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+=head1 NAME
+
+File::Basename - Parse file paths into directory, filename and suffix.
+
+=head1 SYNOPSIS
+
+ use File::Basename;
+
+ ($name,$path,$suffix) = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist);
+ $name = fileparse($fullname,@suffixlist);
+
+ $basename = basename($fullname,@suffixlist);
+ $dirname = dirname($fullname);
+
+
+=head1 DESCRIPTION
+
+These routines allow you to parse file paths into their directory, filename
+and suffix.
+
+B<NOTE>: C<dirname()> and C<basename()> emulate the behaviours, and
+quirks, of the shell and C functions of the same name. See each
+function's documentation for details. If your concern is just parsing
+paths it is safer to use L<File::Spec>'s C<splitpath()> and
+C<splitdir()> methods.
+
+It is guaranteed that
+
+ # Where $path_separator is / for Unix, \ for Windows, etc...
+ dirname($path) . $path_separator . basename($path);
+
+is equivalent to the original path for all systems but VMS.
+
+
+=cut
+
+
+package File::Basename;
+
+# A bit of juggling to insure that C<use re 'taint';> always works, since
+# File::Basename is used during the Perl build, when the re extension may
+# not be available.
+BEGIN {
+ unless (eval { require re; })
+ { eval ' sub re::import { $^H |= 0x00100000; } ' } # HINT_RE_TAINT
+ import re 'taint';
+}
+
+
+use strict;
+use 5.006;
+use warnings;
+our(@ISA, @EXPORT, $VERSION, $Fileparse_fstype, $Fileparse_igncase);
+require Exporter;
+@ISA = qw(Exporter);
+@EXPORT = qw(fileparse fileparse_set_fstype basename dirname);
+$VERSION = "2.77";
+
+fileparse_set_fstype($^O);
+
+
+=over 4
+
+=item C<fileparse>
+X<fileparse>
+
+ my($filename, $directories, $suffix) = fileparse($path);
+ my($filename, $directories, $suffix) = fileparse($path, @suffixes);
+ my $filename = fileparse($path, @suffixes);
+
+The C<fileparse()> routine divides a file path into its $directories, $filename
+and (optionally) the filename $suffix.
+
+$directories contains everything up to and including the last
+directory separator in the $path including the volume (if applicable).
+The remainder of the $path is the $filename.
+
+ # On Unix returns ("baz", "/foo/bar/", "")
+ fileparse("/foo/bar/baz");
+
+ # On Windows returns ("baz", "C:\foo\bar\", "")
+ fileparse("C:\foo\bar\baz");
+
+ # On Unix returns ("", "/foo/bar/baz/", "")
+ fileparse("/foo/bar/baz/");
+
+If @suffixes are given each element is a pattern (either a string or a
+C<qr//>) matched against the end of the $filename. The matching
+portion is removed and becomes the $suffix.
+
+ # On Unix returns ("baz", "/foo/bar/", ".txt")
+ fileparse("/foo/bar/baz.txt", qr/\.[^.]*/);
+
+If type is non-Unix (see C<fileparse_set_fstype()>) then the pattern
+matching for suffix removal is performed case-insensitively, since
+those systems are not case-sensitive when opening existing files.
+
+You are guaranteed that C<$directories . $filename . $suffix> will
+denote the same location as the original $path.
+
+=cut
+
+
+sub fileparse {
+ my($fullname,@suffices) = @_;
+
+ unless (defined $fullname) {
+ require Carp;
+ Carp::croak("fileparse(): need a valid pathname");
+ }
+
+ my $orig_type = '';
+ my($type,$igncase) = ($Fileparse_fstype, $Fileparse_igncase);
+
+ my($taint) = substr($fullname,0,0); # Is $fullname tainted?
+
+ if ($type eq "VMS" and $fullname =~ m{/} ) {
+ # We're doing Unix emulation
+ $orig_type = $type;
+ $type = 'Unix';
+ }
+
+ my($dirpath, $basename);
+
+ if (grep { $type eq $_ } qw(MSDOS DOS MSWin32 Epoc)) {
+ ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^((?:.*[:\\\/])?)(.*)/s);
+ $dirpath .= '.\\' unless $dirpath =~ /[\\\/]\z/;
+ }
+ elsif ($type eq "OS2") {
+ ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ m#^((?:.*[:\\/])?)(.*)#s);
+ $dirpath = './' unless $dirpath; # Can't be 0
+ $dirpath .= '/' unless $dirpath =~ m#[\\/]\z#;
+ }
+ elsif ($type eq "MacOS") {
+ ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^(.*:)?(.*)/s);
+ $dirpath = ':' unless $dirpath;
+ }
+ elsif ($type eq "AmigaOS") {
+ ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /(.*[:\/])?(.*)/s);
+ $dirpath = './' unless $dirpath;
+ }
+ elsif ($type eq 'VMS' ) {
+ ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ /^(.*[:>\]])?(.*)/s);
+ $dirpath ||= ''; # should always be defined
+ }
+ else { # Default to Unix semantics.
