| Class | Dir |
| In: |
dir.c
lib/tmpdir.rb |
| Parent: | Object |
Objects of class Dir are directory streams representing directories in the underlying file system. They provide a variety of ways to list directories and their contents. See also File.
The directory used in these examples contains the two regular files (config.h and main.rb), the parent directory (..), and the directory itself (.).
Equivalent to calling Dir.glob(array,0) and href="Dir.html#M002209">Dir.glob(,0).
Changes the current working directory of the process to the given string. When called without an argument, changes the directory to the value of the environment variable HOME, or LOGDIR. SystemCallError (probably Errno::ENOENT) if the target directory does not exist.
If a block is given, it is passed the name of the new current directory, and the block is executed with that as the current directory. The original working directory is restored when the block exits. The return value of chdir is the value of the block. chdir blocks can be nested, but in a multi-threaded program an error will be raised if a thread attempts to open a chdir block while another thread has one open.
Dir.chdir("/var/spool/mail")
puts Dir.pwd
Dir.chdir("/tmp") do
puts Dir.pwd
Dir.chdir("/usr") do
puts Dir.pwd
end
puts Dir.pwd
end
puts Dir.pwd
produces:
/var/spool/mail /tmp /usr /tmp /var/spool/mail
Changes this process‘s idea of the file system root. Only a privileged process may make this call. Not available on all platforms. On Unix systems, see chroot(2) for more information.
Deletes the named directory. Raises a subclass of SystemCallError if the directory isn‘t empty.
Returns an array containing all of the filenames in the given directory. Will raise a SystemCallError if the named directory doesn‘t exist.
Dir.entries("testdir") #=> [".", "..", "config.h", "main.rb"]
Document-method: directory?
Returns true if the named file is a directory, false otherwise.
File.directory?(".")
Document-method: directory?
Returns true if the named file is a directory, false otherwise.
File.directory?(".")
Returns the path to the current working directory of this process as a string.
Dir.chdir("/tmp") #=> 0
Dir.getwd #=> "/tmp"
Returns the filenames found by expanding pattern which is an Array of the patterns or the pattern String, either as an array or as parameters to the block. Note that this pattern is not a regexp (it‘s closer to a shell glob). See File::fnmatch for the meaning of the flags parameter. Note that case sensitivity depends on your system (so File::FNM_CASEFOLD is ignored)
| *: | Matches any file. Can be restricted by other values in the glob. * will match all files; c* will match all files beginning with c; *c will match all files ending with c; and c will match all files that have c in them (including at the beginning or end). Equivalent to / .* /x in regexp. |
| **: | Matches directories recursively. |
| ?: | Matches any one character. Equivalent to /.{1}/ in regexp. |
| [set]: | Matches any one character in set. Behaves exactly like character sets in Regexp, including set negation ([^a-z]). |
| {p,q}: | Matches either literal p or literal q. Matching literals may be more than one character in length. More than two literals may be specified. Equivalent to pattern alternation in regexp. |
| <code></code>: | Escapes the next metacharacter. |
Dir["config.?"] #=> ["config.h"]
Dir.glob("config.?") #=> ["config.h"]
Dir.glob("*.[a-z][a-z]") #=> ["main.rb"]
Dir.glob("*.[^r]*") #=> ["config.h"]
Dir.glob("*.{rb,h}") #=> ["main.rb", "config.h"]
Dir.glob("*") #=> ["config.h", "main.rb"]
Dir.glob("*", File::FNM_DOTMATCH) #=> [".", "..", "config.h", "main.rb"]
rbfiles = File.join("**", "*.rb")
Dir.glob(rbfiles) #=> ["main.rb",
# "lib/song.rb",
# "lib/song/karaoke.rb"]
libdirs = File.join("**", "lib")
Dir.glob(libdirs) #=> ["lib"]
librbfiles = File.join("**", "lib", "**", "*.rb")
Dir.glob(librbfiles) #=> ["lib/song.rb",
# "lib/song/karaoke.rb"]
librbfiles = File.join("**", "lib", "*.rb")
Dir.glob(librbfiles) #=> ["lib/song.rb"]
Makes a new directory named by string, with permissions specified by the optional parameter anInteger. The permissions may be modified by the value of File::umask, and are ignored on NT. Raises a SystemCallError if the directory cannot be created. See also the discussion of permissions in the class documentation for File.
Dir.mktmpdir creates a temporary directory.
The directory is created with 0700 permission.
The prefix and suffix of the name of the directory is specified by the optional first argument, prefix_suffix.
Dir.mktmpdir {|dir| dir is ".../d..." }
Dir.mktmpdir("foo") {|dir| dir is ".../foo..." }
Dir.mktmpdir(["foo", "bar"]) {|dir| dir is ".../foo...bar" }
The directory is created under Dir.tmpdir or the optional second argument tmpdir if non-nil value is given.
Dir.mktmpdir {|dir| dir is "#{Dir.tmpdir}/d..." }
Dir.mktmpdir(nil, "/var/tmp") {|dir| dir is "/var/tmp/d..." }
If a block is given, it is yielded with the path of the directory. The directory and its contents are removed using FileUtils.remove_entry_secure before Dir.mktmpdir returns. The value of the block is returned.
Dir.mktmpdir {|dir|
# use the directory...
open("#{dir}/foo", "w") { ... }
}
If a block is not given, The path of the directory is returned. In this case, Dir.mktmpdir doesn‘t remove the directory.
dir = Dir.mktmpdir
begin
# use the directory...
open("#{dir}/foo", "w") { ... }
ensure
# remove the directory.
FileUtils.remove_entry_secure dir
end
With no block, open is a synonym for Dir::new. If a block is present, it is passed aDir as a parameter. The directory is closed at the end of the block, and Dir::open returns the value of the block.
Returns the path to the current working directory of this process as a string.
Dir.chdir("/tmp") #=> 0
Dir.getwd #=> "/tmp"
Deletes the named directory. Raises a subclass of SystemCallError if the directory isn‘t empty.
Deletes the named directory. Raises a subclass of SystemCallError if the directory isn‘t empty.
Closes the directory stream. Any further attempts to access dir will raise an IOError.
d = Dir.new("testdir")
d.close #=> nil
Returns the path parameter passed to dir‘s constructor.
d = Dir.new("..")
d.path #=> ".."
Returns the current position in dir. See also Dir#seek.
d = Dir.new("testdir")
d.tell #=> 0
d.read #=> "."
d.tell #=> 12
Synonym for Dir#seek, but returns the position parameter.
d = Dir.new("testdir") #=> #<Dir:0x401b3c40>
d.read #=> "."
i = d.pos #=> 12
d.read #=> ".."
d.pos = i #=> 12
d.read #=> ".."
Reads the next entry from dir and returns it as a string. Returns nil at the end of the stream.
d = Dir.new("testdir")
d.read #=> "."
d.read #=> ".."
d.read #=> "config.h"
Repositions dir to the first entry.
d = Dir.new("testdir")
d.read #=> "."
d.rewind #=> #<Dir:0x401b3fb0>
d.read #=> "."
Seeks to a particular location in dir. integer must be a value returned by Dir#tell.
d = Dir.new("testdir") #=> #<Dir:0x401b3c40>
d.read #=> "."
i = d.tell #=> 12
d.read #=> ".."
d.seek(i) #=> #<Dir:0x401b3c40>
d.read #=> ".."
Returns the current position in dir. See also Dir#seek.
d = Dir.new("testdir")
d.tell #=> 0
d.read #=> "."
d.tell #=> 12
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