NAME
No::Worries::Stat - stat() handling without worries
SYNOPSIS
use No::Worries::Stat qw(*);
@stat = stat($path) or die;
printf("type is %s\n", stat_type($stat[ST_MODE]));
printf("size is %d\n", $stat[ST_SIZE]);
printf("user can read\n") if $stat[ST_MODE] & S_IRUSR;
# make sure "/bin/ls" is owned by root and has the right permissions
stat_ensure("/bin/ls", user => "root", mode => 0755);
# make sure "/var/log" is not group or world writable
stat_ensure("/var/log", mode => "-022");
# idem but using the S_* constants
stat_ensure("/var/log", mode => "-" . (S_IWGRP|S_IWOTH));
DESCRIPTION
This module eases file status handling by providing convenient constants and functions to get, set and manipulate file status information. All the functions die() on error.
CONSTANTS
This module provides the following constants to ease access to stat() fields (none of them being exported by default):
ST_DEV
-
ID of device containing file
ST_INO
-
inode number
ST_MODE
-
protection
ST_NLINK
-
number of hard links
ST_UID
-
user ID of owner
ST_GID
-
group ID of owner
ST_RDEV
-
device ID (if special file)
ST_SIZE
-
total size, in bytes
ST_ATIME
-
time of last access
ST_MTIME
-
time of last modification
ST_CTIME
-
time of last status change
ST_BLKSIZE
-
blocksize for filesystem I/O
ST_BLOCKS
-
number of 512B blocks allocated
In addition, it also optionally exports all the ":mode" constants from Fcntl.
This way, all the stat() related constants can be imported in a uniform way.
FUNCTIONS
This module provides the following functions (none of them being exported by default):
- stat_type(MODE)
-
given the file mode (
ST_MODE
field), return the file type as a string; possible return values are: "block device", "character device", "directory", "door", "event port", "network file", "pipe", "plain file", "socket", "symlink", "unknown" and "whiteout". - stat_ensure(PATH[, OPTIONS])
-
make sure the given path has the expected file "status" (w.r.t. stat()) and call chown(), chmod() or utime() if needed, returning the number of changes performed; supported options:
user
: expected user name or uidgroup
: expected group name or gidmode
: expected mode specification (see below)mtime
: expected modification timefollow
: follow symbolic links (default is to skip them)callback
: code to be executed before changing something (see below)
The mode
option of stat_ensure() can be given:
- NUMBER
-
an absolute value like 0755, meaning that mode must be equal to it
- +NUMBER
-
a list of bits that must be set, e.g. "+0111" for "executable for all"
- -NUMBER
-
a list of bits that must be clear, e.g. "-022" for not writable by group or other
Note: the number after "+" or "-" will be interpreted as being octal only if it starts with "0". You should therefore use "+0111" or "+".oct(111) to enable the executable bits but not "+111" which is the same as "+0157".
The callback
option of stat_ensure() will receive the given path and a string describing what is about to be changed. It must return true to tell stat_ensure() to indeed perform the changes.
Here is for insatnce how a "noaction" option could be implemented:
sub noaction ($$) {
my($path, $change) = @_;
printf("did not change %s of %s\n", $change, $path);
return(0);
}
foreach my $path (@paths) {
stat_ensure($path, user => "root", mode => 0755, callback => \&noaction);
}
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Lionel Cons http://cern.ch/lionel.cons
Copyright (C) CERN 2012-2014