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// Copyright (c) 2012, the Dart project authors. Please see the AUTHORS file
// for details. All rights reserved. Use of this source code is governed by a
// BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
/// A comprehensive, cross-platform path manipulation library.
library path;
import 'dart:io' as io;
/// An internal builder for the current OS so we can provide a straight
/// functional interface and not require users to create one.
final _builder = new Builder();
/**
* Inserts [length] elements in front of the [list] and fills them with the
* [fillValue].
*/
void _growListFront(List list, int length, fillValue) {
list.length += length;
list.setRange(length, list.length, list);
for (var i = 0; i < length; i++) {
list[i] = fillValue;
}
}
/// Gets the path to the current working directory.
String get current => new io.Directory.current().path;
/// Gets the path separator for the current platform. On Mac and Linux, this
/// is `/`. On Windows, it's `\`.
String get separator => _builder.separator;
/// Converts [path] to an absolute path by resolving it relative to the current
/// working directory. If [path] is already an absolute path, just returns it.
///
/// path.absolute('foo/bar.txt'); // -> /your/current/dir/foo/bar.txt
String absolute(String path) => join(current, path);
/// Gets the part of [path] after the last separator.
///
/// path.basename('path/to/foo.dart'); // -> 'foo.dart'
/// path.basename('path/to'); // -> 'to'
///
/// Trailing separators are ignored.
///
/// builder.basename('path/to/'); // -> 'to'
String basename(String path) => _builder.basename(path);
/// Gets the part of [path] after the last separator, and without any trailing
/// file extension.
///
/// path.basenameWithoutExtension('path/to/foo.dart'); // -> 'foo'
///
/// Trailing separators are ignored.
///
/// builder.basenameWithoutExtension('path/to/foo.dart/'); // -> 'foo'
String basenameWithoutExtension(String path) =>
_builder.basenameWithoutExtension(path);
/// Gets the part of [path] before the last separator.
///
/// path.dirname('path/to/foo.dart'); // -> 'path/to'
/// path.dirname('path/to'); // -> 'to'
///
/// Trailing separators are ignored.
///
/// builder.dirname('path/to/'); // -> 'path'
String dirname(String path) => _builder.dirname(path);
/// Gets the file extension of [path]: the portion of [basename] from the last
/// `.` to the end (including the `.` itself).
///
/// path.extension('path/to/foo.dart'); // -> '.dart'
/// path.extension('path/to/foo'); // -> ''
/// path.extension('path.to/foo'); // -> ''
/// path.extension('path/to/foo.dart.js'); // -> '.js'
///
/// If the file name starts with a `.`, then that is not considered the
/// extension:
///
/// path.extension('~/.bashrc'); // -> ''
/// path.extension('~/.notes.txt'); // -> '.txt'
String extension(String path) => _builder.extension(path);
// TODO(nweiz): add a UNC example for Windows once issue 7323 is fixed.
/// Returns the root of [path], if it's absolute, or the empty string if it's
/// relative.
///
/// // Unix
/// path.rootPrefix('path/to/foo'); // -> ''
/// path.rootPrefix('/path/to/foo'); // -> '/'
///
/// // Windows
/// path.rootPrefix(r'path\to\foo'); // -> ''
/// path.rootPrefix(r'C:\path\to\foo'); // -> r'C:\'
String rootPrefix(String path) => _builder.rootPrefix(path);
/// Returns `true` if [path] is an absolute path and `false` if it is a
/// relative path. On POSIX systems, absolute paths start with a `/` (forward
/// slash). On Windows, an absolute path starts with `\\`, or a drive letter
/// followed by `:/` or `:\`.
bool isAbsolute(String path) => _builder.isAbsolute(path);
/// Returns `true` if [path] is a relative path and `false` if it is absolute.
