Provided by: libfile-util-perl_4.161950-1_all bug

NAME

       File::Util - Easy, versatile, portable file handling

VERSION

       version 4.161950

DESCRIPTION

       File::Util provides a comprehensive toolbox of utilities to automate all kinds of common
       tasks on files and directories.  Its purpose is to do so in the most portable manner
       possible so that users of this module won't have to worry about whether their programs
       will work on other operating systems and/or architectures.  It works on Linux, Windows,
       Mac, BSD, Unix and others.

       File::Util is written purely in Perl, and requires no compiler or make utility on your
       system in order to install and run it.  It loads a minimal amount of code when used, only
       pulling in support for lesser-used methods on demand.  It has no dependencies other than
       what comes installed with Perl itself.

       File::Util also aims to be as backward compatible as possible, running without problems on
       Perl installations as old as 5.006.  You are encouraged to run File::Util on Perl version
       5.8 and above.

       After browsing this document, please have a look at the other documentation.  (See
       DOCUMENTATION section below.)

SYNOPSIS

          # use File::Util in your program
          use File::Util;

          # create a new File::Util object
          my $f = File::Util->new();

          # read file into a variable
          my $content = $f->load_file( 'some_file.txt' );

          # write content to a file
          $f->write_file( 'some_other_file.txt' => 'Hello world!' );

          # get the contents of a directory, 3 levels deep
          my @songs = $f->list_dir( '~/Music' => { recurse => 1, max_depth => 3 } );

DOCUMENTATION

       You can do much more with File::Util than the examples above.  For an explanation of all
       the features available to you, take a look at these other reference materials:

       Examples
           The File::Util::Manual::Examples document has a long list of small, reusable code
           snippets and techniques to use in your own programs.  This is the "cheat sheet", and
           is a great place to get started quickly.  Almost everything you need is here.

       Complete API Reference
           The File::Util::Manual is the complete reference document explaining every available
           feature and object method.  Use this to look up the full information on any given
           feature when the examples aren't enough.

       Cookbook
           The File::Util::Cookbook contains examples of complete, working programs that use
           File::Util to easily accomplish tasks which require file handling.

BASIC USAGE

   Getting Started
          # use File::Util in your program
          use File::Util;

          # ...you can optionally enable File::Util's diagnostic error messages:
          # (see File::Util::Manual section regarding diagnostics)
          use File::Util qw( :diag );

          # create a new File::Util object
          my $f = File::Util->new();

          # ...you can enable diagnostics for individual objects:
          $f = File::Util->new( diag => 1 );

   File Operations
          # load file content into a scalar variable as raw text
          my $content = $f->load_file( 'somefile.txt' );

          # read a binary file the same way
          my $binary_content = $f->load_file( 'barking-cat.mp4' );

          # write a raw text file
          $f->write_file( 'somefile.txt' => $content );

          # ...and write a binary file, using some other options as well
          $f->write_file(
             'llama.jpg' => $picture_data => { binmode => 1, bitmask => oct 644 }
          );

          # ...or write a file with UTF-8 encoding (unicode support)
          $f->write_file( 'encoded.txt' => qq(\x{c0}) => { binmode => 'utf8' } );

          # load a file into an array, line by line
          my @lines = $f->load_file( 'file.txt' => { as_lines => 1 } );

          # see if you have permission to write to a file, then append to it
          if ( $f->is_writable( 'captains.log' ) ) {

             my $fh = $f->open_handle( 'captains.log' => 'append' );

             print $fh "Captain's log, stardate 41153.7.  Our destination is...";

             close $fh or die $!;
          }
          else { # ...or warn the crew

             warn "Trouble on the bridge, the Captain can't access his log!";
          }

          # get the number of lines in a file
          my $log_line_count = $f->line_count( '/var/log/messages' );

   File Handles
          # get an open file handle for reading
          my $fh = $f->open_handle( 'Ian likes cats.txt' => 'read' );

          while ( my $line = <$fh> ) { # read the file, line by line
             # ... do stuff
          }

          # get an open file handle for writing the same way
          $fh = $f->open_handle( 'John prefers dachshunds.txt' => 'write' );

          # You add the option to turn on UTF-8 strict encoding for your reads/writes
          $fh = $f->open_handle(
             'John prefers dachshunds.txt' => 'write' => { binmode => 'utf8' }
          );

          print $fh "Bob is happy! \N{U+263A}"; # << unicode smiley face!

          # you can use sysopen to get low-level with your file handles if needed
          $fh = $f->open_handle(
             'alderaan.txt' => 'rwclobber' => { use_sysopen => 1 }
          );

          syswrite $fh, "that's no moon";

          # ...You can use any of these syswrite modes with open_handle():
          # read, write, append, rwcreate, rwclobber, rwappend, rwupdate, and trunc

       PLEASE NOTE that as of Perl 5.23, it is deprecated to mix system IO
       (sysopen/syswrite/sysread/sysseek) with utf8 binmode (see perldoc perlport).  As such,
       File::Util will no longer allow you to do this after version 4.132140.  Please see notes
       on UTF-8 and encoding further below.

