Filesystem
pwd() -> AbstractString
Get the current working directory.
Examples
julia> pwd()
"/home/JuliaUser"
julia> cd("/home/JuliaUser/Projects/julia")
julia> pwd()
"/home/JuliaUser/Projects/julia"
cd(dir::AbstractString=homedir())
Set the current working directory.
Examples
julia> cd("/home/JuliaUser/Projects/julia")
julia> pwd()
"/home/JuliaUser/Projects/julia"
julia> cd()
julia> pwd()
"/home/JuliaUser"
Base.Filesystem.cd
— Method.cd(f::Function, dir::AbstractString=homedir())
Temporarily change the current working directory to dir
, apply function f
and finally return to the original directory.
Examples
julia> pwd()
"/home/JuliaUser"
julia> cd(readdir, "/home/JuliaUser/Projects/julia")
34-element Array{String,1}:
".circleci"
".freebsdci.sh"
".git"
".gitattributes"
".github"
⋮
"test"
"ui"
"usr"
"usr-staging"
julia> pwd()
"/home/JuliaUser"
readdir(dir::AbstractString=".") -> Vector{String}
Return the files and directories in the directory dir
(or the current working directory if not given).
Examples
julia> readdir("/home/JuliaUser/Projects/julia")
34-element Array{String,1}:
".circleci"
".freebsdci.sh"
".git"
".gitattributes"
".github"
⋮
"test"
"ui"
"usr"
"usr-staging"
walkdir(dir; topdown=true, follow_symlinks=false, onerror=throw)
Return an iterator that walks the directory tree of a directory. The iterator returns a tuple containing (rootpath, dirs, files)
. The directory tree can be traversed top-down or bottom-up. If walkdir
encounters a SystemError
it will rethrow the error by default. A custom error handling function can be provided through onerror
keyword argument. onerror
is called with a SystemError
as argument.
Examples
for (root, dirs, files) in walkdir(".")
println("Directories in $root")
for dir in dirs
println(joinpath(root, dir)) # path to directories
end
println("Files in $root")
for file in files
println(joinpath(root, file)) # path to files
end
end
julia> mkpath("my/test/dir");
julia> itr = walkdir("my");
julia> (root, dirs, files) = first(itr)
("my", ["test"], String[])
julia> (root, dirs, files) = first(itr)
("my/test", ["dir"], String[])
julia> (root, dirs, files) = first(itr)
("my/test/dir", String[], String[])
mkdir(path::AbstractString; mode::Unsigned = 0o777)
Make a new directory with name path
and permissions mode
. mode
defaults to 0o777
, modified by the current file creation mask. This function never creates more than one directory. If the directory already exists, or some intermediate directories do not exist, this function throws an error. See mkpath
for a function which creates all required intermediate directories. Return path
.
Examples
julia> mkdir("testingdir")
"testingdir"
julia> cd("testingdir")
julia> pwd()
"/home/JuliaUser/testingdir"
mkpath(path::AbstractString; mode::Unsigned = 0o777)
Create all directories in the given path
, with permissions mode
. mode
defaults to 0o777
, modified by the current file creation mask. Return path
.
Examples
julia> mkdir("testingdir")
"testingdir"
julia> cd("testingdir")
julia> pwd()
"/home/JuliaUser/testingdir"
julia> mkpath("my/test/dir")
"my/test/dir"
julia> readdir()
1-element Array{String,1}:
"my"
julia> cd("my")
julia> readdir()
1-element Array{String,1}:
"test"
julia> readdir("test")
1-element Array{String,1}:
"dir"
symlink(target::AbstractString, link::AbstractString)
Creates a symbolic link to target
with the name link
.
This function raises an error under operating systems that do not support soft symbolic links, such as Windows XP.
readlink(path::AbstractString) -> AbstractString
Return the target location a symbolic link path
points to.
chmod(path::AbstractString, mode::Integer; recursive::Bool=false)
Change the permissions mode of path
to mode
. Only integer mode
s (e.g. 0o777
) are currently supported. If recursive=true
and the path is a directory all permissions in that directory will be recursively changed. Return path
.
chown(path::AbstractString, owner::Integer, group::Integer=-1)
Change the owner and/or group of path
to owner
and/or group
. If the value entered for owner
or group
is -1
the corresponding ID will not change. Only integer owner
s and group
s are currently supported. Return path
.
