filename

filename

filename
Filename manipulation functions.

This module provides functions for analyzing and manipulating filenames. These functions are designed so that the Erlang code can work on many different platforms with different filename formats. With filename is meant all strings that can be used to denote a file. The filename can be a short relative name like foo.erl, a long absolute name including a drive designator, a directory name like D:\usr/local\bin\erl/lib\tools\foo.erl, or any variations in between.

In Windows, all functions return filenames with forward slashes only, even if the arguments contain backslashes. To normalize a filename by removing redundant directory separators, use join/1.

The module supports raw filenames in the way that if a binary is present, or the filename cannot be interpreted according to the return value of file:native_name_encoding/0, a raw filename is also returned. For example, join/1 provided with a path component that is a binary (and cannot be interpreted under the current native filename encoding) results in a raw filename that is returned (the join operation is performed of course). For more information about raw filenames, see the file module.

Note

Functionality in this module generally assumes valid input and does not necessarily fail on input that does not use a valid encoding, but may instead very likely produce invalid output.

File operations used to accept filenames containing null characters (integer value zero). This caused the name to be truncated and in some cases arguments to primitive operations to be mixed up. Filenames containing null characters inside the filename are now rejected and will cause primitive file operations to fail.

Warning

Currently null characters at the end of the filename will be accepted by primitive file operations. Such filenames are however still documented as invalid. The implementation will also change in the future and reject such filenames.

Types

Filename = file:name_all()

Converts a relative Filename and returns an absolute name. No attempt is made to create the shortest absolute name, as this can give incorrect results on file systems that allow links.

Unix examples:

1> pwd().
"/usr/local"
2> filename:absname("foo").
"/usr/local/foo"
3> filename:absname("../x").
"/usr/local/../x"
4> filename:absname("/").
"/"

Windows examples:

1> pwd().
"D:/usr/local"
2> filename:absname("foo").
"D:/usr/local/foo"
3> filename:absname("../x").
"D:/usr/local/../x"
4> filename:absname("/").
"D:/"

Types

Dir = Filename = file:name_all()

Joins an absolute directory with a relative filename. Similar to join/2, but on platforms with tight restrictions on raw filename length and no support for symbolic links, leading parent directory components in Filename are matched against trailing directory components in Dir so they can be removed from the result - minimizing its length.

Types

PathType = basedir_path_type()
PathsType = basedir_paths_type()
Application = string() | binary()
Opts = basedir_opts()
basedir_path_type() =
    user_cache | user_config | user_data | user_log

basedir_paths_type() = site_config | site_data
basedir_opts() =
    #{author => string() | binary(),
      os => windows | darwin | linux,
      version => string() | binary()}

Returns a suitable path, or paths, for a given type. If os is not set in Opts the function will default to the native option, that is 'linux', 'darwin' or 'windows', as understood by os:type/0. Anything not recognized as 'darwin' or 'windows' is interpreted as 'linux'.

The options 'author' and 'version' are only used with 'windows' option mode.

  • user_cache

    The path location is intended for transient data files on a local machine.

    On Linux: Respects the os environment variable XDG_CACHE_HOME.

    1> filename:basedir(user_cache, "my_application", #{os=>linux}).
    "/home/otptest/.cache/my_application"
    On Darwin:
    1> filename:basedir(user_cache, "my_application", #{os=>darwin}).
    "/home/otptest/Library/Caches/my_application"
    On Windows:
    1> filename:basedir(user_cache, "My App").
    "c:/Users/otptest/AppData/Local/My App/Cache"
    2> filename:basedir(user_cache, "My App").
    "c:/Users/otptest/AppData/Local/My App/Cache"
    3> filename:basedir(user_cache, "My App", #{author=>"Erlang"}).
    "c:/Users/otptest/AppData/Local/Erlang/My App/Cache"
    4> filename:basedir(user_cache, "My App", #{version=>"1.2"}).
    "c:/Users/otptest/AppData/Local/My App/1.2/Cache"
    5> filename:basedir(user_cache, "My App", #{author=>"Erlang",version=>"1.2"}).
    "c:/Users/otptest/AppData/Local/Erlang/My App/1.2/Cache"
  • user_config

    The path location is intended for persistent configuration files.

