File | /usr/local/lib/perl5/5.8.8/i686-linux/File/Glob.pm |
Statements Executed | 56 |
Statement Execution Time | 3.57ms |
Calls | P | F | Exclusive Time |
Inclusive Time |
Subroutine |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 | 1 | 1 | 734µs | 828µs | AUTOLOAD | File::Glob::
2 | 2 | 2 | 256µs | 1.20ms | GLOB_CSH | File::Glob::
1 | 1 | 1 | 61µs | 68µs | import | File::Glob::
5 | 1 | 2 | 56µs | 56µs | CORE:subst (opcode) | File::Glob::
5 | 1 | 2 | 38µs | 38µs | constant (xsub) | File::Glob::
2 | 2 | 2 | 20µs | 20µs | CORE:match (opcode) | File::Glob::
0 | 0 | 0 | 0s | 0s | BEGIN | File::Glob::
0 | 0 | 0 | 0s | 0s | GLOB_ERROR | File::Glob::
0 | 0 | 0 | 0s | 0s | bsd_glob | File::Glob::
0 | 0 | 0 | 0s | 0s | csh_glob | File::Glob::
0 | 0 | 0 | 0s | 0s | glob | File::Glob::
Line | State ments |
Time on line |
Calls | Time in subs |
Code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | package File::Glob; | ||||
2 | |||||
3 | 3 | 180µs | 1 | 26µs | use strict; # spent 26µs making 1 call to strict::import |
4 | 1 | 6µs | our($VERSION, @ISA, @EXPORT_OK, @EXPORT_FAIL, %EXPORT_TAGS, | ||
5 | $AUTOLOAD, $DEFAULT_FLAGS); | ||||
6 | |||||
7 | 3 | 1.51ms | use XSLoader (); | ||
8 | |||||
9 | 1 | 12µs | @ISA = qw(Exporter); | ||
10 | |||||
11 | # NOTE: The glob() export is only here for compatibility with 5.6.0. | ||||
12 | # csh_glob() should not be used directly, unless you know what you're doing. | ||||
13 | |||||
14 | 1 | 11µs | @EXPORT_OK = qw( | ||
15 | csh_glob | ||||
16 | bsd_glob | ||||
17 | glob | ||||
18 | GLOB_ABEND | ||||
19 | GLOB_ALPHASORT | ||||
20 | GLOB_ALTDIRFUNC | ||||
21 | GLOB_BRACE | ||||
22 | GLOB_CSH | ||||
23 | GLOB_ERR | ||||
24 | GLOB_ERROR | ||||
25 | GLOB_LIMIT | ||||
26 | GLOB_MARK | ||||
27 | GLOB_NOCASE | ||||
28 | GLOB_NOCHECK | ||||
29 | GLOB_NOMAGIC | ||||
30 | GLOB_NOSORT | ||||
31 | GLOB_NOSPACE | ||||
32 | GLOB_QUOTE | ||||
33 | GLOB_TILDE | ||||
34 | ); | ||||
35 | |||||
36 | 1 | 15µs | %EXPORT_TAGS = ( | ||
37 | 'glob' => [ qw( | ||||
38 | GLOB_ABEND | ||||
39 | GLOB_ALPHASORT | ||||
40 | GLOB_ALTDIRFUNC | ||||
41 | GLOB_BRACE | ||||
42 | GLOB_CSH | ||||
43 | GLOB_ERR | ||||
44 | GLOB_ERROR | ||||
45 | GLOB_LIMIT | ||||
46 | GLOB_MARK | ||||
47 | GLOB_NOCASE | ||||
48 | GLOB_NOCHECK | ||||
49 | GLOB_NOMAGIC | ||||
50 | GLOB_NOSORT | ||||
51 | GLOB_NOSPACE | ||||
52 | GLOB_QUOTE | ||||
53 | GLOB_TILDE | ||||
54 | glob | ||||
55 | bsd_glob | ||||
56 | ) ], | ||||
57 | ); | ||||
58 | |||||
59 | 1 | 5µs | $VERSION = '1.05'; | ||
60 | |||||
61 | # spent 68µs (61+7) within File::Glob::import which was called
# once (61µs+7µs) by Net::HTTP::Methods::zlib_ok at line 19 of File/GlobMapper.pm | ||||
62 | 4 | 46µs | require Exporter; | ||
63 | my $i = 1; | ||||
64 | while ($i < @_) { | ||||
65 | 2 | 33µs | 1 | 7µs | if ($_[$i] =~ /^:(case|nocase|globally)$/) { # spent 7µs making 1 call to File::Glob::CORE:match |
66 | splice(@_, $i, 1); | ||||
67 | $DEFAULT_FLAGS &= ~GLOB_NOCASE() if $1 eq 'case'; | ||||
68 | $DEFAULT_FLAGS |= GLOB_NOCASE() if $1 eq 'nocase'; | ||||
69 | if ($1 eq 'globally') { | ||||
70 | local $^W; | ||||
