NAME
File::BSDGlob - Perl extension for BSD glob routine
SYNOPSIS
@list
=
glob
(
'*.[ch]'
);
$homedir
=
glob
(
'~gnat'
, GLOB_TILDE | GLOB_ERR);
if
(GLOB_ERROR) {
# an error occurred reading $homedir
}
## override the core glob (even with -T)
my
@sources
= <*.{c,h,y}>
DESCRIPTION
File::BSDGlob implements the FreeBSD glob(3) routine, which is a superset of the POSIX glob() (described in IEEE Std 1003.2 "POSIX.2"). The glob() routine takes a mandatory pattern
argument, and an optional flags
argument, and returns a list of filenames matching the pattern, with interpretation of the pattern modified by the flags
variable. The POSIX defined flags are:
GLOB_ERR
-
Force glob() to return an error when it encounters a directory it cannot open or read. Ordinarily glob() continues to find matches.
GLOB_MARK
-
Each pathname that is a directory that matches the pattern has a slash appended.
GLOB_NOCHECK
-
If the pattern does not match any pathname, then glob() returns a list consisting of only the pattern. If
GLOB_QUOTE
is set, its effect is present in the pattern returned. GLOB_NOSORT
-
By default, the pathnames are sorted in ascending ASCII order; this flag prevents that sorting (speeding up glob()).
The FreeBSD extensions to the POSIX standard are the following flags:
GLOB_BRACE
-
Pre-process the string to expand
{pat,pat,...} strings like csh(1). The pattern '{}' is left unexpanded for historical reasons (and csh(1) does the same thing to ease typing of find(1) patterns).
GLOB_NOMAGIC
-
Same as
GLOB_NOCHECK
but it only returns the pattern if it does not contain any of the special characters "*", "?" or "[".NOMAGIC
is provided to simplify implementing the historic csh(1) globbing behaviour and should probably not be used anywhere else. GLOB_QUOTE
-
Use the backslash ('\') character for quoting: every occurrence of a backslash followed by a character in the pattern is replaced by that character, avoiding any special interpretation of the character.
GLOB_TILDE
-
Expand patterns that start with '~' to user name home directories.
GLOB_CSH
-
For convenience,
GLOB_CSH
is a synonym forGLOB_BRACE | GLOB_NOMAGIC | GLOB_QUOTE | GLOB_TILDE
.
The POSIX provided GLOB_APPEND
, GLOB_DOOFFS
, and the FreeBSD extensions GLOB_ALTDIRFUNC
, and GLOB_MAGCHAR
flags have not been implemented in the Perl version because they involve more complex interaction with the underlying C structures.
DIAGNOSTICS
glob() returns a list of matching paths, possibly zero length. If an error occurred, &File::BSDGlob::GLOB_ERROR will be non-zero and $!
will be set. &File::BSDGlob::GLOB_ERROR is guaranteed to be zero if no error occurred, or one of the following values otherwise:
GLOB_NOSPACE
-
An attempt to allocate memory failed.
GLOB_ABEND
-
The glob was stopped because an error was encountered.
In the case where glob() has found some matching paths, but is interrupted by an error, glob() will return a list of filenames and set &File::BSDGlob::ERROR.
Note that glob() deviates from POSIX and FreeBSD glob(3) behaviour by not considering ENOENT
and ENOTDIR
as errors - glob() will continue processing despite those errors, unless the GLOB_ERR
flag is set.
Be aware that all filenames returned from File::BSDGlob are tainted.
NOTES
If you want to use multiple patterns, e.g.
glob "a* b*"
, you should probably throw them in a set as inglob "{a*,b*}
. This is because the argument to glob isn't subjected to parsing by the C shell. Remember that you can use a backslash to escape things.Win32 users should use the real slash. If you really want to use backslashes, consider using Sarathy's File::DosGlob, which comes with the standard Perl distribution.
AUTHOR
The Perl interface was written by Nathan Torkington (gnat@frii.com), and is released under the artistic license. Further modifications were made by Greg Bacon <gbacon@cs.uah.edu>. The C glob code has the following copyright:
Copyright (c) 1989, 1993 The Regents of the University of California.
All rights reserved. This code is derived from software contributed
to Berkeley by Guido van Rossum.
For redistribution of the C glob code, read the copyright notice in the file bsd_glob.c, which is part of the File::BSDGlob source distribution.
2 POD Errors
The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:
- Around line 200:
Unterminated C<...> sequence
- Around line 280:
You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'