NAME¶
Directory::Scratch - Easy-to-use self-cleaning scratch space.
SYNOPSIS¶
When writing test suites for modules that operate on files, it's often
inconvenient to correctly create a platform-independent temporary storage
space, manipulate files inside it, then clean it up when the test exits. The
inconvenience usually results in tests that don't work everwhere, or worse, no
tests at all.
This module aims to eliminate that problem by making it easy to do things right.
Example:
use Directory::Scratch;
my $temp = Directory::Scratch->new();
my $dir = $temp->mkdir('foo/bar');
my @lines= qw(This is a file with lots of lines);
my $file = $temp->touch('foo/bar/baz', @lines);
my $fh = openfile($file);
print {$fh} "Here is another line.\n";
close $fh;
$temp->delete('foo/bar/baz');
undef $temp; # everything else is removed
# Directory::Scratch objects stringify to base
$temp->touch('foo');
ok(-e "$temp/foo"); # /tmp/xYz837/foo should exist
EXPORT¶
The first argument to the module is optional, but if specified, it's interperted
as the name of the OS whose file naming semantics you want to use with
Directory::Scratch. For example, if you choose "Unix", then you can
provide paths to Directory::Scratch in UNIX-form ('foo/bar/baz') on any
platform. Unix is the default if you don't choose anything explicitly.
If you want to use the local platform's flavor (not recommended), specify an
empty import list:
use Directory::Scratch ''; # use local path flavor
Recognized platforms (from File::Spec):
- Mac
- UNIX
- Win32
- VMS
- OS2
The names are case sensitive, since they simply specify which
"File::Spec::" module to use when splitting the path.
EXAMPLE¶
use Directory::Scratch 'Win32';
my $tmp = Directory::Scratch->new();
$tmp->touch("foo\\bar\\baz"); # and so on
METHODS¶
The file arguments to these methods are always relative to the temporary
directory. If you specify "touch('/etc/passwd')", then a file called
"/tmp/whatever/etc/passwd" will be created instead.
This means that the program's PWD is ignored (for these methods), and that a
leading "/" on the filename is meaningless (and will cause
portability problems).
Finally, whenever a filename or path is returned, it is a Path::Class object
rather than a string containing the filename. Usually, this object will act
just like the string, but to be extra-safe, call
"$path->stringify" to ensure that you're really getting a string.
(Some clever modules try to determine whether a variable is a filename or a
filehandle; these modules usually guess wrong when confronted with a
"Path::Class" object.)
new¶
Creates a new temporary directory (via File::Temp and its defaults). When the
object returned by this method goes out of scope, the directory and its
contents are removed.
my $temp = Directory::Scratch->new;
my $another = $temp->new(); # will be under $temp
# some File::Temp arguments get passed through (may be less portable)
my $temp = Directory::Scratch->new(
DIR => '/var/tmp', # be specific about where your files go
CLEANUP => 0, # turn off automatic cleanup
TEMPLATE => 'ScratchDirXXXX', # specify a template for the dirname
);
If "DIR", "CLEANUP", or "TEMPLATE" are omitted,
reasonable defaults are selected. "CLEANUP" is on by default, and
"DIR" is set to "File::Spec-"tmpdir>;
child¶
Creates a new "Directory::Scratch" directory inside the current
"base", copying TEMPLATE and CLEANUP options from the current
instance. Returns a "Directory::Scratch" object.
base¶
Returns the full path of the temporary directory, as a Path::Class object.
Returns the name of the platform that the filenames are being interperted as
(i.e., "Win32" means that this module expects paths like
"\foo\bar", whereas "UNIX" means it expects
"/foo/bar").
If $platform is sepcified, the platform is changed to the passed value.
(Overrides the platform specified at module "use" time, for
this
instance only, not every "Directory::Scratch" object.)
touch($filename, [@lines])¶
Creates a file named $filename, optionally containing the elements of @lines
separated by the output record separator "$\".
The Path::Class object representing the new file is returned if the operation is
successful, an exception is thrown otherwise.
create_tree(\%tree)¶
Creates a file for every key/value pair if the hash, using the key as the
filename and the value as the contents. If the value is an arrayref, the array
is used as the optional @lines argument to "touch". If the value is
a reference to "undef", then a directory is created instead of a
file.
Example:
%tree = ( 'foo' => 'this is foo',
'bar/baz' => 'this is baz inside bar',
'lines' => [qw|this file contains 5 lines|],
'dir' => \undef,
);
$tmp->create_tree(\%tree);
In this case, two directories are created, "dir" and "bar";
and three files are created, "foo", "baz" (inside
"bar"), and "lines". "foo" and "baz"
contain a single line, while "lines" contains 5 lines.
openfile($filename)¶
Opens $filename for writing and reading ("+>"), and returns the
filehandle. If $filename already exists, it will be truncated. It's up to you
to take care of flushing/closing.
