commit | ec92414acf6b37022a5de45c2cfb10569c523730 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Bob Matcuk <bmatcuk@gmail.com> | Thu Nov 19 00:33:48 2020 |
committer | Bob Matcuk <bmatcuk@gmail.com> | Thu Nov 19 00:35:16 2020 |
tree | bf06737f60770df09391e07f7e308295685df1a8 | |
parent | eb4d9ac565e08f034b7f2631c445f08dd3975b97 [diff] |
:bug: fix small recursion error
Path pattern matching and globbing supporting doublestar
(**
) patterns.
doublestar is a golang implementation of path pattern matching and globbing with support for “doublestar” (aka globstar: **
) patterns.
doublestar patterns match files and directories recursively. For example, if you had the following directory structure:
grandparent `-- parent |-- child1 `-- child2
You could find the children with patterns such as: **/child*
, grandparent/**/child?
, **/parent/*
, or even just **
by itself (which will return all files and directories recursively).
Bash‘s globstar is doublestar’s inspiration and, as such, works similarly. Note that the doublestar must appear as a path component by itself. A pattern such as /path**
is invalid and will be treated the same as /path*
, but /path*/**
should achieve the desired result. Additionally, /path/**
will match all directories and files under the path directory, but /path/**/
will only match directories.
doublestar can be installed via go get
:
go get github.com/bmatcuk/doublestar
To use it in your code, you must import it:
import "github.com/bmatcuk/doublestar"
func Match(pattern, name string) (bool, error)
Match returns true if name
matches the file name pattern
(see below). name
and pattern
are split on forward slash (/
) characters and may be relative or absolute.
Note: Match()
is meant to be a drop-in replacement for path.Match()
. As such, it always uses /
as the path separator. If you are writing code that will run on systems where /
is not the path separator (such as Windows), you want to use PathMatch()
(below) instead.
func PathMatch(pattern, name string) (bool, error)
PathMatch returns true if name
matches the file name pattern
(see below). The difference between Match and PathMatch is that PathMatch will automatically use your system's path separator to split name
and pattern
.
PathMatch()
is meant to be a drop-in replacement for filepath.Match()
.
func Glob(pattern string) ([]string, error)
Glob finds all files and directories in the filesystem that match pattern
(see below). pattern
may be relative (to the current working directory), or absolute.
Glob()
is meant to be a drop-in replacement for filepath.Glob()
.
doublestar supports the following special terms in the patterns:
Special Terms | Meaning |
---|---|
* | matches any sequence of non-path-separators |
** | matches any sequence of characters, including path separators |
? | matches any single non-path-separator character |
[class] | matches any single non-path-separator character against a class of characters (see below) |
{alt1,...} | matches a sequence of characters if one of the comma-separated alternatives matches |
Any character with a special meaning can be escaped with a backslash (\
).
Character classes support the following:
Class | Meaning |
---|---|
[abc] | matches any single character within the set |
[a-z] | matches any single character in the range |
[^class] | matches any single character which does not match the class |
os
packagedoublestar by default uses the Open
, Stat
, and Lstat
, functions and PathSeparator
value from the standard library's os
package. To abstract this, for example to be able to perform tests of Windows paths on Linux, or to interoperate with your own filesystem code, it includes the functions GlobOS
and PathMatchOS
which are identical to Glob
and PathMatch
except that they operate on an OS
interface:
type OS interface {
Lstat(name string) (os.FileInfo, error)
Open(name string) (*os.File, error)
PathSeparator() rune
Stat(name string) (os.FileInfo, error)
}
StandardOS
is a value that implements this interface by calling functions in the standard library's os
package.