Copyright | (c) The University of Glasgow 2001 |
---|---|
License | BSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE) |
Maintainer | libraries@haskell.org |
Stability | stable |
Portability | portable |
Safe Haskell | Trustworthy |
Language | Haskell2010 |
System-independent interface to directory manipulation.
- createDirectory :: FilePath -> IO ()
- createDirectoryIfMissing :: Bool -> FilePath -> IO ()
- removeDirectory :: FilePath -> IO ()
- removeDirectoryRecursive :: FilePath -> IO ()
- renameDirectory :: FilePath -> FilePath -> IO ()
- getDirectoryContents :: FilePath -> IO [FilePath]
- getCurrentDirectory :: IO FilePath
- setCurrentDirectory :: FilePath -> IO ()
- getHomeDirectory :: IO FilePath
- getAppUserDataDirectory :: String -> IO FilePath
- getUserDocumentsDirectory :: IO FilePath
- getTemporaryDirectory :: IO FilePath
- removeFile :: FilePath -> IO ()
- renameFile :: FilePath -> FilePath -> IO ()
- copyFile :: FilePath -> FilePath -> IO ()
- canonicalizePath :: FilePath -> IO FilePath
- makeAbsolute :: FilePath -> IO FilePath
- makeRelativeToCurrentDirectory :: FilePath -> IO FilePath
- findExecutable :: String -> IO (Maybe FilePath)
- findExecutables :: String -> IO [FilePath]
- findFile :: [FilePath] -> String -> IO (Maybe FilePath)
- findFiles :: [FilePath] -> String -> IO [FilePath]
- findFilesWith :: (FilePath -> IO Bool) -> [FilePath] -> String -> IO [FilePath]
- doesFileExist :: FilePath -> IO Bool
- doesDirectoryExist :: FilePath -> IO Bool
- data Permissions
- emptyPermissions :: Permissions
- readable :: Permissions -> Bool
- writable :: Permissions -> Bool
- executable :: Permissions -> Bool
- searchable :: Permissions -> Bool
- setOwnerReadable :: Bool -> Permissions -> Permissions
- setOwnerWritable :: Bool -> Permissions -> Permissions
- setOwnerExecutable :: Bool -> Permissions -> Permissions
- setOwnerSearchable :: Bool -> Permissions -> Permissions
- getPermissions :: FilePath -> IO Permissions
- setPermissions :: FilePath -> Permissions -> IO ()
- copyPermissions :: FilePath -> FilePath -> IO ()
- getModificationTime :: FilePath -> IO UTCTime
Documentation
A directory contains a series of entries, each of which is a named
reference to a file system object (file, directory etc.). Some
entries may be hidden, inaccessible, or have some administrative
function (e.g. .
or `..' under POSIX
http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/), but in
this standard all such entries are considered to form part of the
directory contents. Entries in sub-directories are not, however,
considered to form part of the directory contents.
Each file system object is referenced by a path. There is normally at least one absolute path to each file system object. In some operating systems, it may also be possible to have paths which are relative to the current directory.
Actions on directories
createDirectory :: FilePath -> IO () Source
creates a new directory createDirectory
dirdir
which is
initially empty, or as near to empty as the operating system
allows.
The operation may fail with:
isPermissionError
/PermissionDenied
The process has insufficient privileges to perform the operation.[EROFS, EACCES]
isAlreadyExistsError
/AlreadyExists
The operand refers to a directory that already exists.[EEXIST]
HardwareFault
A physical I/O error has occurred.[EIO]
InvalidArgument
The operand is not a valid directory name.[ENAMETOOLONG, ELOOP]
NoSuchThing
There is no path to the directory.[ENOENT, ENOTDIR]
ResourceExhausted
Insufficient resources (virtual memory, process file descriptors, physical disk space, etc.) are available to perform the operation.[EDQUOT, ENOSPC, ENOMEM, EMLINK]
InappropriateType
The path refers to an existing non-directory object.[EEXIST]
createDirectoryIfMissing Source
creates a new directory
createDirectoryIfMissing
parents dirdir
if it doesn't exist. If the first argument is True
the function will also create all parent directories if they are missing.