          # ...THIS WILL NOW FAIL!
          $f->open_handle(
             'somefile.txt' => 'write' => { use_sysopen => 1, binmode => 'utf8' }
          );

   Directories
          # get a listing of files, recursively, skipping directories
          my @files = $f->list_dir( '/var/tmp' => { files_only => 1, recurse => 1 } );

          # get a listing of text files, recursively
          my @textfiles = $f->list_dir(
             '/var/tmp' => {
                files_match => qr/\.txt$/,
                files_only  => 1,
                recurse     => 1,
             }
          );

          # walk a directory, using an anonymous function or function ref as a callback
          $f->list_dir( '/home/larry' => {
             recurse  => 1,
             callback => sub {
                my ( $selfdir, $subdirs, $files ) = @_;
                # do stuff ...
             },
          } );

          # get an entire directory tree as a hierarchal datastructure reference
          my $tree = $f->list_dir( '/my/podcasts' => { as_tree => 1 } );

   Getting Information About Files
          print 'My file has a bitmask of ' . $f->bitmask( 'my.file' );

          print 'My file is a ' . join(', ', $f->file_type( 'my.file' )) . " file.";

          warn 'This file is binary!' if $f->is_bin( 'my.file' );

          print 'My file was last modified on ' .
             scalar localtime $f->last_modified( 'my.file' );

   Getting Information About Your System's IO Capabilities
          # Does your running Perl support unicode?
          print 'I support unicode' if $f->can_utf8;

          # Can your system use file locking?
          print 'I can use flock' if $f->can_flock;

          # The correct directory separator for your system
          print 'The correct directory separator for this system is ' . $f->SL;

          # Does your platform require binmode for all IO?
          print 'I always need binmode' if $f->needs_binmode;

          # Is your system an EBCDIC platform?  (see perldoc perlebcdic)
          print 'This is an EBCDIC platform, so be careful!' if $f->EBCDIC;

       ...See the File::Util::Manual for more details and features like advanced pattern matching
       in directories, callbacks, directory walking, user-definable error handlers, and more.

   File Encoding and UTF-8
       If you want to read/write in UTF-8, you can do that:

          $ftl->load_file( 'file.txt' => $content => { binmode => 'utf8' } );

          $ftl->write_file( 'file.txt' => $content => { binmode => 'utf8' } );

          $ftl->open_handle( 'file.txt' => 'read' => { binmode => 'utf8' } );

          # ...and so on

       Only use "binmode => 'utf8'" for text.

       Encoding and IO layers (sometimes called disciplines) can become complex.  It's not
       something you usually need to worry about unless you wish to really fine tune File::Util's
       behavior beyond what are very suitable, portable defaults, or accomplish very specific
       tasks like encoding conversions.

       You're free to specify any binmode you like, or allow File::Util to use the system's
       default IO layering.  It will automatically use the ":raw" pseudo layer when reading files
       that are binary, unless specifically told to use something different.

       You can control things as shown in the examples below:

          $ftl->load_file( 'file.txt' => $content => { binmode => SPEC } );

          $ftl->write_file( 'file.txt' => $content => { binmode => SPEC } );

          $ftl->open_handle( 'file.txt' => 'read' => { binmode => SPEC } );

       ...where "SPEC" is one or more of any supported IO layers on your system.  Examples might
       include:

       •   ':raw'

       •   ':unix'

       •   ':crlf'

       •   ':stdio'

       •   ':encoding(ENCODING)' with ENCODING's like iso-8859-1, shiftjis, etc

       •   ...and much more

       You can learn about the IO layers available to you and what they do in the PerlIO perldoc.
       Available options have increased over the years, and are likely subject to continued
       evolution.  Consult the PerlIO and Encode documentation as your authoritative source of
       info on what layers to use.

PERFORMANCE

       File::Util consists of a set of smaller modules, but only loads the ones it needs when it
       needs them.  It offers a comparatively fast load-up time, so using File::Util doesn't
       bloat your code's resource footprint.

       Additionally, File::Util has been optimized to run fast.  In many scenarios it does more
       and still out-performs other popular IO modules.  Benchmarking tools are included as part
       of the File::Util installation package.

       (See the benchmarking and profiling scripts that are included as part of this
       distribution.)

METHODS

       File::Util exposes the following public methods.

       Each of which are covered in the File::Util::Manual, which has more room for the detailed
       explanation that is provided there.

