File::chdir - a more sensible way to change directories
version 0.1011
use File::chdir;
$CWD = "/foo/bar"; # now in /foo/bar
{
local $CWD = "/moo/baz"; # now in /moo/baz
...
}
# still in /foo/bar!
Perl's chdir()
has the unfortunate problem of being very, very, very global. If any part of your program calls chdir()
or if any library you use calls chdir()
, it changes the current working directory for the *whole* program.
This sucks.
File::chdir gives you an alternative, $CWD
and @CWD
. These two variables combine all the power of chdir()
, File::Spec and Cwd.
Use the $CWD
variable instead of chdir()
and Cwd.
use File::chdir;
$CWD = $dir; # just like chdir($dir)!
print $CWD; # prints the current working directory
It can be localized, and it does the right thing.
$CWD = "/foo"; # it's /foo out here.
{
local $CWD = "/bar"; # /bar in here
}
# still /foo out here!
$CWD
always returns the absolute path in the native form for the operating system.
$CWD
and normal chdir()
work together just fine.
@CWD
represents the current working directory as an array, each directory in the path is an element of the array. This can often make the directory easier to manipulate, and you don't have to fumble with File::Spec->splitpath
and File::Spec->catdir
to make portable code.
# Similar to chdir("/usr/local/src/perl")
@CWD = qw(usr local src perl);
pop, push, shift, unshift and splice all work. pop and push are probably the most useful.
pop @CWD; # same as chdir(File::Spec->updir)
push @CWD, 'some_dir' # same as chdir('some_dir')
@CWD
and $CWD
both work fine together.
*NOTE* Due to a perl bug you can't localize @CWD
. See "CAVEATS" for a work around.
(We omit the use File::chdir
from these examples for terseness)
Here's $CWD
instead of chdir()
:
$CWD = 'foo'; # chdir('foo')
and now instead of Cwd.
print $CWD; # use Cwd; print Cwd::abs_path
you can even do zsh style cd foo bar
$CWD = '/usr/local/foo';
$CWD =~ s/usr/var/;
if you want to localize that, make sure you get the parens right
{
(local $CWD) =~ s/usr/var/;
...
}
It's most useful for writing polite subroutines which don't leave the program in some strange directory:
sub foo {
local $CWD = 'some/other/dir';
...do your work...
}
which is much simpler than the equivalent:
sub foo {
use Cwd;
my $orig_dir = Cwd::getcwd;
chdir('some/other/dir');
...do your work...
chdir($orig_dir);
}
@CWD
comes in handy when you want to start moving up and down the directory hierarchy in a cross-platform manner without having to use File::Spec.
pop @CWD; # chdir(File::Spec->updir);
push @CWD, 'some', 'dir' # chdir(File::Spec->catdir(qw(some dir)));
You can easily change your parent directory:
# chdir from /some/dir/bar/moo to /some/dir/foo/moo
$CWD[-2] = 'foo';
local @CWD
does not work.local @CWD
will not localize @CWD
. This is a bug in Perl, you can't localize tied arrays. As a work around localizing $CWD will effectively localize @CWD.
{
local $CWD;
pop @CWD;
...
}
@CWD
calls chdir()
for each element@CWD = qw/a b c d/;
Internally, Perl clears @CWD
and assigns each element in turn. Thus, this code above will do this:
chdir 'a';
chdir 'a/b';
chdir 'a/b/c';
chdir 'a/b/c/d';
Generally, avoid assigning to @CWD
and just use push and pop instead.
There is currently no way to change the current volume via File::chdir.
$CWD
returns the current directory using native path separators, i.e. \
on Win32. This ensures that $CWD
will compare correctly with directories created using File::Spec. For example:
my $working_dir = File::Spec->catdir( $CWD, "foo" );
$CWD = $working_dir;
doing_stuff_might_chdir();
is( $CWD, $working_dir, "back to original working_dir?" );
Deleting the last item of @CWD
will act like a pop. Deleting from the middle will throw an exception.
delete @CWD[-1]; # OK
delete @CWD[-2]; # Dies
What should %CWD do? Something with volumes?
# chdir to C:\Program Files\Sierra\Half Life ?
$CWD{C} = '\\Program Files\\Sierra\\Half Life';
If an error is encountered when changing $CWD
or @CWD
, one of the following exceptions will be thrown:
* ~Can't delete except at the end of @CWD~ * ~Failed to change directory to '$dir'~
Michael wanted local chdir
to work. p5p didn't. But it wasn't over! Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor? Hell, no!
Abigail and/or Bryan Warnock suggested the $CWD
thing (Michael forgets which). They were right.
The chdir()
override was eliminated in 0.04.
David became co-maintainer with 0.06_01 to fix some chronic Win32 path bugs.
As of 0.08, if changing $CWD
or @CWD
fails to change the directory, an error will be thrown.
File::pushd, File::Spec, Cwd, "chdir" in perlfunc, "Animal House" http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077975/quotes
Please report any bugs or feature requests through the issue tracker at https://github.com/dagolden/File-chdir/issues. You will be notified automatically of any progress on your issue.
This is open source software. The code repository is available for public review and contribution under the terms of the license.
https://github.com/dagolden/File-chdir
git clone https://github.com/dagolden/File-chdir.git
David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>
Michael G. Schwern <schwern@pobox.com>
David Golden <xdg@xdg.me>
Joel Berger <joel.a.berger@gmail.com>
Philippe Bruhat (BooK) <book@cpan.org>
This software is copyright (c) 2016 by Michael G. Schwern and David Golden.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.