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package File::HomeDir::Darwin::Carbon;
# Basic implementation for the Dawin family of operating systems.
# This includes (most prominently) Mac OS X.
use 5.00503;
use strict;
use Cwd ();
use Carp ();
use File::HomeDir::Darwin ();
use vars qw{$VERSION @ISA};
BEGIN {
$VERSION = '1.002';
# This is only a child class of the pure Perl darwin
# class so that we can do homedir detection of all three
# drivers at one via ->isa.
@ISA = 'File::HomeDir::Darwin';
# Load early if in a forking environment and we have
# prefork, or at run-time if not.
local $@;
eval "use prefork 'Mac::Files'";
}
#####################################################################
# Current User Methods
sub my_home {
my $class = shift;
# A lot of unix people and unix-derived tools rely on
# the ability to overload HOME. We will support it too
# so that they can replace raw HOME calls with File::HomeDir.
if ( exists $ENV{HOME} and defined $ENV{HOME} ) {
return $ENV{HOME};
}
require Mac::Files;
$class->_find_folder(
Mac::Files::kCurrentUserFolderType(),
);
}
sub my_desktop {
my $class = shift;
require Mac::Files;
$class->_find_folder(
Mac::Files::kDesktopFolderType(),
);
}
sub my_documents {
my $class = shift;
require Mac::Files;
$class->_find_folder(
Mac::Files::kDocumentsFolderType(),
);
}
sub my_data {
my $class = shift;
require Mac::Files;
$class->_find_folder(
Mac::Files::kApplicationSupportFolderType(),
);
}
sub my_music {
my $class = shift;
require Mac::Files;
$class->_find_folder(
Mac::Files::kMusicDocumentsFolderType(),
);
}
sub my_pictures {
my $class = shift;
require Mac::Files;
$class->_find_folder(
Mac::Files::kPictureDocumentsFolderType(),
);
}
sub my_videos {
my $class = shift;
require Mac::Files;
$class->_find_folder(
Mac::Files::kMovieDocumentsFolderType(),
);
}
sub _find_folder {
my $class = shift;
my $name = shift;
require Mac::Files;
my $folder = Mac::Files::FindFolder(
Mac::Files::kUserDomain(),
$name,
);
return undef unless defined $folder;
unless ( -d $folder ) {
# Make sure that symlinks resolve to directories.
return undef unless -l $folder;
my $dir = readlink $folder or return;
return undef unless -d $dir;
}
return Cwd::abs_path($folder);
}
#####################################################################
# Arbitrary User Methods
sub users_home {
my $class = shift;
my $home = $class->SUPER::users_home(@_);
return defined $home ? Cwd::abs_path($home) : undef;
}
# in theory this can be done, but for now, let's cheat, since the
# rest is Hard
sub users_desktop {
my ($class, $name) = @_;
return undef if $name eq 'root';
$class->_to_user( $class->my_desktop, $name );
}
sub users_documents {
my ($class, $name) = @_;
return undef if $name eq 'root';
$class->_to_user( $class->my_documents, $name );
}
sub users_data {
my ($class, $name) = @_;
$class->_to_user( $class->my_data, $name )
||
$class->users_home($name);
}
# cheap hack ... not entirely reliable, perhaps, but ... c'est la vie, since
# there's really no other good way to do it at this time, that i know of -- pudge
sub _to_user {
my ($class, $path, $name) = @_;
my $my_home = $class->my_home;
my $users_home = $class->users_home($name);
defined $users_home or return undef;
$path =~ s/^\Q$my_home/$users_home/;
return $path;
}
1;
=pod
=head1 NAME
File::HomeDir::Darwin - Find your home and other directories on Darwin (OS X)
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This module provides Darwin-specific implementations for determining
common user directories. In normal usage this module will always be
used via L<File::HomeDir>.
Note -- since this module requires Mac::Carbon and Mac::Carbon does
not work with 64-bit perls, on such systems, File::HomeDir will try
L<File::HomeDir::Darwin::Cocoa> and then fall back to the (pure Perl)
L<File::HomeDir::Darwin>.
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use File::HomeDir;
# Find directories for the current user
$home = File::HomeDir->my_home; # /Users/mylogin
$desktop = File::HomeDir->my_desktop; # /Users/mylogin/Desktop
$docs = File::HomeDir->my_documents; # /Users/mylogin/Documents
$music = File::HomeDir->my_music; # /Users/mylogin/Music
$pics = File::HomeDir->my_pictures; # /Users/mylogin/Pictures
$videos = File::HomeDir->my_videos; # /Users/mylogin/Movies
$data = File::HomeDir->my_data; # /Users/mylogin/Library/Application Support
=head1 TODO
=over 4
=item * Test with Mac OS (versions 7, 8, 9)
=item * Some better way for users_* ?
=back