NAME

Padre::File - Common API for file functions

DESCRIPTION

Padre::File provides a common API for file access within Padre. It covers all the differences with non-local files by mapping every function call to the currently used transport stream.

METHODS

RegisterProtocol

Padre::File->RegisterProtocol($RegExp, $Module);

Class method, may not be called on an object.

A plug-in could call Padre::File-RegisterProtocol> to register a new protocol to Padre::File and enable Padre to use URLs handled by this module.

Example:

Padre::File->RegisterProtocol('^nfs\:\/\/','Padre::Plugin::NFS');

Every file/URL opened through Padre::File which starts with nfs:// is now handled through Padre::Plugin::NFS. Padre::File->new() will respect this and call Padre::Plugin::NFS->new() to handle such URLs.

Returns true on success or false on error.

Registered protocols may override the internal protocols.

DropProtocol

Drops a previously registered protocol handler. First argument must be the same regular expression (matching a protocol from an URI) that was used to register the protocol handler in the first place using RegisterProtocol. Similarly, the second argument must be the name of the class (module) that the handler was registered for. That means if you registered your protocol with

Padre::File->RegisterProtocol(qr/^sftp:\/\//, 'Padre::File::MySFTP');

then you need to drop it with

Padre::File->DropProtocol(qr/^sftp:\/\//, 'Padre::File::MySFTP');

Returns true if a handler was removed and the empty list if no handler was found for the given regular expression.

new

my $file = Padre::File->new($File_or_URL);

The new constructor lets you create a new Padre::File object.

Only one parameter is accepted at the moment: The name of the file which should be used. As soon as there are HTTP, FTP, SSH and other modules, also URLs should be accepted.

If you know the protocol (which should be true every time you build the URL by source), it's better to call Padre::File::Protocol->new($URL) directly (replacing Protocol by the protocol which should be used, of course).

The module for the selected protocol should fill ->{filename} property. This should be used for all further references to the file as it will contain the file name in universal correct format (for example correct the C:\ eq C:/ problem on Windows).

Returns a new Padre::File or dies on error.

atime

$file->atime;

Returns the last-access time of the file.

This is usually not possible for non-local files, in these cases, the empty list is returned.

basename

$file->basename;

Returns the plain file name without path if a path/file name structure exists for this module.

blksize

$file->blksize;

Returns the block size of the file system where the file resides.

This is usually not possible for non-local files, in these cases, the empty list is returned.

blocks

$file->blocks;

Returns the number of blocks used by the file.

This is usually not possible for non-local files, in these cases, the empty list is returned.

browse_mtime

$file->browse_mtime($path_and_filename);

Returns the modification time of the given file on the remote server.

Leave out the protocol and server name for remote protocols, for example

my $file = Padre::File->new('http://perlide.org/current/foo.html');
$file->browse_mtime('/archive/bar.html');

This returns the mtime of http://perlide.org/archive/bar.html

The default uses one Padre::File clone per request which is a reasonable fallback but very inefficient! Please add browse_ - methods to the subclass module whenever possible.

browse_url_join

$file->browse_url_join($server, $path, $basename);

Merges a servername, pathname and a filename to a complete url.

A "path" in this function is meant to be the local path on the server, not the Padre path (which includes the servername).

You may think of /tmp + padre.$$ => /tmp/padre.$$ C:\\temp + padre.$$ => C:\\temp\\padre.$$

...but also remember http://perlide.org + about.html => http://perlide.org/about.html

Datapoint created a file syntax... common + program/text => program/text:common This could happen once someone adds a Padre::File::DBCFS for using a DB/C FS fileserver. "program" is the filename, "text" the extension and "common" is what we call a directory.

The most common seems to be a / as the directory seperator char, so we'll use this as the default.

This method should care about merging double / to one if this should be done on this filesystem (even if the default doesn't care).

can_clone

$file->can_clone;

Returns true if the protocol allows re-using of connections for new files (usually from the same project).

Local files don't use connections at all, HTTP uses one-request- connections, cloning has no benefit for them. FTP and SSH use connections to a remote server and we should work to get no more than one connection per server.

can_run

$file->can_run;

Returns true if the protocol allows execution of files or the empty list if it doesn't.

This is usually not possible for non-local files (which return true), because there is no way to reproduce a save environment for running a HTTP or FTP based file (they return false).

clone

my $clone = $file->clone($File_or_URL);

The clone constructor lets you create a new Padre::File object reusing an existing connection.

