There are two commands that provide information about the file system,
glob
and file
.glob
provides the access to the names of files in a directory. It uses a name matching mechanism similar to the UNIX ls command or the Windows (DOS) dir command, to return a list of names that match a pattern.file
provides three sets of functionality:- String manipulation appropriate to parsing file names
dirname
........ Returns directory portion of pathextension
........ Returns file name extensionjoin
........ Join directories and the file name to one stringnativename
....... Returns the native name of the file/directoryrootname
....... Returns file name without extensionsplit
........ Split the string into directory and file namestail
.................... Returns filename without directory
- Information about an entry in a directory:
atime
................ Returns time of last accessexecutable
..... Returns 1 if file is executable by userexists
................ Returns 1 if file existsisdirectory
...... Returns 1 if entry is a directoryisfile
.................. Returns 1 if entry is a regular filelstat
................... Returns array of file status informationmtime
............... Returns time of last data modificationowned
................ Returns 1 if file is owned by userreadable
............ Returns 1 if file is readable by userreadlink
............. Returns name of file pointed to by a symbolic linksize
..................... Returns file size in bytesstat
..................... Returns array of file status informationtype
.................... Returns type of filewritable
............ Returns 1 if file is writeable by user
- Manipulating the files and directories themselves:
copy
................ Copy a file or a directorydelete
................ Delete a file or a directorymkdir
................ Create a new directoryrename
................ Rename or move a file or directory
Between these two commands, a program can obtain most of the information that it may need and manipulate the files and directories.
While retrieving information about what files are present and what properties they have is usually a highly platform-dependent matter, Tcl provides an interface that hides almost all details that are specific to the platform (but are irrelevant to the programmer).
To take advantage of this feature, always manipulate file names via the
file
join
, file
split
commands and the others in the first category.
For instance to refer to a file in a directory upwards of the current one:
set upfile [file join ".." "myfile.out"]# upfile will have the value "../myfile.out"
(The ".." indicates the "parent directory")
Because external commands may not always deal gracefully with the uniform representation that Tcl employs (with forward slashes as directory separators), Tcl also provides a command to turn the string into one that is native to the platform:
## On Windows the name becomes "..\myfile.out"#t newname [file nativename [file join ".." "myfile.out"]]s e
Retrieving all the files with extension ".tcl" in the current directory:
set tclfiles [glob *.tcl]puts "Name - date of last modification"foreach f $tclfiles {format [file mtime $f] -format %x]" }puts "$f - [clock
(The clock command turns the number of seconds returned by the
file
mtime
command into a simple date string, like "12/22/04")glob
?switches?
pattern
?patternN?
- returns a list of file names that match
pattern
orpatternN
switches
may be one of the following (there are more switches available):-nocomplain
- Allows
glob
to return an empty list without causing an error. Without this flag, an error would be generated when the empty list was returned. -types
typeList
- Selects which type of files/directory the command should return. The
typeList
may consist of type letters, like a "d" for directories and "f" for ordinary files as well as letters and keywords indicating the user's permissions ("r" for files/directories that can be read for instance). --
- Marks the end of switches. This allows the use of "-" in a pattern without confusing the glob parser.
pattern
follows the same matching rules as the string match globbing rules with these exceptions:- {a,b,...} Matches any of the strings a,b, etc.
- A "." at the beginning of a filename must match a "." in the filename. The "." is only a wildcard if it is not the first character in a name.
- All "/" must match exactly.
- If the first two characters in
pattern
are ~/, then the ~ is replaced by the value of the HOME environment variable. - If the first character in
pattern
is a ~, followed by a login id, then the ~loginid is replaced by the path of loginid's home directory.
