View Source Path (Elixir v1.14.1)
This module provides conveniences for manipulating or retrieving file system paths.
The functions in this module may receive chardata as
arguments and will always return a string encoded in UTF-8. Chardata
is a string or a list of characters and strings, see IO.chardata/0
.
If a binary is given, in whatever encoding, its encoding will be kept.
The majority of the functions in this module do not
interact with the file system, except for a few functions
that require it (like wildcard/2
and expand/1
).
Link to this section Summary
Functions
Converts the given path to an absolute one.
Builds a path from relative_to
to path
.
Returns the last component of the path or the path itself if it does not contain any directory separators.
Returns the last component of path
with the extension
stripped.
Returns the directory component of path
.
Converts the path to an absolute one, expanding
any .
and ..
components and a leading ~
.
Expands the path relative to the path given as the second argument
expanding any .
and ..
characters.
Returns the extension of the last component of path
.
Joins a list of paths.
Joins two paths.
Forces the path to be a relative path.
Returns the given path
relative to the given from
path.
Convenience to get the path relative to the current working directory.
Returns the path
with the extension
stripped.
Returns the path
with the extension
stripped.
Returns a path relative to the current working directory that is protected from directory-traversal attacks.
Returns a relative path that is protected from directory-traversal attacks.
Splits the path into a list at the path separator.
Returns the path type.
Traverses paths according to the given glob
expression and returns a
list of matches.
Link to this section Types
@type t() :: IO.chardata()
A path.
Link to this section Functions
Converts the given path to an absolute one.
Unlike expand/1
, no attempt is made to resolve ..
, .
, or ~
.
Examples
Unix-like operating systems
Path.absname("foo")
#=> "/usr/local/foo"
Path.absname("../x")
#=> "/usr/local/../x"
Windows
Path.absname("foo")
#=> "D:/usr/local/foo"
Path.absname("../x")
#=> "D:/usr/local/../x"
Builds a path from relative_to
to path
.
If path
is already an absolute path, relative_to
is ignored. See also
relative_to/2
.
Unlike expand/2
, no attempt is made to
resolve ..
, .
or ~
.
Examples
iex> Path.absname("foo", "bar")
"bar/foo"
iex> Path.absname("../x", "bar")
"bar/../x"
Returns the last component of the path or the path itself if it does not contain any directory separators.
Examples
iex> Path.basename("foo")
"foo"
iex> Path.basename("foo/bar")
"bar"
iex> Path.basename("lib/module/submodule.ex")
"submodule.ex"
iex> Path.basename("/")
""
Returns the last component of path
with the extension
stripped.
This function should be used to remove a specific extension which may or may not be there.
Examples
iex> Path.basename("~/foo/bar.ex", ".ex")
"bar"
iex> Path.basename("~/foo/bar.exs", ".ex")
"bar.exs"
iex> Path.basename("~/foo/bar.old.ex", ".ex")
"bar.old"
Returns the directory component of path
.
Examples
iex> Path.dirname("/foo/bar.ex")
"/foo"
iex> Path.dirname("/foo/bar/baz.ex")
"/foo/bar"
iex> Path.dirname("/foo/bar/")
"/foo/bar"
iex> Path.dirname("bar.ex")
"."
Converts the path to an absolute one, expanding
any .
and ..
components and a leading ~
.
Examples
Path.expand("/foo/bar/../baz")
#=> "/foo/baz"
Expands the path relative to the path given as the second argument
expanding any .
and ..
characters.
If the path is already an absolute path, relative_to
is ignored.
Note that this function treats a path
with a leading ~
as
an absolute one.
The second argument is first expanded to an absolute path.
Examples
# Assuming that the absolute path to baz is /quux/baz
Path.expand("foo/bar/../bar", "baz")
#=> "/quux/baz/foo/bar"
Path.expand("foo/bar/../bar", "/baz")
#=> "/baz/foo/bar"
Path.expand("/foo/bar/../bar", "/baz")
#=> "/foo/bar"
Returns the extension of the last component of path
.
The behaviour of this function changed in Erlang/OTP 24 for filenames
starting with a dot and without an extension. For example, for a file
named .gitignore
, extname/1
now returns an empty string, while it
would return ".gitignore"
in previous Erlang/OTP versions. This was
done to match the behaviour of rootname/1
, which would return
".gitignore"
as its name (and therefore it cannot also be an extension).
See basename/1
and rootname/1
for related functions to extract
information from paths.
Examples
iex> Path.extname("foo.erl")
".erl"
iex> Path.extname("~/foo/bar")
""
Joins a list of paths.
This function should be used to convert a list of paths to a path. Note that any trailing slash is removed when joining.
Raises an error if the given list of paths is empty.
Examples
iex> Path.join(["~", "foo"])
"~/foo"
iex> Path.join(["foo"])
"foo"
iex> Path.join(["/", "foo", "bar/"])
"/foo/bar"
Joins two paths.
The right path will always be expanded to its relative format and any trailing slash will be removed when joining.
Examples
iex> Path.join("foo", "bar")
"foo/bar"
iex> Path.join("/foo", "/bar/")
"/foo/bar"
The functions in this module support chardata, so giving a list will treat it as a single entity:
iex> Path.join("foo", ["bar", "fiz"])
"foo/barfiz"
iex> Path.join(["foo", "bar"], "fiz")
"foobar/fiz"
Use join/1
if you need to join a list of paths instead.
Forces the path to be a relative path.
