NAME¶
Env::Path - Advanced operations on path variables
SYNOPSIS¶
use Env::Path;
# basic usage
my $manpath = Env::Path->MANPATH;
$manpath->Append('/opt/samba/man');
for ($manpath->List) { print $_, "\n" };
# similar to above using the "implicit object" shorthand
Env::Path->MANPATH;
MANPATH->Append('/opt/samba/man');
for (MANPATH->List) { print $_, "\n" };
# one-shot use
Env::Path->PATH->Append('/usr/sbin');
# change instances of /usr/local/bin to an architecture-specific dir
Env::Path->PATH->Replace('/usr/local/bin', "/usr/local/$ENV{PLATFORM}/bin");
# more complex use (different names for same semantics)
my $libpath;
if ($^O =~ /aix/) {
$libpath = Env::Path->LIBPATH;
} else {
$libpath = Env::Path->LD_LIBRARY_PATH;
}
$libpath->Assign(qw(/usr/lib /usr/openwin/lib));
$libpath->Prepend('/usr/ucblib') unless $libpath->Contains('/usr/ucblib');
$libpath->InsertAfter('/usr/ucblib', '/xx/yy/zz');
$libpath->Uniqify;
$libpath->DeleteNonexistent;
$libpath->Remove('/usr/local/lib');
print $libpath->Name, ":";
for ($libpath->List) { print " $_" };
print "\n";
# simplest usage: bless all existing EV's as Env::Path objects
use Env::Path ':all';
my @cats = PATH->Whence('cat*');
print "@cats\n";
DESCRIPTION¶
Env::Path presents an object-oriented interface to
path variables,
defined as that subclass of
environment variables which name an ordered
list of filesystem elements separated by a platform-standard
separator
(typically ':' on UNIX and ';' on Windows).
Of course, core Perl constructs such
$ENV{PATH} .= ":/usr/local/bin";
will suffice for most uses. Env::Path is for the others; cases where you need to
insert or remove interior path entries, strip redundancies, operate on a
pathvar without having to know whether the current platform uses ":"
or ";", operate on a pathvar which may have a different name on
different platforms, etc.
The OO interface is slightly unusual in that the environment variable is itself
the object and the constructor is Env::Path->
AUTOLOAD(); thus
Env::Path->MANPATH;
will bless $ENV{MANPATH} into its package while leaving it otherwise unmodified
(with the exception of possible autovivification). Unlike most objects, this
is a scalar and thus can have only one attribute; its value.
In other words, Env::Path simply defines a set of methods a path variable may
call on itself without changing the variable's value or other semantics.
Also, while the object reference may be assigned and used in the normal style
my $path = Env::Path->CLASSPATH;
$path->Append('/opt/foo/classes.jar');
a shorthand is also available:
Env::Path->CLASSPATH;
CLASSPATH->Append('/opt/foo/classes.jar');
I.e. the name of the path variable may be used as a proxy for its object
reference. This may be done at 'use' time too:
use Env::Path qw(PATH CLASSPATH); # or qw(:all) to bless all EV's
CLASSPATH->Append('/opt/foo/classes.jar');
The design is intended to make use of this module as lightweight as possible.
Rather than creating a new object to manage an environment variable, the
environment variable is provided a set of methods for self-modification but is
otherwise left undisturbed and can be used in all normal ways.
CLASS METHODS¶
- •
- <CONSTRUCTOR>
The constructor may have any name; it's assumed to name a path
variable as defined above. Returns the object reference.
- •
- PathSeparator
Returns or sets the platform-specific path separator character, by default
: on open platforms and ; on monopolistic ones.
INSTANCE METHODS¶
Unless otherwise indicated these methods return the object reference, allowing
method calls to be strung together. All methods which take lists join them
together using the value of "Env::Path->PathSeparator".
- •
- Name
Returns the name of the pathvar.
- •
- Contains
Returns true iff the specified entry is present in the pathvar.
- •
- Assign
Takes a list and sets the pathvar to that value, separated by the current
PathSeparator.
- •
- List
Returns the current path in list format.
- •
- Prepend
For each entry in the supplied list, removes it from the pathvar if present
and prepends it, thus ensuring that it's present exactly once and at the
front.
- •
- Append
Analogous to Prepend.
- •
- InsertBefore
Takes a <dirname> and a list, inserts the list just before the first
instance of the <dirname>. If dirname is not found, works
just like Prepend. As with Prepend, duplicates of the
supplied entries are removed.
- •
- InsertAfter
Analogous to InsertBefore
- •
- Remove
Removes the specified entries from the path.
- •
- Replace
Takes a /pattern/ and a list. Traverses the path and replaces all entries
which match the pattern with the concatenated list entries.
- •
- ListNonexistent
Returns a list of all entries which do not exist as filesystem
entities.
- •
- DeleteNonexistent
Removes from the path all entries which do not exist as filesystem
entities.
- •
- Uniqify
Removes redundant entries (the 2nd through nth instances of each
entry).
- •
- Whence
Takes a pattern and returns an ordered list of all filenames found along the
path which match it and are executable.
- •
- Shell
Returns a string suitable for passing to a shell which would set and export
the pathvar to its current value within the shell context.
NOTES¶
- •
- No provision is made for path variables which are not also
environment variables, a situation which is technically possible but quite
rare.
- •
- Except where necessary no assumption is made that path
entries should be directories, because pathvars like CLASSPATH may contain
"virtual dirs" such as zip/jar files. For instance the
DeleteNonexistent method does not remove entries which are files.
In Perl terms the test applied is "-e", not "-d".
- •
- The shorthand notation for pathvar FOO is
implemented by hacking @FOO::ISA, so there's a slight
risk of namespace collision if your code also creates packages with
all-upper-case names. No packages are created unless the shorthand
notation is employed.
- •
- There's some cute code in the Env module by Gregor N. Purdy
for splitting pathvars into arrays using ties. I'd love to be able to take
advantage of that, and it pains me to do the same thing (and not as well)
here rather than using Env. Unfortunately it's a newish feature (5.6.0?
5.005? 5.6.1?) in Env and I don't want Env::Path to be "tied" to
the very latest Perls.
WORKS ON¶
UNIX and Windows.
AUTHOR¶
David Boyce <dsbperl AT boyski.com>
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (c) 2000-2001 David Boyce. All rights reserved. This Perl program is
free software; you may redistribute and/or modify it under the same terms as
Perl itself.
SEE ALSO¶
perl(1),
perlobj(1), Env::
Array(3)