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#!perl -w
#
# Documentation at the __END__
#
package File::DosGlob;
our $VERSION = '1.12';
use strict;
use warnings;
require XSLoader;
XSLoader::load();
sub doglob {
my $cond = shift;
my @retval = ();
my $fix_drive_relative_paths;
OUTER:
for my $pat (@_) {
my @matched = ();
my @globdirs = ();
my $head = '.';
my $sepchr = '/';
my $tail;
next OUTER unless defined $pat and $pat ne '';
# if arg is within quotes strip em and do no globbing
if ($pat =~ /^"(.*)"\z/s) {
$pat = $1;
if ($cond eq 'd') { push(@retval, $pat) if -d $pat }
else { push(@retval, $pat) if -e $pat }
next OUTER;
}
# wildcards with a drive prefix such as h:*.pm must be changed
# to h:./*.pm to expand correctly
if ($pat =~ m|^([A-Za-z]:)[^/\\]|s) {
substr($pat,0,2) = $1 . "./";
$fix_drive_relative_paths = 1;
}
if ($pat =~ m|^(.*)([\\/])([^\\/]*)\z|s) {
($head, $sepchr, $tail) = ($1,$2,$3);
push (@retval, $pat), next OUTER if $tail eq '';
if ($head =~ /[*?]/) {
@globdirs = doglob('d', $head);
push(@retval, doglob($cond, map {"$_$sepchr$tail"} @globdirs)),
next OUTER if @globdirs;
}
$head .= $sepchr if $head eq '' or $head =~ /^[A-Za-z]:\z/s;
$pat = $tail;
}
#
# If file component has no wildcards, we can avoid opendir
unless ($pat =~ /[*?]/) {
$head = '' if $head eq '.';
$head .= $sepchr unless $head eq '' or substr($head,-1) eq $sepchr;
$head .= $pat;
if ($cond eq 'd') { push(@retval,$head) if -d $head }
else { push(@retval,$head) if -e $head }
next OUTER;
}
opendir(D, $head) or next OUTER;
my @leaves = readdir D;
closedir D;
# VMS-format filespecs, especially if they contain extended characters,
# are unlikely to match patterns correctly, so Unixify them.
if ($^O eq 'VMS') {
require VMS::Filespec;
@leaves = map {$_ =~ s/\.$//; VMS::Filespec::unixify($_)} @leaves;
}
$head = '' if $head eq '.';
$head .= $sepchr unless $head eq '' or substr($head,-1) eq $sepchr;
# escape regex metachars but not glob chars
$pat =~ s:([].+^\-\${}()[|]):\\$1:g;
# and convert DOS-style wildcards to regex
$pat =~ s/\*/.*/g;
$pat =~ s/\?/.?/g;
my $matchsub = sub { $_[0] =~ m|^$pat\z|is };
INNER:
for my $e (@leaves) {
next INNER if $e eq '.' or $e eq '..';
next INNER if $cond eq 'd' and ! -d "$head$e";
push(@matched, "$head$e"), next INNER if &$matchsub($e);
#
# [DOS compatibility special case]
# Failed, add a trailing dot and try again, but only
# if name does not have a dot in it *and* pattern
# has a dot *and* name is shorter than 9 chars.
#
if (index($e,'.') == -1 and length($e) < 9
and index($pat,'\\.') != -1) {
push(@matched, "$head$e"), next INNER if &$matchsub("$e.");
}
}
push @retval, @matched if @matched;
}
if ($fix_drive_relative_paths) {
s|^([A-Za-z]:)\./|$1| for @retval;
}
return @retval;
}
#
# this can be used to override CORE::glob in a specific
# package by saying C<use File::DosGlob 'glob';> in that
# namespace.
#
# context (keyed by second cxix arg provided by core)
our %entries;
sub glob {
my($pat,$cxix) = ($_[0], _callsite());
my @pat;
# glob without args defaults to $_
$pat = $_ unless defined $pat;
# if we're just beginning, do it all first
if (!$entries{$cxix}) {
# extract patterns
if ($pat =~ /\s/) {
require Text::ParseWords;
@pat = Text::ParseWords::parse_line('\s+',0,$pat);
}
else {
push @pat, $pat;