+ ($dirpath,$basename) = ($fullname =~ m{^(.*/)?(.*)}s);
+ if ($orig_type eq 'VMS' and $fullname =~ m{^(/[^/]+/000000(/|$))(.*)}) {
+ # dev:[000000] is top of VMS tree, similar to Unix '/'
+ # so strip it off and treat the rest as "normal"
+ my $devspec = $1;
+ my $remainder = $3;
+ ($dirpath,$basename) = ($remainder =~ m{^(.*/)?(.*)}s);
+ $dirpath ||= ''; # should always be defined
+ $dirpath = $devspec.$dirpath;
+ }
+ $dirpath = './' unless $dirpath;
+ }
+
+
+ my $tail = '';
+ my $suffix = '';
+ if (@suffices) {
+ foreach $suffix (@suffices) {
+ my $pat = ($igncase ? '(?i)' : '') . "($suffix)\$";
+ if ($basename =~ s/$pat//s) {
+ $taint .= substr($suffix,0,0);
+ $tail = $1 . $tail;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ # Ensure taint is propgated from the path to its pieces.
+ $tail .= $taint;
+ wantarray ? ($basename .= $taint, $dirpath .= $taint, $tail)
+ : ($basename .= $taint);
+}
+
+
+
+=item C<basename>
+X<basename> X<filename>
+
+ my $filename = basename($path);
+ my $filename = basename($path, @suffixes);
+
+This function is provided for compatibility with the Unix shell command
+C<basename(1)>. It does B<NOT> always return the file name portion of a
+path as you might expect. To be safe, if you want the file name portion of
+a path use C<fileparse()>.
+
+C<basename()> returns the last level of a filepath even if the last
+level is clearly directory. In effect, it is acting like C<pop()> for
+paths. This differs from C<fileparse()>'s behaviour.
+
+ # Both return "bar"
+ basename("/foo/bar");
+ basename("/foo/bar/");
+
+@suffixes work as in C<fileparse()> except all regex metacharacters are
+quoted.
+
+ # These two function calls are equivalent.
+ my $filename = basename("/foo/bar/baz.txt", ".txt");
+ my $filename = fileparse("/foo/bar/baz.txt", qr/\Q.txt\E/);
+
+Also note that in order to be compatible with the shell command,
+C<basename()> does not strip off a suffix if it is identical to the
+remaining characters in the filename.
+
+=cut
+
+
+sub basename {
+ my($path) = shift;
+
+ # From BSD basename(1)
+ # The basename utility deletes any prefix ending with the last slash `/'
+ # character present in string (after first stripping trailing slashes)
+ _strip_trailing_sep($path);
+
+ my($basename, $dirname, $suffix) = fileparse( $path, map("\Q$_\E",@_) );
+
+ # From BSD basename(1)
+ # The suffix is not stripped if it is identical to the remaining
+ # characters in string.
+ if( length $suffix and !length $basename ) {
+ $basename = $suffix;
+ }
+
+ # Ensure that basename '/' == '/'
+ if( !length $basename ) {
+ $basename = $dirname;
+ }
+
+ return $basename;
+}
+
+
+
+=item C<dirname>
+X<dirname>
+
+This function is provided for compatibility with the Unix shell
+command C<dirname(1)> and has inherited some of its quirks. In spite of
+its name it does B<NOT> always return the directory name as you might
+expect. To be safe, if you want the directory name of a path use
+C<fileparse()>.
+
+Only on VMS (where there is no ambiguity between the file and directory
+portions of a path) and AmigaOS (possibly due to an implementation quirk in
+this module) does C<dirname()> work like C<fileparse($path)>, returning just the
+$directories.
+
+ # On VMS and AmigaOS
+ my $directories = dirname($path);
+
+When using Unix or MSDOS syntax this emulates the C<dirname(1)> shell function
+which is subtly different from how C<fileparse()> works. It returns all but
+the last level of a file path even if the last level is clearly a directory.
