Class: Chef::ChefFS::FilePattern

Inherits:
Object
  • Object
show all
Defined in:
lib/chef/chef_fs/file_pattern.rb

Overview

Represents a glob pattern. This class is designed so that it can match arbitrary strings, and tell you about partial matches.

Examples:

  • a*z

    • Matches abcz

    • Does not match ab/cd/ez

    • Does not match xabcz

  • a**z

    • Matches abcz

    • Matches ab/cd/ez

Special characters supported:

  • / (and \ on Windows) - directory separators

  • * - match zero or more characters (but not directory separators)

  • *\* - match zero or more characters, including directory separators

  • ? - match exactly one character (not a directory separator)

Only on Unix:

  • [abc0-9] - match one of the included characters

  • \<character> - escape character: match the given character

Instance Attribute Summary collapse

Instance Method Summary collapse

Constructor Details

#initialize(pattern) ⇒ FilePattern

Initialize a new FilePattern with the pattern string.

Raises ArgumentError if empty file pattern is specified



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# File 'lib/chef/chef_fs/file_pattern.rb', line 50

def initialize(pattern)
  @pattern = pattern
end

Instance Attribute Details

#patternObject (readonly)

The pattern string.



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# File 'lib/chef/chef_fs/file_pattern.rb', line 55

def pattern
  @pattern
end

Instance Method Details

#could_match_children?(path) ⇒ Boolean

Reports whether this pattern could match children of path. If the pattern doesn’t match the path up to this point or if it matches and doesn’t allow further children, this will return false.

Attributes

  • path - a path to check

Examples

abc/def.could_match_children?('abc') == true
abc.could_match_children?('abc') == false
abc/def.could_match_children?('x') == false
a**z.could_match_children?('ab/cd') == true

Returns:

  • (Boolean)


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# File 'lib/chef/chef_fs/file_pattern.rb', line 72

def could_match_children?(path)
  return false if path == "" # Empty string is not a path

  argument_is_absolute = Chef::ChefFS::PathUtils.is_absolute?(path)
  return false if is_absolute != argument_is_absolute

  path = path[1, path.length - 1] if argument_is_absolute

  path_parts = Chef::ChefFS::PathUtils.split(path)
  # If the pattern is shorter than the path (or same size), children will be larger than the pattern, and will not match.
  return false if regexp_parts.length <= path_parts.length && !has_double_star
  # If the path doesn't match up to this point, children won't match either.
  return false if path_parts.zip(regexp_parts).any? { |part, regexp| !regexp.nil? && !regexp.match(part) }

  # Otherwise, it's possible we could match: the path matches to this point, and the pattern is longer than the path.
  # TODO There is one edge case where the double star comes after some characters like abc**def--we could check whether the next
  # bit of path starts with abc in that case.
  true
end

#exact_child_name_under(path) ⇒ Object

Returns the immediate child of a path that would be matched if this FilePattern was applied. If more than one child could match, this method returns nil.

Attributes

  • path - The path to look for an exact child name under.

Returns

The next directory in the pattern under the given path. If the directory part could match more than one child, it returns nil.

Examples

abc/def.exact_child_name_under('abc') == 'def'
abc/def/ghi.exact_child_name_under('abc') == 'def'
abc/*/ghi.exact_child_name_under('abc') == nil
abc/*/ghi.exact_child_name_under('abc/def') == 'ghi'
abc/**/ghi.exact_child_name_under('abc/def') == nil

This method assumes could_match_children?(path) is true.



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# File 'lib/chef/chef_fs/file_pattern.rb', line 115

def exact_child_name_under(path)
  path = path[1, path.length - 1] if Chef::ChefFS::PathUtils.is_absolute?(path)
  dirs_in_path = Chef::ChefFS::PathUtils.split(path).length
  return nil if exact_parts.length <= dirs_in_path

  exact_parts[dirs_in_path]
end

#exact_pathObject

If this pattern represents an exact path, returns the exact path.

abc/def.exact_path == 'abc/def'
abc/*def.exact_path == 'abc/def'
abc/x\\yz.exact_path == 'abc/xyz'


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# File 'lib/chef/chef_fs/file_pattern.rb', line 128

def exact_path
  return nil if has_double_star || exact_parts.any?(&:nil?)

  result = Chef::ChefFS::PathUtils.join(*exact_parts)
  is_absolute ? Chef::ChefFS::PathUtils.join("", result) : result
end

#is_absoluteObject

Tell whether this pattern matches absolute, or relative paths



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# File 'lib/chef/chef_fs/file_pattern.rb', line 146

def is_absolute
  calculate
  @is_absolute
end

#match?(path) ⇒ Boolean

Returns <tt>true+ if this pattern matches the path, <tt>false+ otherwise.

abc/*/def.match?('abc/foo/def') == true
abc/*/def.match?('abc/foo') == false

Returns:

  • (Boolean)


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# File 'lib/chef/chef_fs/file_pattern.rb', line 155

def match?(path)
  argument_is_absolute = Chef::ChefFS::PathUtils.is_absolute?(path)
  return false if is_absolute != argument_is_absolute

  path = path[1, path.length - 1] if argument_is_absolute
  !!regexp.match(path)
end

#normalized_patternObject

Returns the normalized version of the pattern, with / as the directory separator, and “.” and “..” removed.

This does not presently change things like b to b, but in the future it might.



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# File 'lib/chef/chef_fs/file_pattern.rb', line 140

def normalized_pattern
  calculate
  @normalized_pattern
end

#to_sObject

Returns the string pattern



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# File 'lib/chef/chef_fs/file_pattern.rb', line 164

def to_s
  pattern
end