4.4 KiB
FS (filesystem) module
This module provides functions to inspect the file system. It is available starting with version 0.53.0.
File lookup rules
Non-absolute paths are looked up relative to the directory where the
current meson.build
file is.
If specified, a leading ~
is expanded to the user home directory.
Environment variables are not available as is the rule throughout Meson.
That is, $HOME, %USERPROFILE%, $MKLROOT, etc. have no meaning to the Meson
filesystem module. If needed, pass such variables into Meson via command
line options in meson_options.txt
, native-file or cross-file.
Where possible, symlinks and parent directory notation are resolved to an absolute path.
exists
Takes a single string argument and returns true if an entity with that name exists on the file system. This can be a file, directory or a special entry such as a device node.
is_dir
Takes a single string argument and returns true if a directory with that name exists on the file system.
is_file
Takes a single string argument and returns true if an file with that name exists on the file system.
is_symlink
Takes a single string argument and returns true if the path pointed to by the string is a symbolic link.
File Parameters
is_absolute
since 0.54.0
Return a boolean indicating if the path string specified is absolute, WITHOUT expanding ~
.
Examples:
fs.is_absolute('~') # false
home = fs.expanduser('~')
fs.is_absolute(home) # true
fs.is_absolute(home / 'foo') # true, even if ~/foo doesn't exist
fs.is_absolute('foo/bar') # false, even if ./foo/bar exists
hash
The fs.hash(filename, hash_algorithm)
method returns a string containing
the hexidecimal hash_algorithm
digest of a file.
hash_algorithm
is a string; the available hash algorithms include:
md5, sha1, sha224, sha256, sha384, sha512.
size
The fs.size(filename)
method returns the size of the file in integer bytes.
is_samepath
The fs.is_samepath(path1, path2)
returns boolean true
if both paths resolve to the same path.
For example, suppose path1 is a symlink and path2 is a relative path.
If path1 can be resolved to path2, then true
is returned.
If path1 is not resolved to path2, false
is returned.
If path1 or path2 do not exist, false
is returned.
Examples:
x = 'foo.txt'
y = 'sub/../foo.txt'
z = 'bar.txt' # a symlink pointing to foo.txt
j = 'notafile.txt' # non-existant file
fs.is_samepath(x, y) # true
fs.is_samepath(x, z) # true
fs.is_samepath(x, j) # false
p = 'foo/bar'
q = 'foo/bar/baz/..'
r = 'buz' # a symlink pointing to foo/bar
s = 'notapath' # non-existant directory
fs.is_samepath(p, q) # true
fs.is_samepath(p, r) # true
fs.is_samepath(p, s) # false
Filename modification
The files need not actually exist yet for these path string manipulation methods.
expanduser
since 0.54.0
A path string with a leading ~
is expanded to the user home directory
Examples:
fs.expanduser('~') # user home directory
fs.expanduser('~/foo') # <homedir>/foo
as_posix
since 0.54.0
fs.as_posix(path)
assumes a Windows path, even if on a Unix-like system.
Thus, all '\'
or '\\'
are turned to '/', even if you meant to escape a character.
Examples
fs.as_posix('\\') == '/' # true
fs.as_posix('\\\\') == '/' # true
fs.as_posix('foo\\bar/baz') == 'foo/bar/baz' # true
replace_suffix
The replace_suffix
method is a string manipulation convenient for filename modifications.
It allows changing the filename suffix like:
swap suffix
original = '/opt/foo.ini'
new = fs.replace_suffix(original, '.txt') # /opt/foo.txt
add suffix
original = '/opt/foo'
new = fs.replace_suffix(original, '.txt') # /opt/foo.txt
compound suffix swap
original = '/opt/foo.dll.a'
new = fs.replace_suffix(original, '.so') # /opt/foo.dll.so
delete suffix
original = '/opt/foo.dll.a'
new = fs.replace_suffix(original, '') # /opt/foo.dll
parent
Returns the parent directory (i.e. dirname).
new = fs.parent('foo/bar') # foo
new = fs.parent('foo/bar/baz.dll') # foo/bar
name
Returns the last component of the path (i.e. basename).
fs.name('foo/bar/baz.dll.a') # baz.dll.a
stem
since 0.54.0
Returns the last component of the path, dropping the last part of the suffix
fs.stem('foo/bar/baz.dll') # baz
fs.stem('foo/bar/baz.dll.a') # baz.dll