    On Linux: Respects the os environment variable XDG_CONFIG_HOME.

    2> filename:basedir(user_config, "my_application", #{os=>linux}).
    "/home/otptest/.config/my_application"
    On Darwin:
    2> filename:basedir(user_config, "my_application", #{os=>darwin}).
    "/home/otptest/Library/Application Support/my_application"
    On Windows:
    1> filename:basedir(user_config, "My App").
    "c:/Users/otptest/AppData/Roaming/My App"
    2> filename:basedir(user_config, "My App", #{author=>"Erlang", version=>"1.2"}).
    "c:/Users/otptest/AppData/Roaming/Erlang/My App/1.2"
  • user_data

    The path location is intended for persistent data files.

    On Linux: Respects the os environment variable XDG_DATA_HOME.

    3> filename:basedir(user_data, "my_application", #{os=>linux}).
    "/home/otptest/.local/my_application"
    On Darwin:
    3> filename:basedir(user_data, "my_application", #{os=>darwin}).
    "/home/otptest/Library/Application Support/my_application"
    On Windows:
    8> filename:basedir(user_data, "My App").
    "c:/Users/otptest/AppData/Local/My App"
    9> filename:basedir(user_data, "My App",#{author=>"Erlang",version=>"1.2"}).
    "c:/Users/otptest/AppData/Local/Erlang/My App/1.2"
  • user_log

    The path location is intended for transient log files on a local machine.

    On Linux: Respects the os environment variable XDG_CACHE_HOME.

    4> filename:basedir(user_log, "my_application", #{os=>linux}).
    "/home/otptest/.cache/my_application/log"
    On Darwin:
    4> filename:basedir(user_log, "my_application", #{os=>darwin}).
    "/home/otptest/Library/Logs/my_application"
    On Windows:
    12> filename:basedir(user_log, "My App").
    "c:/Users/otptest/AppData/Local/My App/Logs"
    13> filename:basedir(user_log, "My App",#{author=>"Erlang",version=>"1.2"}).
    "c:/Users/otptest/AppData/Local/Erlang/My App/1.2/Logs"
  • site_config

    On Linux: Respects the os environment variable XDG_CONFIG_DIRS.

    5> filename:basedir(site_config, "my_application", #{os=>linux}).
    ["/usr/local/share/my_application",
     "/usr/share/my_application"]
    6> os:getenv("XDG_CONFIG_DIRS").
    "/etc/xdg/xdg-ubuntu:/usr/share/upstart/xdg:/etc/xdg"
    7> filename:basedir(site_config, "my_application", #{os=>linux}).
    ["/etc/xdg/xdg-ubuntu/my_application",
     "/usr/share/upstart/xdg/my_application",
     "/etc/xdg/my_application"]
    8> os:unsetenv("XDG_CONFIG_DIRS").
    true
    9> filename:basedir(site_config, "my_application", #{os=>linux}).
    ["/etc/xdg/my_application"]
    On Darwin:
    5> filename:basedir(site_config, "my_application", #{os=>darwin}).
    ["/Library/Application Support/my_application"]
  • site_data

    On Linux: Respects the os environment variable XDG_DATA_DIRS.

    10> os:getenv("XDG_DATA_DIRS").
    "/usr/share/ubuntu:/usr/share/gnome:/usr/local/share/:/usr/share/"
    11> filename:basedir(site_data, "my_application", #{os=>linux}).
    ["/usr/share/ubuntu/my_application",
     "/usr/share/gnome/my_application",
     "/usr/local/share/my_application",
     "/usr/share/my_application"]
    12> os:unsetenv("XDG_DATA_DIRS").
    true
    13> filename:basedir(site_data, "my_application", #{os=>linux}).
    ["/usr/local/share/my_application",
     "/usr/share/my_application"]
    On Darwin:
    5> filename:basedir(site_data, "my_application", #{os=>darwin}).
    ["/Library/Application Support/my_application"]

Types

Filename = file:name_all()

Returns the last component of Filename, or Filename itself if it does not contain any directory separators.

