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File::Find::Rule(3pm) User Contributed Perl DocumentationFile::Find::Rule(3pm)

NAME
       File::Find::Rule - Alternative interface to File::Find

SYNOPSIS
         use File::Find::Rule;
         # find all the subdirectories of a given directory
         my @subdirs = File::Find::Rule->directory->in( $directory );

         # find all the .pm files in @INC
         my @files = File::Find::Rule->file()
                                     ->name( '*.pm' )
                                     ->in( @INC );

         # as above, but without method chaining
         my $rule =  File::Find::Rule->new;
         $rule->file;
         $rule->name( '*.pm' );
         my @files = $rule->in( @INC );

DESCRIPTION
       File::Find::Rule is a friendlier interface to File::Find.  It allows
       you to build rules which specify the desired files and directories.

METHODS
       "new"
           A constructor.  You need not invoke "new" manually unless you wish
           to, as each of the rule-making methods will auto-create a suitable
           object if called as class methods.

   Matching Rules
       "name( @patterns )"
           Specifies names that should match.  May be globs or regular
           expressions.

            $set->name( '*.mp3', '*.ogg' ); # mp3s or oggs
            $set->name( qr/\.(mp3|ogg)$/ ); # the same as a regex
            $set->name( 'foo.bar' );        # just things named foo.bar

       -X tests
           Synonyms are provided for each of the -X tests. See "-X" in
           perlfunc for details.  None of these methods take arguments.

             Test | Method               Test |  Method
            ------|-------------        ------|----------------
              -r  |  readable             -R  |  r_readable
              -w  |  writeable            -W  |  r_writeable
              -w  |  writable             -W  |  r_writable
              -x  |  executable           -X  |  r_executable
              -o  |  owned                -O  |  r_owned
                  |                           |
              -e  |  exists               -f  |  file
              -z  |  empty                -d  |  directory
              -s  |  nonempty             -l  |  symlink
                  |                       -p  |  fifo
              -u  |  setuid               -S  |  socket
              -g  |  setgid               -b  |  block
              -k  |  sticky               -c  |  character
                  |                       -t  |  tty
              -M  |  modified                 |
              -A  |  accessed             -T  |  ascii
              -C  |  changed              -B  |  binary

           Though some tests are fairly meaningless as binary flags
           ("modified", "accessed", "changed"), they have been included for
           completeness.

            # find nonempty files
            $rule->file,
                 ->nonempty;

       stat tests
           The following "stat" based methods are provided: "dev", "ino",
           "mode", "nlink", "uid", "gid", "rdev", "size", "atime", "mtime",
           "ctime", "blksize", and "blocks".  See "stat" in perlfunc for
           details.

           Each of these can take a number of targets, which will follow
           Number::Compare semantics.

            $rule->size( 7 );         # exactly 7
            $rule->size( ">7Ki" );    # larger than 7 * 1024 * 1024 bytes
            $rule->size( ">=7" )
                 ->size( "<=90" );    # between 7 and 90, inclusive
            $rule->size( 7, 9, 42 );  # 7, 9 or 42

       "any( @rules )"
       "or( @rules )"
           Allows shortcircuiting boolean evaluation as an alternative to the
           default and-like nature of combined rules.  "any" and "or" are
           interchangeable.

            # find avis, movs, things over 200M and empty files
            $rule->any( File::Find::Rule->name( '*.avi', '*.mov' ),
                        File::Find::Rule->size( '>200M' ),
                        File::Find::Rule->file->empty,
                      );

       "none( @rules )"
       "not( @rules )"
           Negates a rule.  (The inverse of "any".)  "none" and "not" are
           interchangeable.

             # files that aren't 8.3 safe
             $rule->file
                  ->not( $rule->new->name( qr/^[^.]{1,8}(\.[^.]{0,3})?$/ ) );

       "prune"
           Traverse no further.  This rule always matches.

       "discard"
           Don't keep this file.  This rule always matches.

       "exec( \&subroutine( $shortname, $path, $fullname ) )"
           Allows user-defined rules.  Your subroutine will be invoked with $_
           set to the current short name, and with parameters of the name, the
           path you're in, and the full relative filename.

           Return a true value if your rule matched.

            # get things with long names
            $rules->exec( sub { length > 20 } );

       "grep( @specifiers )"
           Opens a file and tests it each line at a time.

           For each line it evaluates each of the specifiers, stopping at the
           first successful match.  A specifier may be a regular expression or
           a subroutine.  The subroutine will be invoked with the same
           parameters as an ->exec subroutine.