71 | *CORE::GLOBAL::glob = \&File::Glob::csh_glob; | ||||
72 | } | ||||
73 | next; | ||||
74 | } | ||||
75 | ++$i; | ||||
76 | } | ||||
77 | goto &Exporter::import; # spent 1.88ms making 1 call to Exporter::import | ||||
78 | } | ||||
79 | |||||
80 | # spent 828µs (734+94) within File::Glob::AUTOLOAD which was called 5 times, avg 166µs/call:
# 5 times (734µs+94µs) by File::Glob::GLOB_CSH at line 105, avg 166µs/call | ||||
81 | # This AUTOLOAD is used to 'autoload' constants from the constant() | ||||
82 | # XS function. If a constant is not found then control is passed | ||||
83 | # to the AUTOLOAD in AutoLoader. | ||||
84 | |||||
85 | 30 | 871µs | my $constname; | ||
86 | ($constname = $AUTOLOAD) =~ s/.*:://; # spent 56µs making 5 calls to File::Glob::CORE:subst, avg 11µs/call | ||||
87 | my ($error, $val) = constant($constname); # spent 38µs making 5 calls to File::Glob::constant, avg 8µs/call | ||||
88 | if ($error) { | ||||
89 | require Carp; | ||||
90 | Carp::croak($error); | ||||
91 | } | ||||
92 | 1 | 166µs | eval "sub $AUTOLOAD { $val }"; | ||
93 | goto &$AUTOLOAD; # spent 13µs making 1 call to File::Glob::GLOB_ALPHASORT
# spent 13µs making 1 call to File::Glob::GLOB_NOMAGIC
# spent 12µs making 1 call to File::Glob::GLOB_BRACE
# spent 11µs making 1 call to File::Glob::GLOB_QUOTE
# spent 11µs making 1 call to File::Glob::GLOB_TILDE | ||||
94 | } | ||||
95 | |||||
96 | 1 | 442µs | 1 | 412µs | XSLoader::load 'File::Glob', $VERSION; # spent 412µs making 1 call to XSLoader::load |
97 | |||||
98 | # Preloaded methods go here. | ||||
99 | |||||
100 | sub GLOB_ERROR { | ||||
101 | return (constant('GLOB_ERROR'))[1]; | ||||
102 | } | ||||
103 | |||||
104 | # spent 1.20ms (256µs+942µs) within File::Glob::GLOB_CSH which was called 2 times, avg 599µs/call:
# once (175µs+888µs) by Net::HTTP::Methods::zlib_ok at line 112
# once (81µs+54µs) by Net::HTTP::Methods::zlib_ok at line 20 of File/GlobMapper.pm | ||||
105 | 2 | 173µs | 10 | 882µs | GLOB_BRACE() # spent 828µs making 5 calls to File::Glob::AUTOLOAD, avg 166µs/call
# spent 11µs making 1 call to File::Glob::GLOB_ALPHASORT
# spent 11µs making 1 call to File::Glob::GLOB_BRACE
# spent 11µs making 1 call to File::Glob::GLOB_NOMAGIC
# spent 11µs making 1 call to File::Glob::GLOB_QUOTE
# spent 10µs making 1 call to File::Glob::GLOB_TILDE |
106 | | GLOB_NOMAGIC() | ||||
107 | | GLOB_QUOTE() | ||||
108 | | GLOB_TILDE() | ||||
109 | | GLOB_ALPHASORT() | ||||
110 | } | ||||
111 | |||||
112 | 1 | 20µs | 1 | 1.06ms | $DEFAULT_FLAGS = GLOB_CSH(); # spent 1.06ms making 1 call to File::Glob::GLOB_CSH |
113 | 1 | 34µs | 1 | 13µs | if ($^O =~ /^(?:MSWin32|VMS|os2|dos|riscos|MacOS)$/) { # spent 13µs making 1 call to File::Glob::CORE:match |
114 | $DEFAULT_FLAGS |= GLOB_NOCASE(); | ||||
115 | } | ||||
116 | |||||
117 | # Autoload methods go after =cut, and are processed by the autosplit program. | ||||
118 | |||||
119 | sub bsd_glob { | ||||
120 | my ($pat,$flags) = @_; | ||||
121 | $flags = $DEFAULT_FLAGS if @_ < 2; | ||||
122 | return doglob($pat,$flags); | ||||
123 | } | ||||
124 | |||||
125 | # File::Glob::glob() is deprecated because its prototype is different from | ||||