/// On POSIX systems, absolute paths start with a `/` (forward slash). On
/// Windows, an absolute path starts with `\\`, or a drive letter followed by
/// `:/` or `:\`.
bool isRelative(String path) => _builder.isRelative(path);
/// Joins the given path parts into a single path using the current platform's
/// [separator]. Example:
///
/// path.join('path', 'to', 'foo'); // -> 'path/to/foo'
///
/// If any part ends in a path separator, then a redundant separator will not
/// be added:
///
/// path.join('path/', 'to', 'foo'); // -> 'path/to/foo
///
/// If a part is an absolute path, then anything before that will be ignored:
///
/// path.join('path', '/to', 'foo'); // -> '/to/foo'
String join(String part1, [String part2, String part3, String part4,
String part5, String part6, String part7, String part8]) =>
_builder.join(part1, part2, part3, part4, part5, part6, part7, part8);
/// Joins the given path parts into a single path using the current platform's
/// [separator]. Example:
///
/// path.joinAll(['path', 'to', 'foo']); // -> 'path/to/foo'
///
/// If any part ends in a path separator, then a redundant separator will not
/// be added:
///
/// path.joinAll(['path/', 'to', 'foo']); // -> 'path/to/foo
///
/// If a part is an absolute path, then anything before that will be ignored:
///
/// path.joinAll(['path', '/to', 'foo']); // -> '/to/foo'
///
/// For a fixed number of parts, [join] is usually terser.
String joinAll(Iterable<String> parts) => _builder.joinAll(parts);
// TODO(nweiz): add a UNC example for Windows once issue 7323 is fixed.
/// Splits [path] into its components using the current platform's [separator].
///
/// path.split('path/to/foo'); // -> ['path', 'to', 'foo']
///
/// The path will *not* be normalized before splitting.
///
/// path.split('path/../foo'); // -> ['path', '..', 'foo']
///
/// If [path] is absolute, the root directory will be the first element in the
/// array. Example:
///
/// // Unix
/// path.split('/path/to/foo'); // -> ['/', 'path', 'to', 'foo']
///
/// // Windows
/// path.split(r'C:\path\to\foo'); // -> [r'C:\', 'path', 'to', 'foo']
List<String> split(String path) => _builder.split(path);
/// Normalizes [path], simplifying it by handling `..`, and `.`, and
/// removing redundant path separators whenever possible.
///
/// path.normalize('path/./to/..//file.text'); // -> 'path/file.txt'
String normalize(String path) => _builder.normalize(path);
/// Attempts to convert [path] to an equivalent relative path from the current
/// directory.
///
/// // Given current directory is /root/path:
/// path.relative('/root/path/a/b.dart'); // -> 'a/b.dart'
/// path.relative('/root/other.dart'); // -> '../other.dart'
///
/// If the [from] argument is passed, [path] is made relative to that instead.
///
/// path.relative('/root/path/a/b.dart',
/// from: '/root/path'); // -> 'a/b.dart'
/// path.relative('/root/other.dart',
/// from: '/root/path'); // -> '../other.dart'
///
/// Since there is no relative path from one drive letter to another on Windows,
/// this will return an absolute path in that case.
///
/// path.relative(r'D:\other', from: r'C:\home'); // -> 'D:\other'
String relative(String path, {String from}) =>
_builder.relative(path, from: from);
/// Removes a trailing extension from the last part of [path].
///
/// withoutExtension('path/to/foo.dart'); // -> 'path/to/foo'
String withoutExtension(String path) => _builder.withoutExtension(path);
/// Validates that there are no non-null arguments following a null one and
/// throws an appropriate [ArgumentError] on failure.
_validateArgList(String method, List<String> args) {
for (var i = 1; i < args.length; i++) {
// Ignore nulls hanging off the end.
if (args[i] == null || args[i - 1] != null) continue;
var numArgs;
for (numArgs = args.length; numArgs >= 1; numArgs--) {
if (args[numArgs - 1] != null) break;
}
// Show the arguments.
var message = new StringBuffer();
message.write("$method(");
message.write(args.take(numArgs)
.map((arg) => arg == null ? "null" : '"$arg"')
.join(", "));
message.write("): part ${i - 1} was null, but part $i was not.");
throw new ArgumentError(message.toString());
}
}
/// An instantiable class for manipulating paths. Unlike the top-level
/// functions, this lets you explicitly select what platform the paths will use.
class Builder {
/// Creates a new path builder for the given style and root directory.