removeDirectory :: FilePath -> IO () Source
removes an existing directory dir. The
implementation may specify additional constraints which must be
satisfied before a directory can be removed (e.g. the directory has to
be empty, or may not be in use by other processes). It is not legal
for an implementation to partially remove a directory unless the
entire directory is removed. A conformant implementation need not
support directory removal in all situations (e.g. removal of the root
directory).removeDirectory
dir
The operation may fail with:
HardwareFault
A physical I/O error has occurred.[EIO]
InvalidArgument
The operand is not a valid directory name.[ENAMETOOLONG, ELOOP]
isDoesNotExistError
/NoSuchThing
The directory does not exist.[ENOENT, ENOTDIR]
isPermissionError
/PermissionDenied
The process has insufficient privileges to perform the operation.[EROFS, EACCES, EPERM]
UnsatisfiedConstraints
Implementation-dependent constraints are not satisfied.[EBUSY, ENOTEMPTY, EEXIST]
UnsupportedOperation
The implementation does not support removal in this situation.[EINVAL]
InappropriateType
The operand refers to an existing non-directory object.[ENOTDIR]
removeDirectoryRecursive :: FilePath -> IO () Source
removes an existing directory dir
together with its contents and subdirectories. Symbolic links are removed
without affecting their the targets.removeDirectoryRecursive
dir
renameDirectory :: FilePath -> FilePath -> IO () Source
changes the name of an existing
directory from old to new. If the new directory
already exists, it is atomically replaced by the old directory.
If the new directory is neither the old directory nor an
alias of the old directory, it is removed as if by
renameDirectory
old newremoveDirectory
. A conformant implementation need not support
renaming directories in all situations (e.g. renaming to an existing
directory, or across different physical devices), but the constraints
must be documented.
On Win32 platforms, renameDirectory
fails if the new directory already
exists.
The operation may fail with:
HardwareFault
A physical I/O error has occurred.[EIO]
InvalidArgument
Either operand is not a valid directory name.[ENAMETOOLONG, ELOOP]
isDoesNotExistError
/NoSuchThing
The original directory does not exist, or there is no path to the target.[ENOENT, ENOTDIR]
isPermissionError
/PermissionDenied
The process has insufficient privileges to perform the operation.[EROFS, EACCES, EPERM]
ResourceExhausted
Insufficient resources are available to perform the operation.[EDQUOT, ENOSPC, ENOMEM, EMLINK]
UnsatisfiedConstraints
Implementation-dependent constraints are not satisfied.[EBUSY, ENOTEMPTY, EEXIST]
UnsupportedOperation
The implementation does not support renaming in this situation.[EINVAL, EXDEV]
InappropriateType
Either path refers to an existing non-directory object.[ENOTDIR, EISDIR]
getDirectoryContents :: FilePath -> IO [FilePath] Source
returns a list of all entries
in dir.getDirectoryContents
dir
The operation may fail with:
HardwareFault
A physical I/O error has occurred.[EIO]
InvalidArgument
The operand is not a valid directory name.[ENAMETOOLONG, ELOOP]
isDoesNotExistError
/NoSuchThing
The directory does not exist.[ENOENT, ENOTDIR]
isPermissionError
/PermissionDenied
The process has insufficient privileges to perform the operation.[EACCES]
ResourceExhausted
Insufficient resources are available to perform the operation.[EMFILE, ENFILE]
InappropriateType
The path refers to an existing non-directory object.[ENOTDIR]
getCurrentDirectory :: IO FilePath Source
If the operating system has a notion of current directories,
getCurrentDirectory
returns an absolute path to the
current directory of the calling process.
The operation may fail with:
HardwareFault
A physical I/O error has occurred.[EIO]
isDoesNotExistError
/NoSuchThing
There is no path referring to the current directory.[EPERM, ENOENT, ESTALE...]
isPermissionError
/PermissionDenied
The process has insufficient privileges to perform the operation.[EACCES]
ResourceExhausted
Insufficient resources are available to perform the operation.UnsupportedOperation
The operating system has no notion of current directory.
Note that in a concurrent program, the current directory is global
state shared between all threads of the process. When using
filesystem operations from multiple threads, it is therefore highly
recommended to use absolute rather than relative FilePath
s.
setCurrentDirectory :: FilePath -> IO () Source
If the operating system has a notion of current directories,
changes the current
directory of the calling process to dir.setCurrentDirectory
dir
The operation may fail with:
HardwareFault
A physical I/O error has occurred.[EIO]
InvalidArgument
The operand is not a valid directory name.[ENAMETOOLONG, ELOOP]
isDoesNotExistError
/NoSuchThing
The directory does not exist.[ENOENT, ENOTDIR]
isPermissionError
/PermissionDenied
The process has insufficient privileges to perform the operation.[EACCES]
UnsupportedOperation
The operating system has no notion of current directory, or the current directory cannot be dynamically changed.InappropriateType
The path refers to an existing non-directory object.[ENOTDIR]
Note that in a concurrent program, the current directory is global
state shared between all threads of the process. When using
filesystem operations from multiple threads, it is therefore highly
recommended to use absolute rather than relative FilePath
s.
Pre-defined directories
getHomeDirectory :: IO FilePath Source
Returns the current user's home directory.
The directory returned is expected to be writable by the current user,
but note that it isn't generally considered good practice to store
application-specific data here; use getAppUserDataDirectory
instead.