RawFD
Primitive type which wraps the native OS file descriptor. RawFD
s can be passed to methods like stat
to discover information about the underlying file, and can also be used to open streams, with the RawFD
describing the OS file backing the stream.
stat(file)
Returns a structure whose fields contain information about the file. The fields of the structure are:
Name | Description |
---|---|
size | The size (in bytes) of the file |
device | ID of the device that contains the file |
inode | The inode number of the file |
mode | The protection mode of the file |
nlink | The number of hard links to the file |
uid | The user id of the owner of the file |
gid | The group id of the file owner |
rdev | If this file refers to a device, the ID of the device it refers to |
blksize | The file-system preferred block size for the file |
blocks | The number of such blocks allocated |
mtime | Unix timestamp of when the file was last modified |
ctime | Unix timestamp of when the file was created |
lstat(file)
Like stat
, but for symbolic links gets the info for the link itself rather than the file it refers to. This function must be called on a file path rather than a file object or a file descriptor.
ctime(file)
Equivalent to stat(file).ctime
.
mtime(file)
Equivalent to stat(file).mtime
.
filemode(file)
Equivalent to stat(file).mode
.
filesize(path...)
Equivalent to stat(file).size
.
uperm(file)
Get the permissions of the owner of the file as a bitfield of
Value | Description |
---|---|
01 | Execute Permission |
02 | Write Permission |
04 | Read Permission |
For allowed arguments, see stat
.
gperm(file)
Like uperm
but gets the permissions of the group owning the file.
operm(file)
Like uperm
but gets the permissions for people who neither own the file nor are a member of the group owning the file
cp(src::AbstractString, dst::AbstractString; force::Bool=false, follow_symlinks::Bool=false)
Copy the file, link, or directory from src
to dst
. force=true
will first remove an existing dst
.
If follow_symlinks=false
, and src
is a symbolic link, dst
will be created as a symbolic link. If follow_symlinks=true
and src
is a symbolic link, dst
will be a copy of the file or directory src
refers to. Return dst
.
download(url::AbstractString, [localfile::AbstractString])
Download a file from the given url, optionally renaming it to the given local file name. If no filename is given this will download into a randomly-named file in your temp directory. Note that this function relies on the availability of external tools such as curl
, wget
or fetch
to download the file and is provided for convenience. For production use or situations in which more options are needed, please use a package that provides the desired functionality instead.
Returns the filename of the downloaded file.
mv(src::AbstractString, dst::AbstractString; force::Bool=false)
Move the file, link, or directory from src
to dst
. force=true
will first remove an existing dst
. Return dst
.
Examples
julia> write("hello.txt", "world");
julia> mv("hello.txt", "goodbye.txt")
"goodbye.txt"
julia> "hello.txt" in readdir()
false
julia> readline("goodbye.txt")
"world"
julia> write("hello.txt", "world2");
julia> mv("hello.txt", "goodbye.txt")
ERROR: ArgumentError: 'goodbye.txt' exists. `force=true` is required to remove 'goodbye.txt' before moving.
Stacktrace:
[1] #checkfor_mv_cp_cptree#10(::Bool, ::Function, ::String, ::String, ::String) at ./file.jl:293
[...]
julia> mv("hello.txt", "goodbye.txt", force=true)
"goodbye.txt"
julia> rm("goodbye.txt");
rm(path::AbstractString; force::Bool=false, recursive::Bool=false)
Delete the file, link, or empty directory at the given path. If force=true
is passed, a non-existing path is not treated as error. If recursive=true
is passed and the path is a directory, then all contents are removed recursively.
Examples
julia> mkpath("my/test/dir");
julia> rm("my", recursive=true)
julia> rm("this_file_does_not_exist", force=true)
julia> rm("this_file_does_not_exist")
ERROR: IOError: unlink: no such file or directory (ENOENT)
Stacktrace:
[...]
touch(path::AbstractString)
Update the last-modified timestamp on a file to the current time. Return path
.
Examples
julia> write("my_little_file", 2);
julia> mtime("my_little_file")
1.5273815391135583e9
julia> touch("my_little_file");
julia> mtime("my_little_file")
1.527381559163435e9
We can see the mtime
has been modified by touch
.
tempname()
Generate a temporary file path. This function only returns a path; no file is created. The path is likely to be unique, but this cannot be guaranteed.
This can lead to race conditions if another process obtains the same file name and creates the file before you are able to. Using mktemp()
is recommended instead.
tempdir()
Obtain the path of a temporary directory (possibly shared with other processes).
mktemp(parent=tempdir())
Return (path, io)
, where path
is the path of a new temporary file in parent
and io
is an open file object for this path.
Base.Filesystem.mktemp
— Method.mktemp(f::Function, parent=tempdir())
Apply the function f
to the result of mktemp(parent)
and remove the temporary file upon completion.
mktempdir(parent=tempdir())
Create a temporary directory in the parent
directory and return its path. If parent
does not exist, throw an error.
Base.Filesystem.mktempdir
— Method.mktempdir(f::Function, parent=tempdir())
Apply the function f
to the result of mktempdir(parent)
and remove the temporary directory upon completion.
isblockdev(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
is a block device, false
otherwise.
ischardev(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
is a character device, false
otherwise.
isdir(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
is a directory, false
otherwise.