///
/// If [style] is omitted, it uses the host operating system's path style. If
/// [root] is omitted, it defaults to the current working directory. If [root]
/// is relative, it is considered relative to the current working directory.
factory Builder({Style style, String root}) {
if (style == null) {
if (io.Platform.operatingSystem == 'windows') {
style = Style.windows;
} else {
style = Style.posix;
}
}
if (root == null) root = current;
return new Builder._(style, root);
}
Builder._(this.style, this.root);
/// The style of path that this builder works with.
final Style style;
/// The root directory that relative paths will be relative to.
final String root;
/// Gets the path separator for the builder's [style]. On Mac and Linux,
/// this is `/`. On Windows, it's `\`.
String get separator => style.separator;
/// Gets the part of [path] after the last separator on the builder's
/// platform.
///
/// builder.basename('path/to/foo.dart'); // -> 'foo.dart'
/// builder.basename('path/to'); // -> 'to'
///
/// Trailing separators are ignored.
///
/// builder.basename('path/to/'); // -> 'to'
String basename(String path) => _parse(path).basename;
/// Gets the part of [path] after the last separator on the builder's
/// platform, and without any trailing file extension.
///
/// builder.basenameWithoutExtension('path/to/foo.dart'); // -> 'foo'
///
/// Trailing separators are ignored.
///
/// builder.basenameWithoutExtension('path/to/foo.dart/'); // -> 'foo'
String basenameWithoutExtension(String path) =>
_parse(path).basenameWithoutExtension;
/// Gets the part of [path] before the last separator.
///
/// builder.dirname('path/to/foo.dart'); // -> 'path/to'
/// builder.dirname('path/to'); // -> 'path'
///
/// Trailing separators are ignored.
///
/// builder.dirname('path/to/'); // -> 'path'
String dirname(String path) {
var parsed = _parse(path);
parsed.removeTrailingSeparators();
if (parsed.parts.isEmpty) return parsed.root == null ? '.' : parsed.root;
if (parsed.parts.length == 1) {
return parsed.root == null ? '.' : parsed.root;
}
parsed.parts.removeLast();
parsed.separators.removeLast();
parsed.removeTrailingSeparators();
return parsed.toString();
}
/// Gets the file extension of [path]: the portion of [basename] from the last
/// `.` to the end (including the `.` itself).
///
/// builder.extension('path/to/foo.dart'); // -> '.dart'
/// builder.extension('path/to/foo'); // -> ''
/// builder.extension('path.to/foo'); // -> ''
/// builder.extension('path/to/foo.dart.js'); // -> '.js'
///
/// If the file name starts with a `.`, then it is not considered an
/// extension:
///
/// builder.extension('~/.bashrc'); // -> ''
/// builder.extension('~/.notes.txt'); // -> '.txt'
String extension(String path) => _parse(path).extension;
// TODO(nweiz): add a UNC example for Windows once issue 7323 is fixed.
/// Returns the root of [path], if it's absolute, or an empty string if it's
/// relative.
///
/// // Unix
/// builder.rootPrefix('path/to/foo'); // -> ''
/// builder.rootPrefix('/path/to/foo'); // -> '/'
///
/// // Windows
/// builder.rootPrefix(r'path\to\foo'); // -> ''
/// builder.rootPrefix(r'C:\path\to\foo'); // -> r'C:\'
String rootPrefix(String path) {
var root = _parse(path).root;
return root == null ? '' : root;
}
/// Returns `true` if [path] is an absolute path and `false` if it is a
/// relative path. On POSIX systems, absolute paths start with a `/` (forward
/// slash). On Windows, an absolute path starts with `\\`, or a drive letter
/// followed by `:/` or `:\`.
bool isAbsolute(String path) => _parse(path).isAbsolute;
/// Returns `true` if [path] is a relative path and `false` if it is absolute.