On Unix, getHomeDirectory
returns the value of the HOME
environment variable. On Windows, the system is queried for a
suitable path; a typical path might be
C:/Documents And Settings/user
.
The operation may fail with:
UnsupportedOperation
The operating system has no notion of home directory.isDoesNotExistError
The home directory for the current user does not exist, or cannot be found.
getAppUserDataDirectory :: String -> IO FilePath Source
Returns the pathname of a directory in which application-specific
data for the current user can be stored. The result of
getAppUserDataDirectory
for a given application is specific to
the current user.
The argument should be the name of the application, which will be used to construct the pathname (so avoid using unusual characters that might result in an invalid pathname).
Note: the directory may not actually exist, and may need to be created first. It is expected that the parent directory exists and is writable.
On Unix, this function returns $HOME/.appName
. On Windows, a
typical path might be
C:/Users/user/AppData/Roaming/appName
The operation may fail with:
UnsupportedOperation
The operating system has no notion of application-specific data directory.isDoesNotExistError
The home directory for the current user does not exist, or cannot be found.
getUserDocumentsDirectory :: IO FilePath Source
Returns the current user's document directory.
The directory returned is expected to be writable by the current user,
but note that it isn't generally considered good practice to store
application-specific data here; use getAppUserDataDirectory
instead.
On Unix, getUserDocumentsDirectory
returns the value of the HOME
environment variable. On Windows, the system is queried for a
suitable path; a typical path might be
C:/Documents And Settings/user/My Documents
.
The operation may fail with:
UnsupportedOperation
The operating system has no notion of document directory.isDoesNotExistError
The document directory for the current user does not exist, or cannot be found.
getTemporaryDirectory :: IO FilePath Source
Returns the current directory for temporary files.
On Unix, getTemporaryDirectory
returns the value of the TMPDIR
environment variable or "/tmp" if the variable isn't defined.
On Windows, the function checks for the existence of environment variables in
the following order and uses the first path found:
- TMP environment variable.
- TEMP environment variable.
- USERPROFILE environment variable.
- The Windows directory
The operation may fail with:
UnsupportedOperation
The operating system has no notion of temporary directory.
The function doesn't verify whether the path exists.
Actions on files
removeFile :: FilePath -> IO () Source
removeFile
file removes the directory entry for an existing file
file, where file is not itself a directory. The
implementation may specify additional constraints which must be
satisfied before a file can be removed (e.g. the file may not be in
use by other processes).
The operation may fail with:
HardwareFault
A physical I/O error has occurred.[EIO]
InvalidArgument
The operand is not a valid file name.[ENAMETOOLONG, ELOOP]
isDoesNotExistError
/NoSuchThing
The file does not exist.[ENOENT, ENOTDIR]
isPermissionError
/PermissionDenied
The process has insufficient privileges to perform the operation.[EROFS, EACCES, EPERM]
UnsatisfiedConstraints
Implementation-dependent constraints are not satisfied.[EBUSY]
InappropriateType
The operand refers to an existing directory.[EPERM, EINVAL]
renameFile :: FilePath -> FilePath -> IO () Source
changes the name of an existing file system
object from old to new. If the new object already
exists, it is atomically replaced by the old object. Neither
path may refer to an existing directory. A conformant implementation
need not support renaming files in all situations (e.g. renaming
across different physical devices), but the constraints must be
documented.renameFile
old new
The operation may fail with:
HardwareFault
A physical I/O error has occurred.[EIO]
InvalidArgument
Either operand is not a valid file name.[ENAMETOOLONG, ELOOP]
isDoesNotExistError
/NoSuchThing
The original file does not exist, or there is no path to the target.[ENOENT, ENOTDIR]
isPermissionError
/PermissionDenied
The process has insufficient privileges to perform the operation.[EROFS, EACCES, EPERM]
ResourceExhausted
Insufficient resources are available to perform the operation.[EDQUOT, ENOSPC, ENOMEM, EMLINK]
UnsatisfiedConstraints
Implementation-dependent constraints are not satisfied.[EBUSY]
UnsupportedOperation
The implementation does not support renaming in this situation.[EXDEV]
InappropriateType
Either path refers to an existing directory.[ENOTDIR, EISDIR, EINVAL, EEXIST, ENOTEMPTY]
copyFile :: FilePath -> FilePath -> IO () Source
copies the existing file from old to new.
If the new file already exists, it is atomically replaced by the old file.
Neither path may refer to an existing directory. The permissions of old are
copied to new, if possible.copyFile
old new
canonicalizePath :: FilePath -> IO FilePath Source
Canonicalize the path of an existing file or directory. The intent is that two paths referring to the same file/directory will map to the same canonicalized path.