           It is possible to provide a set of negative specifiers by enclosing
           them in anonymous arrays.  Should a negative specifier match the
           iteration is aborted and the clause is failed.  For example:

            $rule->grep( qr/^#!.*\bperl/, [ sub { 1 } ] );

           Is a passing clause if the first line of a file looks like a perl
           shebang line.

       "maxdepth( $level )"
           Descend at most $level (a non-negative integer) levels of
           directories below the starting point.

           May be invoked many times per rule, but only the most recent value
           is used.

       "mindepth( $level )"
           Do not apply any tests at levels less than $level (a non-negative
           integer).

       "extras( \%extras )"
           Specifies extra values to pass through to "File::File::find" as
           part of the options hash.

           For example this allows you to specify following of symlinks like
           so:

            my $rule = File::Find::Rule->extras({ follow => 1 });

           May be invoked many times per rule, but only the most recent value
           is used.

       "relative"
           Trim the leading portion of any path found

       "canonpath"
           Normalize paths found using "File::Spec-"canonpath>. This will
           return paths with a file-seperator that is native to your OS (as
           determined by File::Spec),
            instead of the default "/".

           For example, this will return "tmp/foobar" on Unix-ish OSes and
           "tmp\foobar" on Win32.

       "not_*"
           Negated version of the rule.  An effective shortand related to ! in
           the procedural interface.

            $foo->not_name('*.pl');

            $foo->not( $foo->new->name('*.pl' ) );

   Query Methods
       "in( @directories )"
           Evaluates the rule, returns a list of paths to matching files and
           directories.

       "start( @directories )"
           Starts a find across the specified directories.  Matching items may
           then be queried using "match".  This allows you to use a rule as an
           iterator.

            my $rule = File::Find::Rule->file->name("*.jpeg")->start( "/web" );
            while ( defined ( my $image = $rule->match ) ) {
                ...
            }

       "match"
           Returns the next file which matches, false if there are no more.

   Extensions
       Extension modules are available from CPAN in the File::Find::Rule
       namespace.  In order to use these extensions either use them directly:

        use File::Find::Rule::ImageSize;
        use File::Find::Rule::MMagic;

        # now your rules can use the clauses supplied by the ImageSize and
        # MMagic extension

       or, specify that File::Find::Rule should load them for you:

        use File::Find::Rule qw( :ImageSize :MMagic );

       For notes on implementing your own extensions, consult
       File::Find::Rule::Extending

   Further examples
       Finding perl scripts
            my $finder = File::Find::Rule->or
             (
              File::Find::Rule->name( '*.pl' ),
              File::Find::Rule->exec(
                                     sub {
                                         if (open my $fh, $_) {
                                             my $shebang = <$fh>;
                                             close $fh;
                                             return $shebang =~ /^#!.*\bperl/;
                                         }
                                         return 0;
                                     } ),
             );

           Based upon this message
           http://use.perl.org/comments.pl?sid=7052&cid=10842

       ignore CVS directories
            my $rule = File::Find::Rule->new;
            $rule->or($rule->new
                           ->directory
                           ->name('CVS')
                           ->prune
                           ->discard,
                      $rule->new);

           Note here the use of a null rule.  Null rules match anything they
           see, so the effect is to match (and discard) directories called
           'CVS' or to match anything.

TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE
       File::Find::Rule also gives you a procedural interface.  This is
       documented in File::Find::Rule::Procedural

EXPORTS
       "find", "rule"

TAINT MODE INTERACTION
       As of 0.32 File::Find::Rule doesn't capture the current working
       directory in a taint-unsafe manner.  File::Find itself still does
       operations that the taint system will flag as insecure but you can use
       the "extras" feature to ask File::Find to internally "untaint" file
       paths with a regex like so:

           my $rule = File::Find::Rule->extras({ untaint => 1 });

       Please consult File::Find's documentation for "untaint",
       "untaint_pattern", and "untaint_skip" for more information.

BUGS
       The code makes use of the "our" keyword and as such requires perl
       version 5.6.0 or newer.

       Currently it isn't possible to remove a clause from a rule object.  If
       this becomes a significant issue it will be addressed.

AUTHOR
       Richard Clamp <richardc@unixbeard.net> with input gained from this
       use.perl discussion: http://use.perl.org/~richardc/journal/6467

       Additional proofreading and input provided by Kake, Greg McCarroll, and
       Andy Lester andy@petdance.com.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2009, 2011 Richard Clamp.  All
       Rights Reserved.

       This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the same terms as Perl itself.

SEE ALSO
       File::Find, Text::Glob, Number::Compare, find(1)

       If you want to know about the procedural interface, see
       File::Find::Rule::Procedural, and if you have an idea for a neat
       extension File::Find::Rule::Extending

perl v5.36.0                      2022-11-19             File::Find::Rule(3pm)

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