/// On POSIX systems, absolute paths start with a `/` (forward slash). On
/// Windows, an absolute path starts with `\\`, or a drive letter followed by
/// `:/` or `:\`.
bool isRelative(String path) => !isAbsolute(path);
/// Joins the given path parts into a single path. Example:
///
/// builder.join('path', 'to', 'foo'); // -> 'path/to/foo'
///
/// If any part ends in a path separator, then a redundant separator will not
/// be added:
///
/// builder.join('path/', 'to', 'foo'); // -> 'path/to/foo
///
/// If a part is an absolute path, then anything before that will be ignored:
///
/// builder.join('path', '/to', 'foo'); // -> '/to/foo'
///
String join(String part1, [String part2, String part3, String part4,
String part5, String part6, String part7, String part8]) {
var parts = [part1, part2, part3, part4, part5, part6, part7, part8];
_validateArgList("join", parts);
return joinAll(parts.where((part) => part != null));
}
/// Joins the given path parts into a single path. Example:
///
/// builder.joinAll(['path', 'to', 'foo']); // -> 'path/to/foo'
///
/// If any part ends in a path separator, then a redundant separator will not
/// be added:
///
/// builder.joinAll(['path/', 'to', 'foo']); // -> 'path/to/foo
///
/// If a part is an absolute path, then anything before that will be ignored:
///
/// builder.joinAll(['path', '/to', 'foo']); // -> '/to/foo'
///
/// For a fixed number of parts, [join] is usually terser.
String joinAll(Iterable<String> parts) {
var buffer = new StringBuffer();
var needsSeparator = false;
for (var part in parts) {
if (this.isAbsolute(part)) {
// An absolute path discards everything before it.
buffer = new StringBuffer();
buffer.write(part);
} else {
if (part.length > 0 && part[0].contains(style.separatorPattern)) {
// The part starts with a separator, so we don't need to add one.
} else if (needsSeparator) {
buffer.write(separator);
}
buffer.write(part);
}
// Unless this part ends with a separator, we'll need to add one before
// the next part.
needsSeparator = part.length > 0 &&
!part[part.length - 1].contains(style.separatorPattern);
}
return buffer.toString();
}
// TODO(nweiz): add a UNC example for Windows once issue 7323 is fixed.
/// Splits [path] into its components using the current platform's
/// [separator]. Example:
///
/// builder.split('path/to/foo'); // -> ['path', 'to', 'foo']
///
/// The path will *not* be normalized before splitting.
///
/// builder.split('path/../foo'); // -> ['path', '..', 'foo']
///
/// If [path] is absolute, the root directory will be the first element in the
/// array. Example:
///
/// // Unix
/// builder.split('/path/to/foo'); // -> ['/', 'path', 'to', 'foo']
///
/// // Windows
/// builder.split(r'C:\path\to\foo'); // -> [r'C:\', 'path', 'to', 'foo']
List<String> split(String path) {
var parsed = _parse(path);
// Filter out empty parts that exist due to multiple separators in a row.
parsed.parts = parsed.parts.where((part) => !part.isEmpty)
.toList();
if (parsed.root != null) parsed.parts.insert(0, parsed.root);
return parsed.parts;
}
/// Normalizes [path], simplifying it by handling `..`, and `.`, and
/// removing redundant path separators whenever possible.
///
/// builder.normalize('path/./to/..//file.text'); // -> 'path/file.txt'
String normalize(String path) {
if (path == '') return path;
var parsed = _parse(path);
parsed.normalize();
return parsed.toString();
}
/// Creates a new path by appending the given path parts to the [root].
/// Equivalent to [join()] with [root] as the first argument. Example:
///
/// var builder = new Builder(root: 'root');
/// builder.resolve('path', 'to', 'foo'); // -> 'root/path/to/foo'
String resolve(String part1, [String part2, String part3, String part4,
String part5, String part6, String part7]) {
return join(root, part1, part2, part3, part4, part5, part6, part7);
}
/// Attempts to convert [path] to an equivalent relative path relative to
/// [root].
///
/// var builder = new Builder(root: '/root/path');
/// builder.relative('/root/path/a/b.dart'); // -> 'a/b.dart'
/// builder.relative('/root/other.dart'); // -> '../other.dart'
///
/// If the [from] argument is passed, [path] is made relative to that instead.
///
/// builder.relative('/root/path/a/b.dart',
/// from: '/root/path'); // -> 'a/b.dart'
/// builder.relative('/root/other.dart',
/// from: '/root/path'); // -> '../other.dart'
///
/// Since there is no relative path from one drive letter to another on
/// Windows, this will return an absolute path in that case.