+In effect, it is not returning the directory portion but simply the path one
+level up acting like C<chop()> for file paths.
+
+Also unlike C<fileparse()>, C<dirname()> does not include a trailing slash on
+its returned path.
+
+ # returns /foo/bar. fileparse() would return /foo/bar/
+ dirname("/foo/bar/baz");
+
+ # also returns /foo/bar despite the fact that baz is clearly a
+ # directory. fileparse() would return /foo/bar/baz/
+ dirname("/foo/bar/baz/");
+
+ # returns '.'. fileparse() would return 'foo/'
+ dirname("foo/");
+
+Under VMS, if there is no directory information in the $path, then the
+current default device and directory is used.
+
+=cut
+
+
+sub dirname {
+ my $path = shift;
+
+ my($type) = $Fileparse_fstype;
+
+ if( $type eq 'VMS' and $path =~ m{/} ) {
+ # Parse as Unix
+ local($File::Basename::Fileparse_fstype) = '';
+ return dirname($path);
+ }
+
+ my($basename, $dirname) = fileparse($path);
+
+ if ($type eq 'VMS') {
+ $dirname ||= $ENV{DEFAULT};
+ }
+ elsif ($type eq 'MacOS') {
+ if( !length($basename) && $dirname !~ /^[^:]+:\z/) {
+ _strip_trailing_sep($dirname);
+ ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname;
+ }
+ $dirname .= ":" unless $dirname =~ /:\z/;
+ }
+ elsif (grep { $type eq $_ } qw(MSDOS DOS MSWin32 OS2)) {
+ _strip_trailing_sep($dirname);
+ unless( length($basename) ) {
+ ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname;
+ _strip_trailing_sep($dirname);
+ }
+ }
+ elsif ($type eq 'AmigaOS') {
+ if ( $dirname =~ /:\z/) { return $dirname }
+ chop $dirname;
+ $dirname =~ s{[^:/]+\z}{} unless length($basename);
+ }
+ else {
+ _strip_trailing_sep($dirname);
+ unless( length($basename) ) {
+ ($basename,$dirname) = fileparse $dirname;
+ _strip_trailing_sep($dirname);
+ }
+ }
+
+ $dirname;
+}
+
+
+# Strip the trailing path separator.
+sub _strip_trailing_sep {
+ my $type = $Fileparse_fstype;
+
+ if ($type eq 'MacOS') {
+ $_[0] =~ s/([^:]):\z/$1/s;
+ }
+ elsif (grep { $type eq $_ } qw(MSDOS DOS MSWin32 OS2)) {
+ $_[0] =~ s/([^:])[\\\/]*\z/$1/;
+ }
+ else {
+ $_[0] =~ s{(.)/*\z}{$1}s;
+ }
+}
+
+
+=item C<fileparse_set_fstype>
+X<filesystem>
+
+ my $type = fileparse_set_fstype();
+ my $previous_type = fileparse_set_fstype($type);
+
+Normally File::Basename will assume a file path type native to your current
+operating system (ie. /foo/bar style on Unix, \foo\bar on Windows, etc...).
+With this function you can override that assumption.
+
+Valid $types are "MacOS", "VMS", "AmigaOS", "OS2", "RISCOS",
+"MSWin32", "DOS" (also "MSDOS" for backwards bug compatibility),
+"Epoc" and "Unix" (all case-insensitive). If an unrecognized $type is
+given "Unix" will be assumed.
+
+If you've selected VMS syntax, and the file specification you pass to
+one of these routines contains a "/", they assume you are using Unix
+emulation and apply the Unix syntax rules instead, for that function
+call only.
+
+=back
+
+=cut
+
+
+BEGIN {
+
+my @Ignore_Case = qw(MacOS VMS AmigaOS OS2 RISCOS MSWin32 MSDOS DOS Epoc);
+my @Types = (@Ignore_Case, qw(Unix));
+
+sub fileparse_set_fstype {
+ my $old = $Fileparse_fstype;
+
+ if (@_) {
+ my $new_type = shift;
+
+ $Fileparse_fstype = 'Unix'; # default
+ foreach my $type (@Types) {
+ $Fileparse_fstype = $type if $new_type =~ /^$type/i;
+ }
+
+ $Fileparse_igncase =
+ (grep $Fileparse_fstype eq $_, @Ignore_Case) ? 1 : 0;
+ }
+
+ return $old;
+}
+
+}
+
+
+1;
+
+
+=head1 SEE ALSO
+
+L<dirname(1)>, L<basename(1)>, L<File::Spec>