In list context, returns both the filehandle and the filename "($fh,
$path)".
mkdir($directory)¶
Creates a directory (and its parents, if necessary) inside the temporary
directory and returns its name. Any leading "/" on the directory
name is ignored; all directories are created inside the "base".
The full path of this directory is returned if the operation is successful,
otherwise an exception is thrown.
tempfile([$path])¶
Returns an empty filehandle + filename in $path. If $path is omitted, the base
directory is assumed.
See File::Temp::tempfile.
my($fh,$name) = $scratch->tempfile;
exists($file)¶
Returns the file's real (system) path if $file exists, undefined otherwise.
Example:
my $path = $tmp->exists($file);
if(defined $path){
say "Looks like you have a file at $path!";
open(my $fh, '>>', $path) or die $!;
print {$fh} "add another line\n";
close $fh or die $!;
}
else {
say "No file called $file."
}
stat($file)¶
Stats $file. In list context, returns the list returned by the "stat"
builtin. In scalar context, returns a "File::stat" object.
read($file)¶
Returns the contents of $file. In array context, returns a list of chompped
lines. In scalar context, returns the raw octets of the file (with any
trailing newline removed).
If you wrote the file with $, set, you'll want to set $/ to $, when reading the
file back in:
local $, = '!';
$tmp->touch('foo', qw{foo bar baz}); # writes "foo!bar!baz!" to disk
scalar $tmp->read('foo') # returns "foo!bar!baz!"
$tmp->read('foo') # returns ("foo!bar!baz!")
local $/ = '!';
$tmp->read('foo') # returns ("foo", "bar", "baz")
write($file, @lines)¶
Replaces the contents of file with @lines. Each line will be ended with a
"\n", or $, if it is defined. The file will be created if necessary.
append($file, @lines)¶
Appends @lines to $file, as per "write".
randfile()¶
Generates a file with random string data in it. If String::Random is available,
it will be used to generate the file's data. Takes 0, 1, or 2 arguments -
default size, max size, or size range.
A max size of 0 will cause an exception to be thrown.
Examples:
my $file = $temp->randfile(); # size is between 1024 and 131072
my $file = $temp->randfile( 4192 ); # size is below 4129
my $file = $temp->randfile( 1000000, 4000000 );
link($from, $to)¶
Symlinks a file in the temporary directory to another file in the temporary
directory.
Note: symlinks are not supported on Win32. Portable code must not use this
method. (The method will "croak" if it won't work.)
ls([$path])¶
Returns a list (in no particular order) of all files below $path. If $path is
omitted, the root is assumed. Note that directories are not returned.
If $path does not exist, an exception is thrown.
delete($path)¶
Deletes the named file or directory at $path.
If the path is removed successfully, the method returns true. Otherwise, an
exception is thrown.
(Note: delete means "unlink" for a file and "rmdir" for a
directory. "delete"-ing an unempty directory is an error.)
chmod($octal_permissions, @files)¶
Sets the permissions $octal_permissions on @files, returning the number of files
successfully changed. Note that '0644' is "--w----r-T", not
"-rw-r--r--". You need to pass in "oct('0644')" or a
literal 0644 for this method to DWIM. The method is just a passthru to perl's
built-in "chmod" function, so see "perldoc -f chmod" for
full details.
cleanup¶
Forces an immediate cleanup of the current object's directory. See File::Path's
rmtree(). It is not safe to use the object after this method is called.
ENVIRONMENT¶
If the "PERL_DIRECTORYSCRATCH_CLEANUP" variable is set to 0, automatic
cleanup will be suppressed.
PATCHES¶
Commentary, patches, etc. are most welcome. If you send a patch, try patching
the git version available from:
git://git.jrock.us/Directory-Scratch
<
git://git.jrock.us/Directory-Scratch>.
You can check out a copy by running:
git clone git://git.jrock.us/Directory-Scratch
Then you can use git to commit changes and then e-mail me a patch, or you can
publish the repository and ask me to pull the changes. More information about
git is available from
<
http://git.or.cz/>
SEE ALSO¶
L<File::Temp>
L<File::Path>
L<File::Spec>
L<Path::Class>
BUGS¶
Please report any bugs or feature through the web interface at
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Directory-Scratch
<
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Directory-Scratch>.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS¶
Thanks to Al Tobey (TOBEYA) for some excellent patches, notably:
- "child"
- Random Files ("randfile")
- "tempfile"
- "openfile"
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE¶
Copyright 2006 Jonathan Rockway, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.