Os.Dir
Directory operations.
This module operates on directories, most functions error if they are applied to other file kinds.
exists dir
is Ok true
if dir
is a directory in the file system and Ok false
otherwise. Symbolic links are followed.
must_exist dir
is Ok ()
if dir
is a directory in the file system and an error otherwise. Symbolic links are followed.
create ~mode ~make_path dir
creates the directory dir
.
mode
are the file permission of dir
. They default to 0o755
(readable and traversable by everyone, writeable by the user).make_path
is true
and the parent directory of p
does not exist the whole path to the parent is created as needed with permission 0o755
(readable and traversable by everyone, writable by the user)The result is:
Ok true
if dir
did not exist and was created.Ok false
if dir
did exist as (possibly a symlink to) a directory. In this case the mode of dir
and any other directory is kept unchanged.Error _
otherwise and in particular if dir
exists as a non-directory.val fold : ?rel:bool -> ?dotfiles:bool -> ?follow_symlinks:bool ->
?prune:(Unix.stats -> string -> Fpath.t -> 'a -> bool) -> recurse:bool ->
(Unix.stats -> string -> Fpath.t -> 'a -> 'a) -> Fpath.t -> 'a -> ('a, string) result
fold ~rel ~dotfiles ~follow_symlinks ~prune ~recurse f dir
acc
folds f
over the contents of dir
starting with acc
. If dir
does not exist the function errors. Paths given to prune
and f
do not have a trailing /
.
f st name p acc
is called with each path p
folded over with st
its stat information, name
its filename and acc
the accumulator.recurse
is true
sub-directories dir
are folded over recursively modulo prune
(see below). If recurse
is false only the direct contents of dir
is folded over.prune
is called only when recurse
is true
as prune st d
with d
any sub-directory to be folded over and st
its stat information. If the result is true
d
and its contents are not folded over. Defaults to fun _ _ _ _ -> false
follow_symlinks
if true
(default), symbolic links are followed. If false
symbolic links are not followed and the stat information given to prune
and f
is given by Path.symlink_stat
.dotfiles
is false
(default) elements whose filename start with a .
are not folded overrel
is false
(default) the paths given to f
and prune
have dir
prepended, if true
they are relative to dir
.Fold order. The fold order is generally undefined. The only guarantee is that directory paths are folded over before their content.
Warning. Given the raciness of the POSIX file API it cannot be guaranteed that really all existing files will be folded over in presence of other processes.
val fold_files : ?rel:bool -> ?dotfiles:bool -> ?follow_symlinks:bool ->
?prune:(Unix.stats -> string -> Fpath.t -> 'a -> bool) -> recurse:bool ->
(Unix.stats -> string -> Fpath.t -> 'a -> 'a) -> Fpath.t -> 'a -> ('a, string) result
fold_files
is like fold
but f
is only applied to non-directory files.
val fold_dirs : ?rel:bool -> ?dotfiles:bool -> ?follow_symlinks:bool ->
?prune:(Unix.stats -> string -> Fpath.t -> 'a -> bool) -> recurse:bool ->
(Unix.stats -> string -> Fpath.t -> 'a -> 'a) -> Fpath.t -> 'a -> ('a, string) result
fold_dirs
is like fold
but f
is only applied to directory files.
val path_list : Unix.stats -> string -> Fpath.t -> Fpath.t list -> Fpath.t list
path_list
is a folding function to get a (reverse w.r.t. list of paths). Paths in the result that correspond to directories satisfy Fpath.is_dir_path
.
val copy : ?rel:bool -> ?atomic:bool -> ?follow_symlinks:bool ->
?prune:(Unix.stats -> string -> Fpath.t -> bool) -> make_path:bool -> recurse:bool -> src:Fpath.t ->
Fpath.t -> (unit, string) result
copy ~rel ~atomic ~prune ~follow_symlinks ~make_path ~recurse
~src dst
copies the directory src
to dst
. File modes of src
and its contents are preserved in dst
. The function errors if dst
exists.