Note: if you only require an absolute path, consider using
instead, which is more reliable and does not have
unspecified behavior on nonexistent paths.makeAbsolute
It is impossible to guarantee that the implication (same file/dir <=> same canonicalized path) holds in either direction: this function can make only a best-effort attempt.
The precise behaviour is that of the POSIX realpath
function (or
GetFullPathNameW
on Windows). In particular, the behaviour on paths that
don't exist can vary from platform to platform. Some platforms do not
alter the input, some do, and some throw an exception.
An empty path is considered to be equivalent to the current directory.
Known bug(s): on Windows, this function does not resolve symbolic links.
makeAbsolute :: FilePath -> IO FilePath Source
Make a path absolute by prepending the current directory (if it isn't
already absolute) and applying
to the result.normalise
The operation may fail with the same exceptions as
.getCurrentDirectory
Since: 1.2.2.0
makeRelativeToCurrentDirectory :: FilePath -> IO FilePath Source
makeRelative
the current directory.
findExecutable :: String -> IO (Maybe FilePath) Source
Given an executable file name, searches for such file in the directories listed in system PATH. The returned value is the path to the found executable or Nothing if an executable with the given name was not found. For example (findExecutable "ghc") gives you the path to GHC.
The path returned by findExecutable
corresponds to the
program that would be executed by createProcess
when passed the same string (as a RawCommand, not a ShellCommand).
On Windows, findExecutable
calls the Win32 function SearchPath
,
which may search other places before checking the directories in
PATH
. Where it actually searches depends on registry settings,
but notably includes the directory containing the current
executable. See
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa365527.aspx for more
details.
findExecutables :: String -> IO [FilePath] Source
Given a file name, searches for the file and returns a list of all occurences that are executable.
Since: 1.2.2.0
findFile :: [FilePath] -> String -> IO (Maybe FilePath) Source
Search through the given set of directories for the given file.
Used by findExecutable
on non-windows platforms.
findFiles :: [FilePath] -> String -> IO [FilePath] Source
Search through the given set of directories for the given file and returns a list of paths where the given file exists.
Since: 1.2.1.0
findFilesWith :: (FilePath -> IO Bool) -> [FilePath] -> String -> IO [FilePath] Source
Search through the given set of directories for the given file and with the given property (usually permissions) and returns a list of paths where the given file exists and has the property.
Since: 1.2.1.0
Existence tests
doesFileExist :: FilePath -> IO Bool Source
The operation doesFileExist
returns True
if the argument file exists and is not a directory, and False
otherwise.
doesDirectoryExist :: FilePath -> IO Bool Source
The operation doesDirectoryExist
returns True
if the argument file
exists and is either a directory or a symbolic link to a directory,
and False
otherwise.
Permissions
The Permissions
type is used to record whether certain operations are
permissible on a file/directory. getPermissions
and setPermissions
get and set these permissions, respectively. Permissions apply both to
files and directories. For directories, the executable field will be
False
, and for files the searchable field will be False
. Note that
directories may be searchable without being readable, if permission has
been given to use them as part of a path, but not to examine the
directory contents.
Note that to change some, but not all permissions, a construct on the following lines must be used.
makeReadable f = do p <- getPermissions f setPermissions f (p {readable = True})
data Permissions Source
readable :: Permissions -> Bool Source
writable :: Permissions -> Bool Source
executable :: Permissions -> Bool Source
searchable :: Permissions -> Bool Source
setOwnerReadable :: Bool -> Permissions -> Permissions Source
setOwnerWritable :: Bool -> Permissions -> Permissions Source
setOwnerExecutable :: Bool -> Permissions -> Permissions Source
setOwnerSearchable :: Bool -> Permissions -> Permissions Source
getPermissions :: FilePath -> IO Permissions Source
The getPermissions
operation returns the
permissions for the file or directory.
The operation may fail with:
isPermissionError
if the user is not permitted to access the permissions; orisDoesNotExistError
if the file or directory does not exist.
setPermissions :: FilePath -> Permissions -> IO () Source
The setPermissions
operation sets the
permissions for the file or directory.
The operation may fail with:
isPermissionError
if the user is not permitted to set the permissions; orisDoesNotExistError
if the file or directory does not exist.
copyPermissions :: FilePath -> FilePath -> IO () Source
Timestamps
getModificationTime :: FilePath -> IO UTCTime Source
The getModificationTime
operation returns the
clock time at which the file or directory was last modified.
The operation may fail with:
isPermissionError
if the user is not permitted to access the modification time; orisDoesNotExistError
if the file or directory does not exist.
Note: This function returns a timestamp with sub-second resolution
only if this package is compiled against unix-2.6.0.0
or later
for unix systems, and Win32-2.3.1.0
or later for windows systems.
Of course this also requires that the underlying file system supports
such high resolution timestamps.