NAME
Archive::Tar::Merge - Merge two or more tarballs into one
SYNOPSIS
use Archive::Tar::Merge;
my $merger = Archive::Tar::Merge->new(
source_tarballs => ["a.tgz", "b.tgz"],
dest_tarball => "c.tgz"
);
$merger->merge();
DESCRIPTION
Archive::Tar::Merge
takes two or more tarballs, merges their files and writes the resulting directory/file structure out to a destination tarball.
In the easiest case, there's no overlap between files. Then the result is just a union of all files in all source tarballs.
If there's overlap, but the overlapping files are identical in the source and destination tarballs, there's no conflict and Archive::Tar::Merge
just puts the files into the destination tarball without further ado.
Deciders
If there is a conflict, e.g. two files under the same path in two source tarballs which have different content or permissions, a decision needs to be made which of the source files is going to be used in the destination tarball. The decider
parameter takes a reference to a function, which receives both the logical path and the physical locations of the two (or more) conflicting files. Based on this, it decides what to do:
Return the array index of the winning file. If the decider gets a reference to an array of 2 source tarballs, returning
return { index => 0 }
will pick the first file while
return { index => 1 }
will pick the second one.
Return the content of the winning file. How it comes up with this content is up to the decider, typically, it applies a filter to one or more of the source files, derives the content of the destination file from them and returns its content as a string.
return { content => "content of destination file" }
Ignore the file. Leave it out of the destination tarball:
return { action => "ignore" };
As parameters, the decider receives the file's logical source path in the tarball and a list of paths to the unpacked source file candidates. Here's an example of a decider that resolves conflicts by prioritizing files from the second source tarball (b.tgz
):
my $merger = Archive::Tar::Merge->new(
source_tarballs => ["a.tgz", "b.tgz"],
dest_tarball => "c.tgz"
decider => \&decider,
);
# If there's a conflict, let the source file of the
# last candidate win.
sub decider {
my($logical_src_path, $candidate_physical_paths) = @_;
# Always return the index of the last candidate
return { index => "-1" };
}
$merger->merge();
If a decider wants to make a decision based on the content of one or more of the source files, it has to open and read them. A somewhat contrived example would be a decider which appends the content of all conflicting source files and adds them under the given logical path to the destination tarball:
use File::Slurp;
sub decider {
my($logical_src_path, $candidate_physical_paths) = @_;
my $content;
for my $path (@$candidate_physical_paths) {
$content .= read_file($path);
}
return { content => $content };
}
A decider receives a reference to the outgoing Archive::Tar::Wrapper
object as a third parameter:
sub decider {
my($logical_src_path, $candidate_physical_paths, $out_tar) = @_;
This allows for adding extra files to the outgoing tarball and perform all kinds of scary manipulations.
Hooks
Sometimes not all of the source files are supposed to be merged to the destination. A hook, called with the logical source path and a list of source file candidate physical paths, can act as a filter to suppress files, modify their content, or store them under a different location.
my $merger = Archive::Tar::Merge->new(
source_tarballs => ["a.tgz", "b.tgz"],
dest_tarball => "c.tgz"
hook => \&hook,
);
# Keep only "bin/*" files
sub hook {
my($logical_src_path, $candidate_paths) = @_;
if($logical_src_path =~ /^bin/) {
# keep
return undef;
}
return { action => "ignore" };
}
Just like deciders, hooks receive the file's logical source path in the tarball and a reference to an array of paths to the source file candidates. Hooks differ from deciders in that they are called with every file that is merged and not just with conflicting files.
If a merger defines both a decider and a hook, in case of a conflict, it will <only> call the decider. It doesn't make sense to call the hook in this case because the decider already had the opportunity to totally render the content of the file itself, making things like source paths useless.
If a hook returns undef
, the file will be kept unmodified. On
return { action => "ignore" };
the file will be ignored. And a hook can, just like a decider, filter the original file or create its content from scratch by using the content
parameter.
A hook also receives a reference to the outgoing Archive::Tar::Wrapper
object.
Using a decider to add multiple files
If you have two tarballs which both have a different version of path/to/file
, you might want to add these entries as path/to/file.1
and path/to/file.2
to the outgoing tarball.
Since the decider gets a reference to the outgoing tarball's Archive::Tar::Wrapper
object, it can easily do that:
my $merger = Archive::Tar::Merge->new(
source_tarballs => ["a.tgz", "b.tgz"],
decider => sub {
my($logical_src_path, $candidate_physical_paths, $out_tar) = @_;
my $idx = 1;
for my $ppath (@$candidate_physical_paths) {
$out_tar->add($logical_src_path . ".$idx", $ppath);
$idx++;
}
return { action => "ignore" };
}
);
Note that the decider code not only adds the different versions under different paths to the outgoing tarball but also tells the main Archive::Tar::Merge
code to ignore the file to prevent it from adding yet another version.
Post-processing the outgoing tarball
If the Archive::Tar::Merge
object gets the name of the outgoing tarball in its constructor call, its merge()
method will write the outgoing tarball into the file specified right after the merge process has been completed.
If dest_tarball
isn't specified, as in
my $merger = Archive::Tar::Merge->new(
source_tarballs => ["a.tgz", "b.tgz"],
);
then writing out the resulting tarball can be done manually by using the Archive::Tar::Wrapper
object returned by merge()
:
my $out_tar = $merger->merge();
$out_tar->write("c.tgz", $compressed);
For more info on what to do with the Archive::Tar::Wrapper
object, read its documentation.
TODO
* Copy directories? * What if an entry is a symlink in one tarball and a file in another? * Permissions of target files created by content * N different symlinks (hash dst file)
LEGALESE
Copyright 2007 by Mike Schilli, all rights reserved. This program is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
AUTHOR
2007, Mike Schilli <cpan@perlmeister.com>