Examples:

5> filename:basename("foo").
"foo"
6> filename:basename("/usr/foo").
"foo"
7> filename:basename("/").
[]

Types

Filename = Ext = file:name_all()

Returns the last component of Filename with extension Ext stripped. This function is to be used to remove a (possible) specific extension. To remove an existing extension when you are unsure which one it is, use rootname(basename(Filename)).

Examples:

8> filename:basename("~/src/kalle.erl", ".erl").
"kalle"
9> filename:basename("~/src/kalle.beam", ".erl").
"kalle.beam"
10> filename:basename("~/src/kalle.old.erl", ".erl").
"kalle.old"
11> filename:rootname(filename:basename("~/src/kalle.erl")).
"kalle"
12> filename:rootname(filename:basename("~/src/kalle.beam")).
"kalle"

Types

Filename = file:name_all()

Returns the directory part of Filename.

Examples:

13> filename:dirname("/usr/src/kalle.erl").
"/usr/src"
14> filename:dirname("kalle.erl").
"."
5> filename:dirname("\\usr\\src/kalle.erl"). % Windows
"/usr/src"

Types

Filename = file:name_all()

Returns the file extension of Filename, including the period. Returns an empty string if no extension exists.

Examples:

15> filename:extension("foo.erl").
".erl"
16> filename:extension("beam.src/kalle").
[]

Types

Filename = file:name_all()

Converts a possibly deep list filename consisting of characters and atoms into the corresponding flat string filename.

Types

Components = [file:name_all()]

Joins a list of filename Components with directory separators. If one of the elements of Components includes an absolute path, such as "/xxx", the preceding elements, if any, are removed from the result.

The result is "normalized":

  • Redundant directory separators are removed.
  • In Windows, all directory separators are forward slashes and the drive letter is in lower case.

Examples:

17> filename:join(["/usr", "local", "bin"]).
"/usr/local/bin"
18> filename:join(["a/b///c/"]).
"a/b/c"
6> filename:join(["B:a\\b///c/"]). % Windows
"b:a/b/c"

Types

Name1 = Name2 = file:name_all()

Joins two filename components with directory separators. Equivalent to join([Name1, Name2]).

Types

Converts Path to a form accepted by the command shell and native applications on the current platform. On Windows, forward slashes are converted to backward slashes. On all platforms, the name is normalized as done by join/1.

Examples:

19> filename:nativename("/usr/local/bin/"). % Unix
"/usr/local/bin"
7> filename:nativename("/usr/local/bin/"). % Windows
"\\usr\\local\\bin"

Types

Returns the path type, which is one of the following:

The path name refers to a specific file on a specific volume.

Unix example: /usr/local/bin

Windows example: D:/usr/local/bin

The path name is relative to the current working directory on the current volume.

Example: foo/bar, ../src

The path name is relative to the current working directory on a specified volume, or it is a specific file on the current working volume.

Windows example: D:bar.erl, /bar/foo.erl

Types

Filename = Ext = file:name_all()

Removes a filename extension. rootname/2 works as rootname/1, except that the extension is removed only if it is Ext.

Examples:

20> filename:rootname("/beam.src/kalle").
"/beam.src/kalle"
21> filename:rootname("/beam.src/foo.erl").
"/beam.src/foo"
22> filename:rootname("/beam.src/foo.erl", ".erl").
"/beam.src/foo"
23> filename:rootname("/beam.src/foo.beam", ".erl").
"/beam.src/foo.beam"

Types

Filename = file:name_all()
Components = [file:name_all()]

Returns a list whose elements are the path components of Filename.

Examples:

24> filename:split("/usr/local/bin").
["/","usr","local","bin"]
25> filename:split("foo/bar").
["foo","bar"]
26> filename:split("a:\\msdev\\include").
["a:/","msdev","include"]