Provided by: libparanoid-perl_2.05-2_all bug

NAME

       Paranoid::Glob - Paranoid Glob objects

VERSION

       $Id: lib/Paranoid/Glob.pm, 2.05 2017/02/06 01:48:57 acorliss Exp $

SYNOPSIS

           $obj = Paranoid::Glob->new(
                  globs       => [ qw(/lib/* /sbin/* /etc/foo.conf) ],
                  literals    => [ qw(/tmp/{sadssde-asdfak}) ],
                  );

           print "Expanded globs:\n\t", join("\n\t", @$obj);

           $rv = $obj->addGlobs(qw(/etc/* /bin/*));
           $rv = $obj->addLiterals(qw(/etc/foo.conf));

           $obj->consolidate;

           @existing       = $obj->exists;
           @readable       = $obj->readable;
           @writable       = $obj->writable;
           @executable     = $obj->executable;
           @owned          = $obj->owned;
           @directories    = $obj->directories;
           @files          = $obj->files;
           @symlinks       = $obj->symlinks;
           @pipes          = $obj->pipes;
           @sockets        = $obj->sockets;
           @blockDevs      = $obj->blockDevs;
           @charDevs       = $obj->charDevs;

           $obj->recurse(1, 1);

DESCRIPTION

       The primary purpose of these objects is to allow an easy way to detaint a list of files
       and/or directories while performing shell expansion of names.  It does this with a caveat,
       however.  If a given file or directory name exists on the file system as a literal string
       (regardless of whether it has shell expansion characters in it) it will be added as such.
       It is only filtered through bsd_glob if it does not exist on the file system.

       The objects can also be created with instructions to explicitly treat all names as literal
       strings.

       Any undef or zero-length strings passed in the files array are silently removed.

       As a convenience subsets of the expanded files can be returned based on the common
       stat/lstat tests.  Please note the obvious caveats, however: asking for a list of
       directories will fail to list directories if the effective user does not have privileges
       to read the parent directory, etc.  This is no different than performing '-d', etc.,
       directly.  If you care about privilege/permission issues you shouldn't use these methods.

       An additional method (recurse) falls outside of what a globbing construct should do, but
       it seemed too useful to leave out.

SUBROUTINES/METHODS

   new
           $obj = Paranoid::Glob->new(
                  globs       => [ qw(/lib/* /sbin/* /etc/foo.conf) ],
                  literals    => [ qw(/tmp/{sadssde-asdfak}) ],
                  );

       This class method creates a Paranoid::Glob object.  It can be constructed with optional
       literal strings and/or globs to expand.  All are filtered through a [[:print:]] regex for
       detainting.  Any undefined or zero-length strings are silently removed from the arrays.

       The object reference is a blessed array reference, which is populated with the expanded
       (or literal) globs, making it easy to iterate over the final list.

       If any entry in the globs array fails to detaint this method will return undef instead of
       an object reference.

   addGlobs
           $rv = $obj->addGlobs(qw(/etc/* /bin/*));

       Adds more globs to the object that are detainted and filtered through bsd_glob.  Returns
       false if any strings fail to detaint.  All undefined or zero-length strings are silently
       removed.

   addLiterals
           $rv = $obj->addLiterals(qw(/etc/foo.conf));

       Adds more literal strings to the object that are detainted.  Returns false if any strings
       fail to detaint.  All undefined or zero-length strings are silently removed.

   consolidate
           $obj->consolidate;

       This method removes redundant entries and lexically sorts the contents of the glob.

   exists
           @existing       = $obj->exists;

       This object method returns a list of all entries that currently exist on the filesystem.
       In the case of a symlink that exists but links to a nonexistent file it returns the
       symlink as well.

   readable
           @readable       = $obj->readable;

       This method returns a list of all entries that are currently readable by the effective
       user.  In the case of a symlink it returns the symlink only if the target of the symlink
       is readable, just as a normal stat or -r function would.

   writable
           @writable       = $obj->writable;

       This method returns a list of all entries that are currently writable by the effective
       user.  In the case of a symlink it returns the symlink only if the target of the symlink
       is writable, just as a normal stat or -w function would.

   executable
           @executable     = $obj->executable;

       This method returns a list of all entries that are currently executable by the effective
       user.  In the case of a symlink it returns the symlink only if the target of the symlink
       is executable, just as a normal stat or -x function would.

   owned
           @owned          = $obj->owned;

       This method returns a list of all entries that are currently owned by the effective user.
       In the case of a symlink it returns the symlink only if the target of the symlink is
       owned, just as a normal stat or -o function would.

   directories
           @directories    = $obj->directories;

       This method returns a list of all the directories.  In the case of a symlink it returns
       the symlink if the target of the symlink is a directory, just as a normal stat or -d
       function would.

   files
           @files          = $obj->files;

       This method returns a list of all the files.  In the case of a symlink it returns the
       symlink if the target of the symlink is a file, just as a normal stat or -f function
       would.

   symlinks
           @symlinks       = $obj->symlinks;

       This method returns a list of all the symlinks.

   pipes
           @pipes          = $obj->pipes;

       This method returns a list of all the pipes.  In the case of a symlink it returns the
       symlink if the target of the symlink is a pipe, just as a normal stat or -p function
       would.

   sockets
           @sockets        = $obj->sockets;

       This method returns a list of all the sockets.  In the case of a symlink it returns the
       symlink if the target of the symlink is a socket, just as a normal stat or -S function
       would.

   blockDevs
           @blockDevs      = $obj->blockDevs;

       This method returns a list of all the block device nodes.  In the case of a symlink it
       returns the symlink if the target of the symlink is a block device node, just as a normal
       stat or -b function would.

   charDevs
           @charDevs       = $obj->charDevs;

       This method returns a list of all the character device nodes.  In the case of a symlink it
       returns the symlink if the target of the symlink is a character device node, just as a
       normal stat or -c function would.

   recurse
           $obj->recurse;
           $obj->recurse(1);
           $obj->recurse(1, 1);

       This method with recursively load all filesystem entries underneath any directories
       already listed in the object.  It returns true upon completion, or false if any errors
       occurred (such as Permission Denied).

       Two optional boolean arguments can be passed to it:

         Option1:        Follow Symlinks
         Option2:        Include "Hidden" directories

       Both options are false by default.  If Option1 (Follow Symlinks) is true any symlinks
       pointing to directories will be recursed into as well.  Option2 in its default false
       setting excludes dot files or directories just as normal shell expansion would.  Setting
       it to true causes it to include (and recurse into) hidden files and directories.

DEPENDENCIES

       o   Carp

       o   Errno

       o   Fcntl

       o   File::Glob

       o   Paranoid

       o   Paranoid::Debug

BUGS AND LIMITATIONS

AUTHOR

       Arthur Corliss (corliss@digitalmages.com)

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

       This software is licensed under the same terms as Perl, itself.  Please see
       http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.

       (c) 2005 - 2017, Arthur Corliss (corliss@digitalmages.com)