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File::Finder::Steps(3)



NAME

       File::Finder::Steps - steps for File::Finder


SYNOPSIS

         ## See File::Finder for normal use of steps

         ## subclassing example:
         BEGIN {
           package My::File::Finder;
           use base File::Finder;

           sub _steps_class { "My::File::Finder::Steps" }
         }
         BEGIN {
           package My::File::Finder::Steps;
           use base File::Finder::Steps;

           sub bigger_than { # true if bigger than N bytes
             my $self = shift;
             my $bytes = shift;
             return sub {
               -s > $bytes;
             }
           }
         }

         my $over_1k = My::File::Finder->bigger_than(1024);
         print "Temp files over 1k:\n";
         $over_1k->ls->in("/tmp");


DESCRIPTION

       "File::Finder::Steps" provide the predicates being tested for
       "File::Finder".

   STEPS METHODS
       These methods are called on a class or instance to add a "step".  Each
       step adds itself to a list of steps, returning the new object.  This
       allows you to chain steps together to form a formula.

       As in find, the default operator is "and", and short-circuiting is
       performed.

       or  Like find's "or".

       left
           Like a left parenthesis.  Used in nesting pairs with "right".

       right
           Like a right parenthesis.  Used in nesting pairs with "left".  For
           example:

             my $big_or_old = File::Finder
               ->type('f')
               ->left
                 ->size("+100")->or->mtime("+90")
               ->right;
             find($big_or_old->ls, "/tmp");

           You need parens because the "or" operator is lower precedence than
           the implied "and", for the same reason you need them here:

             find /tmp -type f '(' -size +100 -o -mtime +90 ')' -print

           Without the parens, the -type would bind to -size, and not to the
           choice of -size or -mtime.

           Mismatched parens will not be found until the formula is used,
           causing a fatal error.

       begin
           Alias for "left".

       end Alias for "right".

       not Like find's "!".  Prefix operator, can be placed in front of
           individual terms or open parens.  Can be nested, but what's the
           point?

             # list all non-files in /tmp
             File::Finder->not->type('f')->ls->in("/tmp");

       true
           Always returns true.  Useful when a subexpression might fail, but
           you don't want the overall code to fail:

             ... ->left-> ...[might return false]... ->or->true->right-> ...

           Of course, this is the find command's idiom of:

              find .... '(' .... -o -true ')' ...

       false
           Always returns false.

       comma
           Like GNU find's ",".  The result of the expression (or
           subexpression if in parens) up to this point is discarded, and
           execution continues afresh.  Useful when a part of the expression
           is needed for its side effects, but shouldn't affect the rest of
           the "and"-ed chain.

             # list all files and dirs, but don't descend into CVS dir contents:
             File::Finder->type('d')->name('CVS')->prune->comma->ls->in('.');

       follow
           Enables symlink following, and returns true.

       name(NAME)
           True if basename matches NAME, which can be given as a glob pattern
           or a regular expression object:

             my $pm_files = File::Finder->name('*.pm')->in('.');
             my $pm_files_too = File::Finder->name(qr/pm$/)->in('.');

       perm(PERMISSION)
           Like find's "-perm".  Leading "-" means "all of these bits".
           Leading "+" means "any of these bits".  Value is de-octalized if a
           leading 0 is present, which is likely only if it's being passed as
           a string.

             my $files = File::Finder->type('f');
             # find files that are exactly mode 644
             my $files_644 = $files->perm(0644);
             # find files that are at least world executable:
             my $files_world_exec = $files->perm("-1");
             # find files that have some executable bit set:
             my $files_exec = $files->perm("+0111");

       type(TYPE)
           Like find's "-type".  All native Perl types are supported.  Note
           that "s" is a socket, mapping to Perl's "-S", to be consistent with
           find.  Returns true or false, as appropriate.

       print
           Prints the fullname to "STDOUT", followed by a newline.  Returns
           true.

       print0
           Prints the fullname to "STDOUT", followed by a NUL.  Returns true.

       fstype
           Not implemented yet.

       user(USERNAME|UID)
           True if the owner is USERNAME or UID.

       group(GROUPNAME|GID)
           True if the group is GROUPNAME or GID.

       nouser
           True if the entry doesn't belong to any known user.

       nogroup
           True if the entry doesn't belong to any known group.

       links( +/- N )
           Like find's "-links N".  Leading plus means "more than", minus
           means "less than".

       inum( +/- N )
           True if the inode number meets the qualification.

       size( +/- N [c/k])
           True if the file size meets the qualification.  By default, N is in
           half-K blocks.  Append a trailing "k" to the number to indicate 1K
           blocks, or "c" to indicate characters (bytes).

       atime( +/- N )
           True if access time (in days) meets the qualification.

       mtime( +/- N )
           True if modification time (in days) meets the qualification.

       ctime( +/- N )
           True if inode change time (in days) meets the qualification.

       exec(@COMMAND)
           Forks the child process via "system()".  Any appearance of "{}" in
           any argument is replaced by the current filename.  Returns true if
           the child exit status is 0.  The list is passed directly to
           "system", so if it's a single arg, it can contain "/bin/sh" syntax.
           Otherwise, it's a pre-parsed command that must be found on the
           PATH.