       This is just an itemized table of contents for HTML POD readers.  For those viewing this
       document in a text terminal, open perldoc to the "File::Util::Manual".

       atomize_path         (see atomize_path)
       bitmask              (see bitmask)
       can_flock            (see can_flock)
       can_utf8             (see can_utf8)
       created              (see created)
       default_path         (see default_path)
       diagnostic           (see diagnostic)
       ebcdic               (see ebcdic)
       escape_filename      (see escape_filename)
       existent             (see existent)
       file_type            (see file_type)
       flock_rules          (see flock_rules)
       is_bin               (see is_bin)
       is_readable          (see is_readable)
       is_writable          (see is_writable)
       last_access          (see last_access)
       last_changed         (see last_changed)
       last_modified        (see last_modified)
       line_count           (see line_count)
       list_dir             (see list_dir)
       load_dir             (see load_dir)
       load_file            (see load_file)
       make_dir             (see make_dir)
       abort_depth          (see abort_depth)
       needs_binmode        (see needs_binmode)
       new                  (see new)
       onfail               (see onfail)
       open_handle          (see open_handle)
       read_limit           (see read_limit)
       return_path          (see return_path)
       size                 (see size)
       split_path           (see split_path)
       strict_path          (see strict_path)
       strip_path           (see strip_path)
       touch                (see touch)
       trunc                (see trunc)
       unlock_open_handle   (see unlock_open_handle)
       use_flock            (see use_flock)
       valid_filename       (see valid_filename)
       write_file           (see write_file)

EXPORTED SYMBOLS

       Exports nothing by default.  File::Util fully respects your namespace.  You can, however,
       ask it for certain things (below).

   EXPORT_OK
       The following symbols comprise @File::Util::EXPORT_OK, and as such are available for
       import to your namespace only upon request.  They can be used either as object methods or
       like regular subroutines in your program.

          -  atomize_path      -  can_flock         -  can_utf8
          -  created           -  default_path      -  diagnostic
          -  ebcdic            -  escape_filename   -  existent
          -  file_type         -  is_bin            -  is_readable
          -  is_writable       -  last_access       -  last_changed
          -  last_modified     -  needs_binmode     -  strict_path
          -  return_path       -  size              -  split_path
          -  strip_path        -  valid_filename    -  NL and S L

       To get any of these functions/symbols into your namespace without having to use them as
       object methods, use this kind of syntax:

          use File::Util qw( strip_path return_path existent size );

          my $file  = $ARGV[0];
          my $fname = strip_path( $file );
          my $path  = return_path( $file );
          my $size  = size( $file );

          print qq(File "$fname" exists in "$path", and is $size bytes in size)
             if existent( $file );

   EXPORT_TAGS
          :all (imports all of @File::Util::EXPORT_OK to your namespace)

          :diag (imports nothing to your namespace, it just enables diagnostics)

       You can use these tags alone, or in combination with other symbols as shown above.

PREREQUISITES

       None.  There are no external prerequisite modules.
           File::Util only depends on modules that are part of the Core Perl distribution, and
           you don't need a compiler on your system to install it.

       File::Util recommends Perl 5.8.1 or better ...
           You can technically run File::Util on older versions of Perl 5, but it isn't
           recommended, especially if you want unicode support and wish to take advantage of
           File::Util's ability to read and write files using UTF-8 encoding.

           Unicode::UTF8 is also recommended and helps speed things up in several places where
           you might choose to use unicode as described elsewhere in the File::Util::Manual.

INSTALLATION

       To install this module type the following at the command prompt:

          perl Build.PL
          perl Build
          perl Build test
          sudo perl Build install

       On Windows systems, the "sudo" part of the command may be omitted, but you will need to
       run the rest of the install command with Administrative privileges

BUGS

       Send bug reports and patches to the CPAN Bug Tracker for File::Util at rt.cpan.org
       <https://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Name=File%3A%3AUtil>

SUPPORT

       If you want to get help, contact the authors (links below in AUTHORS section)

       I fully endorse <http://www.perlmonks.org> as an excellent source of help with Perl in
       general.

CONTRIBUTING

       The project website for File::Util is at <https://github.com/tommybutler/file-util/wiki>

       The git repository for File::Util is on Github at
       <https://github.com/tommybutler/file-util>

       Clone it at <git://github.com/tommybutler/file-util.git>

       This project was a private endeavor for too long so don't hesitate to pitch in.

CONTRIBUTORS

       The following people have contributed to File::Util in the form of feedback,
       encouragement, recommendations, testing, or assistance with problems either on or offline
       in one form or another.  Listed in no particular order:

       •   John Fields <jfields.cpan.org@spammenot.com>

       •   BrowserUk <browseruk@cpan.org>

       •   Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@cpan.org>

       •   Matt S Trout <perl-stuff@trout.me.uk>

       •   Nicholas Perez <nperez@cpan.org>

       •   David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>

AUTHORS

       Tommy Butler <http://www.atrixnet.com/contact>

       Others Welcome!

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright(C) 2001-2013, Tommy Butler.  All rights reserved.

LICENSE

       This library is free software, you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself. For more details, see the full text of the LICENSE file that is
       included in this distribution.

LIMITATION OF WARRANTY

       This software is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without any warranty;
       without even the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.

       This disclaimer applies to every part of the File::Util distribution.

SEE ALSO

       The rest of the documentation: File::Util::Manual, File::Util::Manual::Examples,
       File::Util::Cookbook

       Other Useful Modules that do similar things: File::Slurp, File::Spec, File::Find::Rule,
       Path::Class, Path::Tiny