///
/// builder.relative(r'D:\other', from: r'C:\other'); // -> 'D:\other'
///
/// This will also return an absolute path if an absolute [path] is passed to
/// a builder with a relative [root].
///
/// var builder = new Builder(r'some/relative/path');
/// builder.relative(r'/absolute/path'); // -> '/absolute/path'
String relative(String path, {String from}) {
if (path == '') return '.';
from = from == null ? root : this.join(root, from);
// We can't determine the path from a relative path to an absolute path.
if (this.isRelative(from) && this.isAbsolute(path)) {
return this.normalize(path);
}
// If the given path is relative, resolve it relative to the root of the
// builder.
if (this.isRelative(path)) path = this.resolve(path);
// If the path is still relative and `from` is absolute, we're unable to
// find a path from `from` to `path`.
if (this.isRelative(path) && this.isAbsolute(from)) {
throw new ArgumentError('Unable to find a path to "$path" from "$from".');
}
var fromParsed = _parse(from)..normalize();
var pathParsed = _parse(path)..normalize();
// If the root prefixes don't match (for example, different drive letters
// on Windows), then there is no relative path, so just return the absolute
// one. In Windows, drive letters are case-insenstive and we allow
// calculation of relative paths, even if a path has not been normalized.
if (fromParsed.root != pathParsed.root &&
((fromParsed.root == null || pathParsed.root == null) ||
fromParsed.root.toLowerCase().replaceAll('/', '\\') !=
pathParsed.root.toLowerCase().replaceAll('/', '\\'))) {
return pathParsed.toString();
}
// Strip off their common prefix.
while (fromParsed.parts.length > 0 && pathParsed.parts.length > 0 &&
fromParsed.parts[0] == pathParsed.parts[0]) {
fromParsed.parts.removeAt(0);
fromParsed.separators.removeAt(0);
pathParsed.parts.removeAt(0);
pathParsed.separators.removeAt(0);
}
// If there are any directories left in the root path, we need to walk up
// out of them.
_growListFront(pathParsed.parts, fromParsed.parts.length, '..');
_growListFront(
pathParsed.separators, fromParsed.parts.length, style.separator);
// Corner case: the paths completely collapsed.
if (pathParsed.parts.length == 0) return '.';
// Make it relative.
pathParsed.root = '';
pathParsed.removeTrailingSeparators();
return pathParsed.toString();
}
/// Removes a trailing extension from the last part of [path].
///
/// builder.withoutExtension('path/to/foo.dart'); // -> 'path/to/foo'
String withoutExtension(String path) {
var parsed = _parse(path);
for (var i = parsed.parts.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
if (!parsed.parts[i].isEmpty) {
parsed.parts[i] = parsed.basenameWithoutExtension;
break;
}
}
return parsed.toString();
}
_ParsedPath _parse(String path) {
var before = path;
// Remove the root prefix, if any.
var root = style.getRoot(path);
if (root != null) path = path.substring(root.length);
// Split the parts on path separators.
var parts = [];
var separators = [];
var start = 0;
for (var match in style.separatorPattern.allMatches(path)) {
parts.add(path.substring(start, match.start));
separators.add(match[0]);
start = match.end;
}
// Add the final part, if any.
if (start < path.length) {
parts.add(path.substring(start));
separators.add('');
}
return new _ParsedPath(style, root, parts, separators);
}
}
/// An enum type describing a "flavor" of path.
class Style {
/// POSIX-style paths use "/" (forward slash) as separators. Absolute paths
/// start with "/". Used by UNIX, Linux, Mac OS X, and others.
static final posix = new Style._('posix', '/', '/', '/');
/// Windows paths use "\" (backslash) as separators. Absolute paths start with
/// a drive letter followed by a colon (example, "C:") or two backslashes
/// ("\\") for UNC paths.
