Stdlib.Filename
Operations on file names.
The conventional name for the parent of the current directory (e.g. ..
in Unix).
concat dir file
returns a file name that designates file file
in directory dir
.
Return true
if the file name is relative to the current directory, false
if it is absolute (i.e. in Unix, starts with /
).
Return true
if the file name is relative and does not start with an explicit reference to the current directory (./
or ../
in Unix), false
if it starts with an explicit reference to the root directory or the current directory.
check_suffix name suff
returns true
if the filename name
ends with the suffix suff
.
Under Windows ports (including Cygwin), comparison is case-insensitive, relying on String.lowercase_ascii
. Note that this does not match exactly the interpretation of case-insensitive filename equivalence from Windows.
chop_suffix name suff
removes the suffix suff
from the filename name
.
chop_suffix_opt ~suffix filename
removes the suffix from the filename
if possible, or returns None
if the filename does not end with the suffix.
Under Windows ports (including Cygwin), comparison is case-insensitive, relying on String.lowercase_ascii
. Note that this does not match exactly the interpretation of case-insensitive filename equivalence from Windows.
extension name
is the shortest suffix ext
of name0
where:
name0
is the longest suffix of name
that does not contain a directory separator;ext
starts with a period;ext
is preceded by at least one non-period character in name0
.If such a suffix does not exist, extension name
is the empty string.
Return the given file name without its extension, as defined in Filename.extension
. If the extension is empty, the function returns the given file name.
The following invariant holds for any file name s
:
remove_extension s ^ extension s = s
Same as Filename.remove_extension
, but raise Invalid_argument
if the given name has an empty extension.
Split a file name into directory name / base file name. If name
is a valid file name, then concat (dirname name) (basename name)
returns a file name which is equivalent to name
. Moreover, after setting the current directory to dirname name
(with Sys.chdir
), references to basename name
(which is a relative file name) designate the same file as name
before the call to Sys.chdir
.
This function conforms to the specification of POSIX.1-2008 for the basename
utility.
See Filename.basename
. This function conforms to the specification of POSIX.1-2008 for the dirname
utility.
null
is "/dev/null"
on POSIX and "NUL"
on Windows. It represents a file on the OS that discards all writes and returns end of file on reads.
temp_file prefix suffix
returns the name of a fresh temporary file in the temporary directory. The base name of the temporary file is formed by concatenating prefix
, then a suitably chosen integer number, then suffix
. The optional argument temp_dir
indicates the temporary directory to use, defaulting to the current result of Filename.get_temp_dir_name
. The temporary file is created empty, with permissions 0o600
(readable and writable only by the file owner). The file is guaranteed to be different from any other file that existed when temp_file
was called.
val open_temp_file :
?mode:open_flag list ->
?perms:int ->
?temp_dir:string ->
string ->
string ->
string * out_channel
Same as Filename.temp_file
, but returns both the name of a fresh temporary file, and an output channel opened (atomically) on this file. This function is more secure than temp_file
: there is no risk that the temporary file will be modified (e.g. replaced by a symbolic link) before the program opens it. The optional argument mode
is a list of additional flags to control the opening of the file. It can contain one or several of Open_append
, Open_binary
, and Open_text
. The default is [Open_text]
(open in text mode). The file is created with permissions perms
(defaults to readable and writable only by the file owner, 0o600
).
temp_dir prefix suffix
creates and returns the name of a fresh temporary directory with permissions perms
(defaults to 0o700) inside temp_dir
. The base name of the temporary directory is formed by concatenating prefix
, then a suitably chosen integer number, then suffix
. The optional argument temp_dir
indicates the temporary directory to use, defaulting to the current result of Filename.get_temp_dir_name
. The temporary directory is created empty, with permissions 0o700
(readable, writable, and searchable only by the file owner). The directory is guaranteed to be different from any other directory that existed when temp_dir
was called.
If temp_dir does not exist, this function does not create it. Instead, it raises Sys_error.
The name of the temporary directory: Under Unix, the value of the TMPDIR
environment variable, or "/tmp" if the variable is not set. Under Windows, the value of the TEMP
environment variable, or "." if the variable is not set. The temporary directory can be changed with Filename.set_temp_dir_name
.
Change the temporary directory returned by Filename.get_temp_dir_name
and used by Filename.temp_file
and Filename.open_temp_file
. The temporary directory is a domain-local value which is inherited by child domains.
Return a quoted version of a file name, suitable for use as one argument in a command line, escaping all meta-characters. Warning: under Windows, the output is only suitable for use with programs that follow the standard Windows quoting conventions.
val quote_command :
string ->
?stdin:string ->
?stdout:string ->
?stderr:string ->
string list ->
string
quote_command cmd args
returns a quoted command line, suitable for use as an argument to Sys.command
, Unix
.system, and the Unix
.open_process functions.
The string cmd
is the command to call. The list args
is the list of arguments to pass to this command. It can be empty.
The optional arguments ?stdin
and ?stdout
and ?stderr
are file names used to redirect the standard input, the standard output, or the standard error of the command. If ~stdin:f
is given, a redirection < f
is performed and the standard input of the command reads from file f
. If ~stdout:f
is given, a redirection > f
is performed and the standard output of the command is written to file f
. If ~stderr:f
is given, a redirection 2> f
is performed and the standard error of the command is written to file f
. If both ~stdout:f
and ~stderr:f
are given, with the exact same file name f
, a 2>&1
redirection is performed so that the standard output and the standard error of the command are interleaved and redirected to the same file f
.
Under Unix and Cygwin, the command, the arguments, and the redirections if any are quoted using Filename.quote
, then concatenated. Under Win32, additional quoting is performed as required by the cmd.exe
shell that is called by Sys.command
.