint, $dirpath .= $taint, $tail) | |||
176 | : ($basename .= $taint); | |||
177 | } | |||
178 | ||||
179 | ||||
180 | ||||
181 | =item C<basename> | |||
182 | X<basename> X<filename> | |||
183 | ||||
184 | my $filename = basename($path); | |||
185 | my $filename = basename($path, @suffixes); | |||
186 | ||||
187 | This function is provided for compatibility with the Unix shell command | |||
188 | C<basename(1)>. It does B<NOT> always return the file name portion of a | |||
189 | path as you might expect. To be safe, if you want the file name portion of | |||
190 | a path use C<fileparse()>. | |||
191 | ||||
192 | C<basename()> returns the last level of a filepath even if the last | |||
193 | level is clearly directory. In effect, it is acting like C<pop()> for | |||
194 | paths. This differs from C<fileparse()>'s behaviour. | |||
195 | ||||
196 | # Both return "bar" | |||
197 | basename("/foo/bar"); | |||
198 | basename("/foo/bar/"); | |||
199 | ||||
200 | @suffixes work as in C<fileparse()> except all regex metacharacters are | |||
201 | quoted. | |||
202 | ||||
203 | # These two function calls are equivalent. | |||
204 | my $filename = basename("/foo/bar/baz.txt", ".txt"); | |||
205 | my $filename = fileparse("/foo/bar/baz.txt", qr/\Q.txt\E/); | |||
206 | ||||
207 | Also note that in order to be compatible with the shell command, | |||
208 | C<basename()> does not strip off a suffix if it is identical to the | |||
209 | remaining characters in the filename. | |||
210 | ||||
211 | =cut | |||
212 | ||||
213 | ||||
214 | # spent 83µs (21+62) within File::Basename::basename which was called
# once (21µs+62µs) by WISE::Params::parwhoiam at line 2975 of /wise/base/deliv/dev/lib/perl/WISE/Params.pm | |||
215 | 6 | 2.5e-5 | 4.2e-6 | my($path) = shift; |
216 | ||||
217 | # From BSD basename(1) | |||
218 | # The basename utility deletes any prefix ending with the last slash `/' | |||
219 | # character present in string (after first stripping trailing slashes) | |||
220 | _strip_trailing_sep($path); # spent 26µs making 1 call to File::Basename::_strip_trailing_sep | |||
221 | ||||
222 | my($basename, $dirname, $suffix) = fileparse( $path, map("\Q$_\E",@_) ); # spent 36µs making 1 call to File::Basename::fileparse | |||
223 | ||||
224 | # From BSD basename(1) | |||
225 | # The suffix is not stripped if it is identical to the remaining | |||
226 | # characters in string. | |||
227 | if( length $suffix and !length $basename ) { | |||
228 | $basename = $suffix; | |||
229 | } | |||
230 | ||||
231 | # Ensure that basename '/' == '/' | |||
232 | if( !length $basename ) { | |||
233 | $basename = $dirname; | |||
234 | } | |||
235 | ||||
236 | return $basename; | |||
237 | } | |||
238 | ||||
239 | ||||
240 | ||||
241 | =item C<dirname> | |||
242 | X<dirname> | |||
243 | ||||
244 | This function is provided for compatibility with the Unix shell | |||
245 | command C<dirname(1)> and has inherited some of its quirks. In spite of | |||
246 | its name it does B<NOT> always return the directory name as you might | |||
247 | expect. To be safe, if you want the directory name of a path use | |||
248 | C<fileparse()>. | |||
249 | ||||
250 | Only on VMS (where there is no ambiguity between the file and directory | |||
251 | portions of a path) and AmigaOS (possibly due to an implementation quirk in | |||
252 | this module) does C<dirname()> work like C<fileparse($path)>, returning just the | |||
253 | $directories. | |||
254 | ||||
255 | # On VMS and AmigaOS | |||
256 | my $directories = dirname($path); | |||
257 | ||||
258 | When using Unix or MSDOS syntax this emulates the C<dirname(1)> shell function | |||
259 | which is subtly different from how C<fileparse()> works. It returns all but | |||
260 | the last level of a file path even if the last level is clearly a directory. | |||
261 | In effect, it is not returning the directory portion but simply the path one | |||
262 | level up acting like C<chop()> for file paths. | |||
263 | ||||
264 | Also unlike C<fileparse()>, C<dirname()> does not include a trailing slash on | |||
265 | its returned path. | |||
266 | ||||
267 | # returns /foo/bar. fileparse() would return /foo/bar/ | |||
268 | dirname("/foo/bar/baz"); | |||
269 | ||||
270 | # also returns /foo/bar despite the fact that baz is clearly a | |||
271 | # directory. fileparse() would return /foo/bar/baz/ | |||
272 | dirname("/foo/bar/baz/"); | |||
273 | ||||
274 | # returns '.'. fileparse() would return 'foo/' | |||
275 | dirname("foo/"); | |||