// TODO(rnystrom): The UNC root prefix should include the drive name too, not
// just the "\\".
static final windows = new Style._('windows', '\\', r'[/\\]',
r'\\\\|[a-zA-Z]:[/\\]');
Style._(this.name, this.separator, String separatorPattern,
String rootPattern)
: separatorPattern = new RegExp(separatorPattern),
_rootPattern = new RegExp('^$rootPattern');
/// The name of this path style. Will be "posix" or "windows".
final String name;
/// The path separator for this style. On POSIX, this is `/`. On Windows,
/// it's `\`.
final String separator;
/// The [Pattern] that can be used to match a separator for a path in this
/// style. Windows allows both "/" and "\" as path separators even though
/// "\" is the canonical one.
final Pattern separatorPattern;
// TODO(nweiz): make this a Pattern when issue 7080 is fixed.
/// The [RegExp] that can be used to match the root prefix of an absolute
/// path in this style.
final RegExp _rootPattern;
/// Gets the root prefix of [path] if path is absolute. If [path] is relative,
/// returns `null`.
String getRoot(String path) {
var match = _rootPattern.firstMatch(path);
if (match == null) return null;
return match[0];
}
String toString() => name;
}
// TODO(rnystrom): Make this public?
class _ParsedPath {
/// The [Style] that was used to parse this path.
Style style;
/// The absolute root portion of the path, or `null` if the path is relative.
/// On POSIX systems, this will be `null` or "/". On Windows, it can be
/// `null`, "//" for a UNC path, or something like "C:\" for paths with drive
/// letters.
String root;
/// The path-separated parts of the path. All but the last will be
/// directories.
List<String> parts;
/// The path separators following each part. The last one will be an empty
/// string unless the path ends with a trailing separator.
List<String> separators;
/// The file extension of the last part, or "" if it doesn't have one.
String get extension => _splitExtension()[1];
/// `true` if this is an absolute path.
bool get isAbsolute => root != null;
_ParsedPath(this.style, this.root, this.parts, this.separators);
String get basename {
var copy = this.clone();
copy.removeTrailingSeparators();
if (copy.parts.isEmpty) return root == null ? '' : root;
return copy.parts.last;
}
String get basenameWithoutExtension {
var copy = this.clone();
copy.removeTrailingSeparators();
if (copy.parts.isEmpty) return root == null ? '' : root;
return copy._splitExtension()[0];
}
void removeTrailingSeparators() {
while (!parts.isEmpty && parts.last == '') {
parts.removeLast();
separators.removeLast();
}
if (separators.length > 0) separators[separators.length - 1] = '';
}
void normalize() {
// Handle '.', '..', and empty parts.
var leadingDoubles = 0;
var newParts = [];
for (var part in parts) {
if (part == '.' || part == '') {
// Do nothing. Ignore it.
} else if (part == '..') {
// Pop the last part off.
if (newParts.length > 0) {
newParts.removeLast();
} else {
// Backed out past the beginning, so preserve the "..".
leadingDoubles++;
}
} else {
newParts.add(part);
}
}
// A relative path can back out from the start directory.
if (!isAbsolute) {
_growListFront(newParts, leadingDoubles, '..');
}
// If we collapsed down to nothing, do ".".
if (newParts.length == 0 && !isAbsolute) {
newParts.add('.');
}
// Canonicalize separators.
var newSeparators = [];
_growListFront(newSeparators, newParts.length, style.separator);
parts = newParts;
separators = newSeparators;
// Normalize the Windows root if needed.
if (root != null && style == Style.windows) {
root = root.replaceAll('/', '\\');
}
removeTrailingSeparators();
}
String toString() {
var builder = new StringBuffer();
if (root != null) builder.write(root);
for (var i = 0; i < parts.length; i++) {
builder.write(parts[i]);
builder.write(separators[i]);
}
return builder.toString();
}
/// Splits the last part of the path into a two-element list. The first is
/// the name of the file without any extension. The second is the extension
/// or "" if it has none.
List<String> _splitExtension() {
if (parts.isEmpty) return ['', ''];
var file = parts.last;
if (file == '..') return ['..', ''];
var lastDot = file.lastIndexOf('.');
// If there is no dot, or it's the first character, like '.bashrc', it
// doesn't count.
if (lastDot <= 0) return [file, ''];
return [file.substring(0, lastDot), file.substring(lastDot)];
}
_ParsedPath clone() => new _ParsedPath(
style, root, new List.from(parts), new List.from(separators));
}