NAME

File::Finder - nice wrapper for File::Find ala find(1)

SYNOPSIS

use File::Finder;
## simulate "-type f"
my $all_files = File::Finder->type('f');

## any rule can be extended:
my $all_files_printer = $all_files->print;

## traditional use: generating "wanted" subroutines:
use File::Find;
find($all_files_printer, @starting_points);  

## or, we can gather up the results immediately:
my @results = $all_files->in(@starting_points);

## -depth and -follow are noted, but need a bit of help for find:
my $deep_dirs = File::Finder->depth->type('d')->ls->exec('rmdir','{}');
find($deep_dirs->as_options, @places);

DESCRIPTION

File::Find is great, but constructing the wanted routine can sometimes be a pain. This module provides a wanted-writer, using syntax that is directly mappable to the find command's syntax.

Also, I find myself (heh) frequently just wanting the list of names that match. With File::Find, I have to write a little accumulator, and then access that from a closure. But with File::Finder, I can turn the problem inside out.

A File::Finder object contains a hash of File::Find options, and a series of steps that mimic find's predicates. Initially, a File::Finder object has no steps. Each step method clones the previous object's options and steps, and then adds the new step, returning the new object. In this manner, an object can be grown, step by step, by chaining method calls. Furthermore, a partial sequence can be created and held, and used as the head of many different sequences.

For example, a step sequence that finds only files looks like:

my $files = File::Finder->type('f');

Here, type is acting as a class method and thus a constructor. An instance of File::Finder is returned, containing the one step to verify that only files are selected. We could use this immediately as a File::Find::find wanted routine, although it'd be uninteresting:

use File::Find;
find($files, "/tmp");

Calling a step method on an existing object adds the step, returning the new object:

my $files_print = $files->print;

And now if we use this with find, we get a nice display:

find($files_print, "/tmp");

Of course, we didn't really need that second object: we could have generated it on the fly:

find($files->print, "/tmp");

File::Find supports options to modify behavior, such as depth-first searching. The depth step flags this in the options as well:

my $files_depth_print = $files->depth->print;

However, the File::Finder object needs to be told explictly to generate an options hash for File::Find::find to pass this information along:

find($files_depth_print->as_options, "/tmp");

A File::Finder object, like the find command, supports AND, OR, NOT, and parenthesized sub-expressions. AND binds tighter than OR, and is also implied everywhere that it makes sense. Like find, the predicates are computed in a "short-circuit" fashion, so that a false to the left of the (implied) AND keeps the right side from being evaluated, including entire parenthesized subexpressions. Similarly, if the left side of an OR is false, the right side is evaluated, and if the left side of the OR is true, the right side is skipped. Nested parens are handled properly. Parens are indicated with the rather ugly left and right methods:

my $big_or_old_files = $files->left->size("+50")->or->atime("+30")->right;

The parens here correspond directly to the parens in:

find somewhere -type f '(' -size +50 -o -atime +30 ')'

and are needed so that the OR and the implied ANDs have the right nesting.

Besides passing the constructed File::Finder object to File::Finder::find directly as a wanted routine or an options hash, you can also call find implictly, with in. in provides a list of starting points, and returns all filenames that match the criteria.

For example, a list of all names in /tmp can be generated simply with:

my @names = File::Finder->in("/tmp");

For more flexibility, use collect to execute an arbitrary block in a list context, concatenating all the results (similar to map):

my %sizes = File::Finder
  ->collect(sub { $File::Find::name => -s _ }, "/tmp");

That's all I can think of for now. The rest is in the detailed reference below.

META METHODS

All of these methods can be used as class or instance methods, except new, which is usually not needed and is class only.

new

Not strictly needed, because any instance method called on a class will create a new object anyway.

as_wanted

Returns a subroutine suitable for passing to File::Find::find or File::Find::finddepth as the wanted routine. If the object is used in a place that wants a coderef, this happens automatically through overloading.

as_options

Returns a hashref suitable for passing to File::Find::find or File::Find::finddepth as the options hash. This is necessary if you want the meta-information to carry forward properly.

in(@starting_points)

Calls File::Find::find($self->as_options, @starting_points), gathering the results, and returns the results as a list. At the moment, it also returns the count of those items in a scalar context. If that's useful, I'll maintain that.

collect($coderef, @starting_points)

Calls $coderef in a list context for each of the matching items, gathering and concatenating the results, and returning the results as a list.

my $f = File::Finder->type('f');
my %sizes = $f->collect(sub { $File::Find::name, -s _ }, "/tmp");

In fact, in is implemented by calling collect with a coderef of just sub { $File::Find::name }.

STEPS

See File::Finder::Steps.

SPEED

All the steps can have a compile-time and run-time component. As much work is done during compile-time as possible. Runtime consists of a simple linear pass executing a series of closures representing the individual steps (not method calls). It is hoped that this will produce a speed that is within a factor of 2 or 3 of a handcrafted monolithic wanted routine.

SEE ALSO

File::Finder::Steps, File::Find, find2perl, File::Find::Rule

BUGS

None known yet.

AUTHOR

Randal L. Schwartz, <merlyn@stonehenge.com>, with a tip of the hat to Richard Clamp for File::Find::Rule.

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.