# This file is part of GNU Stow. # # GNU Stow is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it # under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # GNU Stow 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. See the GNU # General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program. If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/. package Stow::Util; =head1 NAME Stow::Util - general utilities =head1 SYNOPSIS use Stow::Util qw(debug set_debug_level error ...); =head1 DESCRIPTION Supporting utility routines for L. =cut use strict; use warnings; use File::Spec; use POSIX qw(getcwd); use base qw(Exporter); our @EXPORT_OK = qw( error debug set_debug_level set_test_mode join_paths parent canon_path restore_cwd adjust_dotfile ); our $ProgramName = 'stow'; our $VERSION = '@VERSION@'; ############################################################################# # # General Utilities: nothing stow specific here. # ############################################################################# =head1 IMPORTABLE SUBROUTINES =head2 error($format, @args) Outputs an error message in a consistent form and then dies. =cut sub error { my ($format, @args) = @_; die "$ProgramName: ERROR: " . sprintf($format, @args) . "\n"; } =head2 set_debug_level($level) Sets verbosity level for C. =cut our $debug_level = 0; sub set_debug_level { my ($level) = @_; $debug_level = $level; } =head2 set_test_mode($on_or_off) Sets testmode on or off. =cut our $test_mode = 0; sub set_test_mode { my ($on_or_off) = @_; if ($on_or_off) { $test_mode = 1; } else { $test_mode = 0; } } =head2 debug($level[, $indent_level], $msg) Logs to STDERR based on C<$debug_level> setting. C<$level> is the minimum verbosity level required to output C<$msg>. All output is to STDERR to preserve backward compatibility, except for in test mode, when STDOUT is used instead. In test mode, the verbosity can be overridden via the C environment variable. Verbosity rules: =over 4 =item 0: errors only =item >= 1: print operations: LINK/UNLINK/MKDIR/RMDIR/MV =item >= 2: print operation exceptions e.g. "_this_ already points to _that_", skipping, deferring, overriding, fixing invalid links =item >= 3: print trace detail: trace: stow/unstow/package/contents/node =item >= 4: debug helper routines =item >= 5: debug ignore lists =back =cut sub debug { my $level = shift; my $indent_level; # Maintain backwards-compatibility in case anyone's relying on this. $indent_level = $_[0] =~ /^\d+$/ ? shift : 0; my $msg = shift; if ($debug_level >= $level) { my $indent = ' ' x $indent_level; if ($test_mode) { print "# $indent$msg\n"; } else { warn "$indent$msg\n"; } } } #===== METHOD =============================================================== # Name : join_paths() # Purpose : concatenates given paths # Parameters: path1, path2, ... => paths # Returns : concatenation of given paths # Throws : n/a # Comments : Factors out some redundant path elements: # : '//' => '/', and 'a/b/../c' => 'a/c'. We need this function # : with this behaviour, even though b could be a symlink to # : elsewhere, as noted in the perldoc for File::Spec->canonpath(). # : This behaviour is deliberately different to # : Stow::Util::canon_path(), because the way join_paths() is used # : relies on this. Firstly, there is no guarantee that the paths # : exist, so a filesystem check is inappropriate. # : # : For example, it's used to determine the path from the target # : directory to a symlink destination. So if a symlink # : path/to/target/a/b/c points to ../../../stow/pkg/a/b/c, # : then joining path/to/target/a/b with ../../../stow/pkg/a/b/c # : yields path/to/stow/pkg/a/b/c, and it's crucial that the # : path/to/stow prefix matches a recognisable stow directory. #============================================================================ sub join_paths { my @paths = @_; debug(5, 5, "| Joining: @paths"); my $result = ''; for my $part (@paths) { next if ! length $part; # probably shouldn't happen? $part = File::Spec->canonpath($part); if (substr($part, 0, 1) eq '/') { $result = $part; # absolute path, so ignore all previous parts } else { $result .= '/' if length $result && $result ne '/'; $result .= $part; } debug(7, 6, "| Join now: $result"); } debug(6, 5, "| Joined: $result"); # Need this to remove any initial ./ $result = File::Spec->canonpath($result); # remove foo/.. 1 while $result =~ s,(^|/)(?!\.\.)[^/]+/\.\.(/|$),$1,; debug(6, 5, "| After .. removal: $result"); $result = File::Spec->canonpath($result); debug(5, 5, "| Final join: $result"); return $result; } #===== METHOD =============================================================== # Name : parent # Purpose : find the parent of the given path # Parameters: @path => components of the path # Returns : returns a path string # Throws : n/a # Comments : allows you to send multiple chunks of the path # : (this feature is currently not used) #============================================================================ sub parent { my @path = @_; my $path = join '/', @_; my @elts = split m{/+}, $path; pop @elts; return join '/', @elts; } #===== METHOD =============================================================== # Name : canon_path # Purpose : find absolute canonical path of given path # Parameters: $path # Returns : absolute canonical path # Throws : n/a # Comments : is this significantly different from File::Spec->rel2abs? #============================================================================ sub canon_path { my ($path) = @_; my $cwd = getcwd(); chdir($path) or error("canon_path: cannot chdir to $path from $cwd"); my $canon_path = getcwd(); restore_cwd($cwd); return $canon_path; } sub restore_cwd { my ($prev) = @_; chdir($prev) or error("Your current directory $prev seems to have vanished"); } sub adjust_dotfile { my ($pkg_node) = @_; (my $adjusted = $pkg_node) =~ s/^dot-([^.])/.$1/; return $adjusted; } =head1 BUGS =head1 SEE ALSO =cut 1; # Local variables: # mode: perl # end: # vim: ft=perl