recurse
is true
sub-directories of dir
are also copied recursively, unless they are prune
d (see below). If false
only the files of src
are copied modulo prune
. FIXME I think this is weirdmake_path
is true
and the parent directory of dst
does not exist the whole path to the parent is created as needed with permission 0o755
(readable and traversable by everyone, writable by the user).prune st name p
is called on each path p
to copy with st
its stat information and name
its filename. If the function returns true
the directory or file is not copied over. Defaults to fun _ _ _ -> false
.follow_symlinks
is true
(default), symlinks are followed. If false
symbolic links are not followed, the actual symlinks are copied and the stat information given to prune
is given by Os.Path.symlink_stat
.atomic
if atomic is true
and the function errors then dst
should not exist. To write atomically, a temporary directory t
in the parent directory of dst
is created. On copy success t
is renamed to dst
. On error t
is deleted and dst
left intact. This means the user needs write permissions in the parent directory of dst
, in practice this is almost always the case but fails for some directories (e.g. writing in /sys
on Linux®).rel
is false
(default) the paths given to prune
have src
prepended. If true
they are relative to src
.cwd ()
is the current working directory. The resulting path is guaranteed to be absolute.
set_cwd dir
sets the current working directory to dir
.
with_cwd dir f
is f ()
with the current working directory bound to dir
. After the function returns the current working directory is back to its initial value.
val default_tmp : unit -> Fpath.t
default_tmp ()
is a default directory that can be used as a default directory for creating temporary files and directories. If set_default_tmp
hasn't been called this is:
TMPDIR
environment variable or Fpath.v "/tmp"
if the variable is not set or empty.TEMP
environment variable or Fpath.v "."
if it is not set or empty.val set_default_tmp : Fpath.t -> unit
set_default_tmp p
sets the value returned by default_tmp
to p
.
val with_tmp : ?mode:int -> ?make_path:bool -> ?dir:Fpath.t -> ?name:Path.tmp_name ->
(Fpath.t -> 'a) -> ('a, string) result
with_tmp ~mode ~make_path ~dir ~name f
creates a temporary empty directory t
and returns Ok (f t). After the function returns (normally or via an exception) t
and its content are deleted.
name
is used to construct the filename of the directory, see File
.tmp_name for details. It defaults to "tmp-%s"
.dir
is the directory in which the temporary file is created. It defaults to Dir
.default_tmp ().make_path
is true
(default) and dir
doesn't exist the whole path to it is created as needed with permission 0o755
(readable and traversable by everyone, writable by the user).mode
are the permissions of the temporary directory; they default to 0o700
, only readable, writeable and traversable by the userval tmp : ?mode:int -> ?make_path:bool -> ?dir:Fpath.t -> ?name:Path.tmp_name -> unit -> (Fpath.t, string) result
tmp
is like with_tmp
except the directory and its content is only deleted at the end of program execution if the client doesn't do it before.
The directories returned by these functions are not guaranteed to exist.
user ()
is the home directory of the user executing the process. Determined by consulting passwd
database with the user if of the process. If this fails falls back to parse a path from the HOME
environment variables. On Windows no special fallback is implemented.
config ()
is the directory used to store user-specific program configurations. This is in order:
XDG_CONFIG_HOME
.APPDATA
.user ()
is Ok home
, Fpath.(home / ".config")
.data ()
is the directory used to store user-specific program data. This is in order:
XDG_DATA_HOME
.APPDATA
.user ()
is Ok home
, Fpath.(home / ".local" / "share")
.cache ()
is the directory used to store user-specific non-essential data. This is in order:
XDG_CACHE_HOME
.%TEMP%
user ()
is Ok home
, Fpath.(home / ".cache")
runtime ()
is the directory used to store user-specific runtime files. This is in order:
XDG_RUNTIME_HOME
.default_tmp
.