Examples
julia> isdir(homedir())
true
julia> isdir("not/a/directory")
false
isfifo(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
is a FIFO, false
otherwise.
isfile(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
is a regular file, false
otherwise.
Examples
julia> isfile(homedir())
false
julia> f = open("test_file.txt", "w");
julia> isfile(f)
true
julia> close(f); rm("test_file.txt")
islink(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
is a symbolic link, false
otherwise.
ismount(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
is a mount point, false
otherwise.
ispath(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
is a valid filesystem path, false
otherwise.
issetgid(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
has the setgid flag set, false
otherwise.
issetuid(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
has the setuid flag set, false
otherwise.
issocket(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
is a socket, false
otherwise.
issticky(path) -> Bool
Return true
if path
has the sticky bit set, false
otherwise.
homedir() -> AbstractString
Return the current user's home directory.
homedir
determines the home directory via libuv
's uv_os_homedir
. For details (for example on how to specify the home directory via environment variables), see the uv_os_homedir
documentation.
dirname(path::AbstractString) -> AbstractString
Get the directory part of a path.
Examples
julia> dirname("/home/myuser")
"/home"
See also: basename
basename(path::AbstractString) -> AbstractString
Get the file name part of a path.
Examples
julia> basename("/home/myuser/example.jl")
"example.jl"
See also: dirname
@__FILE__ -> AbstractString
Expand to a string with the path to the file containing the macrocall, or an empty string if evaluated by julia -e <expr>
. Return nothing
if the macro was missing parser source information. Alternatively see PROGRAM_FILE
.
@__DIR__ -> AbstractString
Expand to a string with the absolute path to the directory of the file containing the macrocall. Return the current working directory if run from a REPL or if evaluated by julia -e <expr>
.
@__LINE__ -> Int
Expand to the line number of the location of the macrocall. Return 0
if the line number could not be determined.
isabspath(path::AbstractString) -> Bool
Determine whether a path is absolute (begins at the root directory).
Examples
julia> isabspath("/home")
true
julia> isabspath("home")
false
isdirpath(path::AbstractString) -> Bool
Determine whether a path refers to a directory (for example, ends with a path separator).
Examples
julia> isdirpath("/home")
false
julia> isdirpath("/home/")
true
joinpath(parts...) -> AbstractString
Join path components into a full path. If some argument is an absolute path or (on Windows) has a drive specification that doesn't match the drive computed for the join of the preceding paths, then prior components are dropped.
Examples
julia> joinpath("/home/myuser", "example.jl")
"/home/myuser/example.jl"
abspath(path::AbstractString) -> AbstractString
Convert a path to an absolute path by adding the current directory if necessary. Also normalizes the path as in normpath
.
abspath(path::AbstractString, paths::AbstractString...) -> AbstractString
Convert a set of paths to an absolute path by joining them together and adding the current directory if necessary. Equivalent to abspath(joinpath(path, paths...))
.
normpath(path::AbstractString) -> AbstractString
Normalize a path, removing "." and ".." entries.
Examples
julia> normpath("/home/myuser/../example.jl")
"/home/example.jl"
realpath(path::AbstractString) -> AbstractString
Canonicalize a path by expanding symbolic links and removing "." and ".." entries.
relpath(path::AbstractString, startpath::AbstractString = ".") -> AbstractString
Return a relative filepath to path
either from the current directory or from an optional start directory. This is a path computation: the filesystem is not accessed to confirm the existence or nature of path
or startpath
.
expanduser(path::AbstractString) -> AbstractString
On Unix systems, replace a tilde character at the start of a path with the current user's home directory.
splitdir(path::AbstractString) -> (AbstractString, AbstractString)
Split a path into a tuple of the directory name and file name.
Examples
julia> splitdir("/home/myuser")
("/home", "myuser")
splitdrive(path::AbstractString) -> (AbstractString, AbstractString)
On Windows, split a path into the drive letter part and the path part. On Unix systems, the first component is always the empty string.
splitext(path::AbstractString) -> (AbstractString, AbstractString)
If the last component of a path contains a dot, split the path into everything before the dot and everything including and after the dot. Otherwise, return a tuple of the argument unmodified and the empty string.
Examples
julia> splitext("/home/myuser/example.jl")
("/home/myuser/example", ".jl")
julia> splitext("/home/myuser/example")
("/home/myuser/example", "")
splitpath(path::AbstractString) -> Vector{String}
Split a file path into all its path components. This is the opposite of joinpath
. Returns an array of substrings, one for each directory or file in the path, including the root directory if present.
This function requires at least Julia 1.1.
Examples
julia> splitpath("/home/myuser/example.jl")
4-element Array{String,1}:
"/"
"home"
"myuser"
"example.jl"