276 | ||||
277 | Under VMS, if there is no directory information in the $path, then the | |||
278 | current default device and directory is used. | |||
279 | ||||
280 | =cut | |||
281 | ||||
282 | ||||
283 | sub dirname { | |||
284 | my $path = shift; | |||
285 | ||||
286 | my($type) = $Fileparse_fstype; | |||
287 | ||||
288 | if( $type eq 'VMS' and $path =~ m{/} ) { | |||
289 | # Parse as Unix | |||
290 | local($File::Basename::Fileparse_fstype) = ''; | |||
291 | return dirname($path); | |||
292 | } | |||
293 | ||||
294 | my($basename, $dirname) = fileparse($path); | |||
295 | ||||
296 | if ($type eq 'VMS') { | |||
297 | $dirname ||= $ENV{DEFAULT}; | |||
298 | } | |||
299 | elsif ($type eq 'MacOS') { | |||
300 | if( !length($basename) && $dirname !~ /^[^:]+:\z/) { | |||
301 | _strip_trailing_sep($dirname); | |||
302 | ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname; | |||
303 | } | |||
304 | $dirname .= ":" unless $dirname =~ /:\z/; | |||
305 | } | |||
306 | elsif (grep { $type eq $_ } qw(MSDOS DOS MSWin32 OS2)) { | |||
307 | _strip_trailing_sep($dirname); | |||
308 | unless( length($basename) ) { | |||
309 | ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname; | |||
310 | _strip_trailing_sep($dirname); | |||
311 | } | |||
312 | } | |||
313 | elsif ($type eq 'AmigaOS') { | |||
314 | if ( $dirname =~ /:\z/) { return $dirname } | |||
315 | chop $dirname; | |||
316 | $dirname =~ s{[^:/]+\z}{} unless length($basename); | |||
317 | } | |||
318 | else { | |||
319 | _strip_trailing_sep($dirname); | |||
320 | unless( length($basename) ) { | |||
321 | ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname; | |||
322 | _strip_trailing_sep($dirname); | |||
323 | } | |||
324 | } | |||
325 | ||||
326 | $dirname; | |||
327 | } | |||
328 | ||||
329 | ||||
330 | # Strip the trailing path separator. | |||
331 | # spent 26µs within File::Basename::_strip_trailing_sep which was called
# once (26µs+0) by File::Basename::basename at line 220 | |||
332 | 3 | 2.0e-5 | 6.7e-6 | my $type = $Fileparse_fstype; |
333 | ||||
334 | if ($type eq 'MacOS') { | |||
335 | $_[0] =~ s/([^:]):\z/$1/s; | |||
336 | } | |||
337 | elsif (grep { $type eq $_ } qw(MSDOS DOS MSWin32 OS2)) { | |||
338 | $_[0] =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*\z/$1/; | |||
339 | } | |||
340 | else { | |||
341 | $_[0] =~ s{(.)/*\z}{$1}s; | |||
342 | } | |||
343 | } | |||
344 | ||||
345 | ||||
346 | =item C<fileparse_set_fstype> | |||
347 | X<filesystem> | |||
348 | ||||
349 | my $type = fileparse_set_fstype(); | |||
350 | my $previous_type = fileparse_set_fstype($type); | |||
351 | ||||
352 | Normally File::Basename will assume a file path type native to your current | |||
353 | operating system (ie. /foo/bar style on Unix, \foo\bar on Windows, etc...). | |||
354 | With this function you can override that assumption. | |||
355 | ||||
356 | Valid $types are "MacOS", "VMS", "AmigaOS", "OS2", "RISCOS", | |||
357 | "MSWin32", "DOS" (also "MSDOS" for backwards bug compatibility), | |||
358 | "Epoc" and "Unix" (all case-insensitive). If an unrecognized $type is | |||
359 | given "Unix" will be assumed. | |||
360 | ||||
361 | If you've selected VMS syntax, and the file specification you pass to | |||
362 | one of these routines contains a "/", they assume you are using Unix | |||
363 | emulation and apply the Unix syntax rules instead, for that function | |||
364 | call only. | |||
365 | ||||
366 | =back | |||
367 | ||||
368 | =cut | |||
369 | ||||
370 | ||||
371 | BEGIN { | |||
372 | ||||
373 | 2 | 8.0e-6 | 4.0e-6 | my @Ignore_Case = qw(MacOS VMS AmigaOS OS2 RISCOS MSWin32 MSDOS DOS Epoc); |
374 | my @Types = (@Ignore_Case, qw(Unix)); | |||
375 | ||||
376 | # spent 80µs within File::Basename::fileparse_set_fstype which was called
# once (80µs+0) at line 59 | |||
377 | 17 | 7.4e-5 | 4.4e-6 | my $old = $Fileparse_fstype; |
378 | ||||
379 | if (@_) { | |||
380 | my $new_type = shift; | |||
381 | ||||
382 | $Fileparse_fstype = 'Unix'; # default | |||
383 | foreach my $type (@Types) { | |||
384 | $Fileparse_fstype = $type if $new_type =~ /^$type/i; | |||
385 | } | |||
386 | ||||
387 | $Fileparse_igncase = | |||
388 | (grep $Fileparse_fstype eq $_, @Ignore_Case) ? 1 : 0; | |||
389 | } | |||
390 | ||||
391 | return $old; | |||
392 | } | |||
393 | ||||
394 | 1 | 1.9e-5 | 1.9e-5 | } |
395 | ||||
396 | ||||
397 | 1 | 8.0e-6 | 8.0e-6 | 1; |
398 | ||||
399 | ||||
400 | =head1 SEE ALSO | |||
401 | ||||
402 | L<dirname(1)>, L<basename(1)>, L<File::Spec> |