Examples
Unix-like operating systems
Path.relative("/usr/local/bin") #=> "usr/local/bin"
Path.relative("usr/local/bin") #=> "usr/local/bin"
Path.relative("../usr/local/bin") #=> "../usr/local/bin"
Windows
Path.relative("D:/usr/local/bin") #=> "usr/local/bin"
Path.relative("usr/local/bin") #=> "usr/local/bin"
Path.relative("D:bar.ex") #=> "bar.ex"
Path.relative("/bar/foo.ex") #=> "bar/foo.ex"
Returns the given path
relative to the given from
path.
In other words, this function tries to strip the from
prefix from path
.
This function does not query the file system, so it assumes no symlinks between the paths.
In case a direct relative path cannot be found, it returns the original path.
Examples
iex> Path.relative_to("/usr/local/foo", "/usr/local")
"foo"
iex> Path.relative_to("/usr/local/foo", "/")
"usr/local/foo"
iex> Path.relative_to("/usr/local/foo", "/etc")
"/usr/local/foo"
iex> Path.relative_to("/usr/local/foo", "/usr/local/foo")
"."
Convenience to get the path relative to the current working directory.
If, for some reason, the current working directory
cannot be retrieved, this function returns the given path
.
Returns the path
with the extension
stripped.
Examples
iex> Path.rootname("/foo/bar")
"/foo/bar"
iex> Path.rootname("/foo/bar.ex")
"/foo/bar"
Returns the path
with the extension
stripped.
This function should be used to remove a specific extension which may or may not be there.
Examples
iex> Path.rootname("/foo/bar.erl", ".erl")
"/foo/bar"
iex> Path.rootname("/foo/bar.erl", ".ex")
"/foo/bar.erl"
Returns a path relative to the current working directory that is protected from directory-traversal attacks.
Same as safe_relative_to/2
with the current working directory as
the second argument. If there is an issue retrieving the current working
directory, this function raises an error.
Examples
iex> Path.safe_relative("foo")
{:ok, "foo"}
iex> Path.safe_relative("foo/../bar")
{:ok, "bar"}
iex> Path.safe_relative("foo/../..")
:error
iex> Path.safe_relative("/usr/local")
:error
Returns a relative path that is protected from directory-traversal attacks.
The given relative path is sanitized by eliminating ..
and .
components.
This function checks that, after expanding those components, the path is still "safe". Paths are considered unsafe if either of these is true:
The path is not relative, such as
"/foo/bar"
.A
..
component would make it so that the path would travers up above the root ofrelative_to
.A symbolic link in the path points to something above the root of
relative_to
.
Examples
iex> Path.safe_relative_to("deps/my_dep/app.beam", "deps")
{:ok, "deps/my_dep/app.beam"}
iex> Path.safe_relative_to("deps/my_dep/./build/../app.beam", "deps")
{:ok, "deps/my_dep/app.beam"}
iex> Path.safe_relative_to("my_dep/../..", "deps")
:error
iex> Path.safe_relative_to("/usr/local", ".")
:error
Splits the path into a list at the path separator.
If an empty string is given, returns an empty list.
On Windows, path is split on both "\"
and "/"
separators
and the driver letter, if there is one, is always returned
in lowercase.
Examples
iex> Path.split("")
[]
iex> Path.split("foo")
["foo"]
iex> Path.split("/foo/bar")
["/", "foo", "bar"]
@spec type(t()) :: :absolute | :relative | :volumerelative
Returns the path type.
Examples
Unix-like operating systems
Path.type("/") #=> :absolute
Path.type("/usr/local/bin") #=> :absolute
Path.type("usr/local/bin") #=> :relative
Path.type("../usr/local/bin") #=> :relative
Path.type("~/file") #=> :relative
Windows
Path.type("D:/usr/local/bin") #=> :absolute
Path.type("usr/local/bin") #=> :relative
Path.type("D:bar.ex") #=> :volumerelative
Path.type("/bar/foo.ex") #=> :volumerelative
Traverses paths according to the given glob
expression and returns a
list of matches.
The wildcard looks like an ordinary path, except that the following "wildcard characters" are interpreted in a special way:
?
- matches one character.*
- matches any number of characters up to the end of the filename, the next dot, or the next slash.**
- two adjacent*
's used as a single pattern will match all files and zero or more directories and subdirectories.[char1,char2,...]
- matches any of the characters listed; two characters separated by a hyphen will match a range of characters. Do not add spaces before and after the comma as it would then match paths containing the space character itself.{item1,item2,...}
- matches one of the alternatives. Do not add spaces before and after the comma as it would then match paths containing the space character itself.
Other characters represent themselves. Only paths that have
exactly the same character in the same position will match. Note
that matching is case-sensitive: "a"
will not match "A"
.
Directory separators must always be written as /
, even on Windows.
You may call Path.expand/1
to normalize the path before invoking
this function.
By default, the patterns *
and ?
do not match files starting
with a dot .
. See the :match_dot
option in the "Options" section
below.
Options
:match_dot
- (boolean) iffalse
, the special wildcard characters*
and?
will not match files starting with a dot (.
). Iftrue
, files starting with a.
will not be treated specially. Defaults tofalse
.
Examples
Imagine you have a directory called projects
with three Elixir projects
inside of it: elixir
, ex_doc
, and plug
. You can find all .beam
files
inside the ebin
directory of each project as follows:
Path.wildcard("projects/*/ebin/**/*.beam")
If you want to search for both .beam
and .app
files, you could do:
Path.wildcard("projects/*/ebin/**/*.{beam,app}")