Takes the same arguments as the new method.

If the protocol doesn't know about (server) connections/sessions, returns a brand new Padre::File object.

NOTICE: If you request a clone which is located on another server, you'll get a Padre::File object using the original connection to the original server and the original authentication data but the new path and filename!

Returns a new Padre::File or dies on error.

clone_file

my $clone = $file->clone_file($filename_with_path);
my $clone = $file->clone_file($path,$filename);

The clone constructor lets you create a new Padre::File object reusing an existing connection.

Takes one or two arguments: - either the complete path + filename of an URL - or the path and filename as seperate arguments

If the protocol doesn't know about (server) connections/sessions, returns a brand new Padre::File object.

Returns a new Padre::File or dies on error.

ctime

$file->ctime;

Returns the last-change time of the inode (not the file!).

This is usually not possible for non-local files, in these cases, the empty list is returned.

dev

$file->dev;

Returns the device number of the file system where the file resides.

This is usually not possible for non-local files, in these cases, the empty list is returned.

dirname

$file->dirname;

Returns the plain path without file name if a path/file name structure exists for this module.

Returns the empty list on failure or undefined behaviour for the given protocol.

error

$file->error;

Returns the last error message (like $! for system calls).

exists

$file->exists;

Returns true if the file exists. Returns false if the file doesn't exist. Returns the empty list if unsure (network problem, not implemented).

filename

$file->filename;

Returns the the file name including path handled by this object.

Please remember that Padre::File is able to open many URL types. This file name may also be a URL. Please use the basename and dirname methods to split it (assuming that a path exists in the current protocol).

gid

$file->gid;

Returns the real group ID of the file group.

This is usually not possible for non-local files, in these cases, the empty list is returned.

inode

$file->inode;

Returns the inode number of the file.

This is usually not possible for non-local files, in these cases, the empty list is returned.

mime

$file->mime;
$file->mime('text/plain');

Returns or sets the MIME type of the file.

mode

$file->mode;

Returns the file mode (type and rights). See also: "stat" in perlfunc. To get the Unixy file permissions as the usual octal number (as opposed to a string) use:

use Fcntl ':mode';
my $perms_octal = S_IMODE($file->mode);

This is usually not possible for non-local files, in these cases, the empty list is returned.

mtime

$file->mtime;

Returns the last-modification (change) time of the file.

$file->nlink;

Returns the number of hard links to the file.

This is usually not possible for non-local files, in these cases, the empty list is returned.

rdev

$file->rdev;

Returns the device identifier.

This is usually not possible for non-local files, in these cases, the empty list is returned.

read

$file->read;

Reads the file contents and returns them.

Returns the empty list on error. The error message can be retrieved using the error method.

servername

$file->servername;

Returns the server name for this module - if the protocol knows about a server, local files don't.

WARNING: The Padre "path" includes the servername in a protocol dependent syntax!

size

$file->size;

Returns the file size in bytes or the empty list if the method was not implemented by the Padre::File subclass.

stat

$file->stat;

This emulates a stat call and returns the same values:

 0 dev      device number of file system
 1 ino      inode number
 2 mode     file mode  (type and permissions)
 3 nlink    number of (hard) links to the file
 4 uid      numeric user ID of file's owner
 5 gid      numeric group ID of file's owner
 6 rdev     the device identifier (special files only)
 7 size     total size of file, in bytes
 8 atime    last access time in seconds since the epoch
 9 mtime    last modify time in seconds since the epoch
10 ctime    inode change time in seconds since the epoch (*)
11 blksize  preferred block size for file system I/O
12 blocks   actual number of blocks allocated

A module should fill as many items as possible, but if you're thinking about using this method, always remember

  1. Usually, you need only one or two of the items, request them directly.

  2. Besides from local files, most of the values will not be accessible (resulting in empty lists/false returned).

  3. On most protocols these values must be requested one-by-one, which is very expensive.

Please always consider using the function for the value you really need instead of using stat!

uid

$file->uid;

Returns the real user ID of the file owner.

This is usually not possible for non-local files, in these cases, the empty list is returned.

write

$file->write($Content);
$file->write($Content,$Coding);

Writes the given $Content to the file, if a encoding is given and the protocol allows encoding, it is respected.

Returns 1 on success. Returns 0 on failure. Returns the empty list if the function is not available on the protocol.