}
# Mike Mestnik: made to do abc{1,2,3} == abc1 abc2 abc3.
# abc3 will be the original {3} (and drop the {}).
# abc1 abc2 will be put in @appendpat.
# This was just the easiest way, not nearly the best.
REHASH: {
my @appendpat = ();
for (@pat) {
# There must be a "," I.E. abc{efg} is not what we want.
while ( /^(.*)(?<!\\)\{(.*?)(?<!\\)\,.*?(?<!\\)\}(.*)$/ ) {
my ($start, $match, $end) = ($1, $2, $3);
#print "Got: \n\t$start\n\t$match\n\t$end\n";
my $tmp = "$start$match$end";
while ( $tmp =~ s/^(.*?)(?<!\\)\{(?:.*(?<!\\)\,)?(.*\Q$match\E.*?)(?:(?<!\\)\,.*)?(?<!\\)\}(.*)$/$1$2$3/ ) {
# these expansions will be performed by the original,
# when we call REHASH.
}
push @appendpat, ("$tmp");
s/^\Q$start\E(?<!\\)\{\Q$match\E(?<!\\)\,/$start\{/;
if ( /^\Q$start\E(?<!\\)\{(?!.*?(?<!\\)\,.*?\Q$end\E$)(.*)(?<!\\)\}\Q$end\E$/ ) {
$match = $1;
#print "GOT: \n\t$start\n\t$match\n\t$end\n\n";
$_ = "$start$match$end";
}
}
#print "Sould have "GOT" vs "Got"!\n";
#FIXME: There should be checking for this.
# How or what should be done about failure is beyond me.
}
if ( $#appendpat != -1
) {
#FIXME: Max loop, no way! :")
for ( @appendpat ) {
push @pat, $_;
}
goto REHASH;
}
}
for ( @pat ) {
s/\\([{},])/$1/g;
}
$entries{$cxix} = [doglob(1,@pat)];
}
# chuck it all out, quick or slow
if (wantarray) {
return @{delete $entries{$cxix}};
}
else {
if (scalar @{$entries{$cxix}}) {
return shift @{$entries{$cxix}};
}
else {
# return undef for EOL
delete $entries{$cxix};
return undef;
}
}
}
{
no strict 'refs';
sub import {
my $pkg = shift;
return unless @_;
my $sym = shift;
my $callpkg = ($sym =~ s/^GLOBAL_//s ? 'CORE::GLOBAL' : caller(0));
*{$callpkg.'::'.$sym} = \&{$pkg.'::'.$sym} if $sym eq 'glob';
}
}
1;
__END__
=head1 NAME
File::DosGlob - DOS like globbing and then some
=head1 SYNOPSIS
require 5.004;
# override CORE::glob in current package
use File::DosGlob 'glob';
# override CORE::glob in ALL packages (use with extreme caution!)
use File::DosGlob 'GLOBAL_glob';
@perlfiles = glob "..\\pe?l/*.p?";
print <..\\pe?l/*.p?>;
# from the command line (overrides only in main::)
> perl -MFile::DosGlob=glob -e "print <../pe*/*p?>"
=head1 DESCRIPTION
A module that implements DOS-like globbing with a few enhancements.
It is largely compatible with perlglob.exe (the M$ setargv.obj
version) in all but one respect--it understands wildcards in
directory components.
For example, C<< <..\\l*b\\file/*glob.p?> >> will work as expected (in
that it will find something like '..\lib\File/DosGlob.pm' alright).
Note that all path components are case-insensitive, and that
backslashes and forward slashes are both accepted, and preserved.
You may have to double the backslashes if you are putting them in
literally, due to double-quotish parsing of the pattern by perl.
Spaces in the argument delimit distinct patterns, so
C<glob('*.exe *.dll')> globs all filenames that end in C<.exe>
or C<.dll>. If you want to put in literal spaces in the glob
pattern, you can escape them with either double quotes, or backslashes.
e.g. C<glob('c:/"Program Files"/*/*.dll')>, or
C<glob('c:/Program\ Files/*/*.dll')>. The argument is tokenized using
C<Text::ParseWords::parse_line()>, so see L<Text::ParseWords> for details
of the quoting rules used.
Extending it to csh patterns is left as an exercise to the reader.
=head1 EXPORTS (by request only)
glob()
=head1 BUGS
Should probably be built into the core, and needs to stop
pandering to DOS habits. Needs a dose of optimization too.
=head1 AUTHOR
Gurusamy Sarathy <gsar@activestate.com>
=head1 HISTORY
=over 4
=item *
Support for globally overriding glob() (GSAR 3-JUN-98)
=item *
Scalar context, independent iterator context fixes (GSAR 15-SEP-97)
=item *
A few dir-vs-file optimizations result in glob importation being
10 times faster than using perlglob.exe, and using perlglob.bat is
only twice as slow as perlglob.exe (GSAR 28-MAY-97)
=item *
Several cleanups prompted by lack of compatible perlglob.exe
under Borland (GSAR 27-MAY-97)
=item *
Initial version (GSAR 20-FEB-97)
=back
=head1 SEE ALSO
perl
perlglob.bat
Text::ParseWords
=cut