           Note that I couldn't figure out how to horse around with the
           current directory very well, so I'm using $_ here instead of the
           more traditional "File::Find::name".  It still works, because we're
           still chdir'ed down into the directory, but it looks weird on a
           trace.  Trigger "no_chdir" in "find" if you want a traditional find
           full path.

             my $f = File::Finder->exec('ls', '-ldg', '{}');
             find({ no_chdir => 1, wanted => $f }, @starting_dirs);

           Yeah, it'd be trivial for me to add a no_chdir method.  Soon.

       ok(@COMMAND)
           Like "exec", but displays the command line first, and waits for a
           response.  If the response begins with "y" or "Y", runs the
           command.  If the command fails, or the response wasn't yes, returns
           false, otherwise true.

       prune
           Sets $File::Find::prune, and returns true.

       xdev
           Not yet implemented.

       newer
           Not yet implemented.

       eval(CODEREF)
           Ah yes, the master escape, with extra benefits.  Give it a coderef,
           and it evaluates that code at the proper time.  The return value is
           noted for true/false and used accordingly.

             my $blaster = File::Finder->atime("+30")->eval(sub { unlink });

           But wait, there's more.  If the parameter is an object that
           responds to "as_wanted", that method is automatically called,
           hoping for a coderef return. This neat feature allows subroutines
           to be created and nested:

             my $old = File::Finder->atime("+30");
             my $big = File::Finder->size("+100");
             my $old_or_big = File::Finder->eval($old)->or->eval($big);
             my $killer = File::Finder->eval(sub { unlink });
             my $kill_old_or_big = File::Finder->eval($old_or_big)->ls->eval($killer);
             $kill_old_or_big->in('/tmp');

           Almost too cool for words.

       depth
           Like find's "-depth".  Sets a flag for "as_options", and returns
           true.

       ls  Like find's "-ls".  Performs a "ls -dils" on the entry to "STDOUT"
           (without forking), and returns true.

       tar Not yet implemented.

       [n]cpio
           Not yet implemented.

       ffr($ffr_object)
           Incorporate a "File::Find::Rule" object as a step. Note that this
           must be a rule object, and not a result, so don't call or pass
           "in".  For example, using "File::Find::Rule::ImageSize" to define a
           predicate for image files that are bigger than a megapixel in my
           friends folder, I get:

             require File::Finder;
             require File::Find::Rule;
             require File::Find::Rule::ImageSize;
             my $ffr = File::Find::Rule->file->image_x('>1000')->image_y('>1000');
             my @big_friends = File::Finder->ffr($ffr)
               ->in("/Users/merlyn/Pictures/Sorted/Friends");

       contains(pattern)
           True if the file contains "pattern" (either a literal string
           treated as a regex, or a true regex object).

             my $plugh_files = File::Finder->type('f')->contains(qr/plugh/);

           Searching is performed on a line-by-line basis, respecting the
           current value of $/.

   EXTENDING
       A step consists of a compile-time and a run-time component.

       During the creation of a "File::Finder" object, step methods are called
       as if they were methods against the slowly-growing "File::Finder"
       instance, including any additional parameters as in a normal method
       call.  The step is expected to return a coderef (possibly a closure) to
       be executed at run-time.

       When a "File::Finder" object is being evaluated as the "File::Find"
       "wanted" routine, the collected coderefs are evaluated in sequence,
       again as method calls against the "File::Finder" object.  No additional
       parameters are passed.  However, the normal "wanted" values are
       available, such as $_, $File::Find::name, and so on.  The "_" pseudo-
       handle has been set properly, so you can safely use "-X" filetests and
       "stat" against the pseudo-handle.  The routine is expected to return a
       true/false value, which becomes the value of the step.

       Although a "File::Finder" object is passed both to the compile-time
       invocation and the resulting run-time invocation, only the "options"
       self-hash element is properly duplicated through the cloning process.
       Do not be tempted to add additional self-hash elements without
       overriding "File::Finder"'s "_clone".  Instead, pass values from the
       compile-time phase to the run-time phase using closure variables, as
       shown in the synopsis.

       For simplicity, you can also just mix-in your methods to the existing
       "File::Finder::Steps" class, rather than subclassing both classes as
       shown above.  However, this may result in conflicting implementations
       of a given step name, so beware.


SEE ALSO

       File::Finder(3)


BUGS

       None known yet.


AUTHOR

       Randal L. Schwartz, <merlyn@stonehenge.com>


COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright (C) 2003,2004 by Randal L. Schwartz, Stonehenge Consulting
       Services, Inc.

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.2 or, at
       your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.



perl v5.28.1                      2005-04-08            File::Finder::Steps(3)

file-finder 0.530.0 - Generated Wed Mar 6 18:47:29 CST 2019
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