Note that the filenames that matchpattern
are returned in an arbitrary order (that is, do not expect them to be sorted in alphabetical order, for instance). file
atime
name
- Returns the number of seconds since some system-dependent start date, also known as the "epoch" (frequently 1/1/1970) when the file
name
was last accessed. Generates an error if the file doesn't exist, or the access time cannot be queried. file
copy
?-force?
name
target
- Copy the file/directory
name
to a new filetarget
(or to an existing directory with that name)The switch-force
allows you to overwrite existing files. file
delete
?-force?
name
- Delete the file/directory
name
.The switch-force
allows you to delete non-empty directories. file
dirname
name
- Returns the directory portion of a path/filename string. If
name
contains no slashes,file
dirname
returns a ".". If the last "/" inname
is also the first character, it returns a "/". file
executable
name
- Returns 1 if file
name
is executable by the current user, otherwise returns 0. file
exists
name
- Returns 1 if the file
name
exists, and the user has search access in all the directories leading to the file. Otherwise, 0 is returned. file
extension
name
- Returns the file extension.
file
isdirectory
name
- Returns 1 if file name is a directory, otherwise returns 0.
file
isfile
name
- Returns 1 if file name is a regular file, otherwise returns 0.
file
lstat
name
varName
- This returns the same information returned by the system call lstat. The results are placed in the associative array
varName
. The indexes invarName
are:atime
.......time of last accessctime
.......time of last file status changedev
...........inode's devicegid
............group ID of the file's groupino
............inode's numbermode
.......inode protection modemtime
.....time of last data modificationnlink
........number of hard linkssize
...........file size, in bytestype
..........Type of Fileuid
.............user ID of the file's owner
Because this calls lstat, ifname
is a symbolic link, the values invarName
will refer to the link, not the file that is linked to. (See also thestat
subcommand) file
mkdir
name
- Create a new directory
name
. file
mtime
name
- Returns the time of the last modification in seconds since Jan 1, 1970 or whatever start date the system uses.
file
owned
name
- Returns 1 if the file is owned by the current user, otherwise returns 0.
file
readable
name
- Returns 1 if the file is readable by the current user, otherwise returns 0.
file
readlink
name
- Returns the name of the file a symlink is pointing to. If
name
isn't a symlink, or can't be read, an error is generated. file
rename
?-force?
name
target
- Rename file/directory
name
to the new nametarget
(or to an existing directory with that name)The switch-force
allows you to overwrite existing files. file
rootname
name
- Returns all the characters in
name
up to but not including the last ".". Returns$name
ifname
doesn't include a ".". file
size
name
- Returns the size of
name
in bytes. file
stat
name
varName
- This returns the same information returned by the system call stat. The results are placed in the associative array
varName
. The indexes invarName
are:atime
.......time of last accessctime
.......time of last file status changedev
...........inode's devicegid
............group ID of the file's groupino
............inode's numbermode
.......inode protection modemtime
.....time of last data modificationnlink
........number of hard linkssize
...........file size in bytestype
..........Type of fileuid
.............user ID of the file's owner
file
tail
name
- Returns all of the characters in
name
after the last slash. Returns the name ifname
contains no slashes. file
type
name
- Returns a string giving the type of file name, which will be one of:
file
...................................Normal filedirectory
........................DirectorycharacterSpecial
.......Character oriented deviceblockSpecial
.............. Block oriented devicefifo
...................................Named pipelink
..................................Symbolic linksocket
...........................Named socket
file
writable
name
- Returns 1 if file name is writable by the current user, otherwise returns 0.
Note: The overview given above does not cover all the details of the various subcommands, nor does it list all subcommands. Please check the man pages for these.
Example
## Report all the files and subdirectories in the current directory# For files: show the sizet they _are_ directories # set dirs [glob -nocompl# For directories: show th aain -type d *] if { [llength $dirs] > 0 } { puts "Directories:"puts "(no subdirectories)"foreach d [lsort $dirs] { puts " $d" } } else { } set files [glob -nocomplain -type f *] if { [llength $files] > 0 } { puts "Files:"ts "(no files)" }foreach f [lsort $files] { puts " [file size $f] - $f" } } else { pu
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