126 | # CORE::glob() (use bsd_glob() instead) | ||||
127 | sub glob { | ||||
128 | splice @_, 1; # don't pass PL_glob_index as flags! | ||||
129 | goto &bsd_glob; | ||||
130 | } | ||||
131 | |||||
132 | ## borrowed heavily from gsar's File::DosGlob | ||||
133 | 1 | 4µs | my %iter; | ||
134 | 1 | 4µs | my %entries; | ||
135 | |||||
136 | sub csh_glob { | ||||
137 | my $pat = shift; | ||||
138 | my $cxix = shift; | ||||
139 | my @pat; | ||||
140 | |||||
141 | # glob without args defaults to $_ | ||||
142 | $pat = $_ unless defined $pat; | ||||
143 | |||||
144 | # extract patterns | ||||
145 | $pat =~ s/^\s+//; # Protect against empty elements in | ||||
146 | $pat =~ s/\s+$//; # things like < *.c> and <*.c >. | ||||
147 | # These alone shouldn't trigger ParseWords. | ||||
148 | if ($pat =~ /\s/) { | ||||
149 | # XXX this is needed for compatibility with the csh | ||||
150 | # implementation in Perl. Need to support a flag | ||||
151 | # to disable this behavior. | ||||
152 | require Text::ParseWords; | ||||
153 | @pat = Text::ParseWords::parse_line('\s+',0,$pat); | ||||
154 | } | ||||
155 | |||||
156 | # assume global context if not provided one | ||||
157 | $cxix = '_G_' unless defined $cxix; | ||||
158 | $iter{$cxix} = 0 unless exists $iter{$cxix}; | ||||
159 | |||||
160 | # if we're just beginning, do it all first | ||||
161 | if ($iter{$cxix} == 0) { | ||||
162 | if (@pat) { | ||||
163 | $entries{$cxix} = [ map { doglob($_, $DEFAULT_FLAGS) } @pat ]; | ||||
164 | } | ||||
165 | else { | ||||
166 | $entries{$cxix} = [ doglob($pat, $DEFAULT_FLAGS) ]; | ||||
167 | } | ||||
168 | } | ||||
169 | |||||
170 | # chuck it all out, quick or slow | ||||
171 | if (wantarray) { | ||||
172 | delete $iter{$cxix}; | ||||
173 | return @{delete $entries{$cxix}}; | ||||
174 | } | ||||
175 | else { | ||||
176 | if ($iter{$cxix} = scalar @{$entries{$cxix}}) { | ||||
177 | return shift @{$entries{$cxix}}; | ||||
178 | } | ||||
179 | else { | ||||
180 | # return undef for EOL | ||||
181 | delete $iter{$cxix}; | ||||
182 | delete $entries{$cxix}; | ||||
183 | return undef; | ||||
184 | } | ||||
185 | } | ||||
186 | } | ||||
187 | |||||
188 | 1 | 35µs | 1; | ||
189 | __END__ | ||||
190 | |||||
191 | =head1 NAME | ||||
192 | |||||
193 | File::Glob - Perl extension for BSD glob routine | ||||
194 | |||||
195 | =head1 SYNOPSIS | ||||
196 | |||||
197 | use File::Glob ':glob'; | ||||
198 | |||||
199 | @list = bsd_glob('*.[ch]'); | ||||
200 | $homedir = bsd_glob('~gnat', GLOB_TILDE | GLOB_ERR); | ||||
201 | |||||
202 | if (GLOB_ERROR) { | ||||
203 | # an error occurred reading $homedir | ||||
204 | } | ||||
205 | |||||
206 | ## override the core glob (CORE::glob() does this automatically | ||||
207 | ## by default anyway, since v5.6.0) | ||||
208 | use File::Glob ':globally'; | ||||
209 | my @sources = <*.{c,h,y}>; | ||||
210 | |||||
211 | ## override the core glob, forcing case sensitivity | ||||
212 | use File::Glob qw(:globally :case); | ||||
213 | my @sources = <*.{c,h,y}>; | ||||
214 | |||||
215 | ## override the core glob forcing case insensitivity | ||||
216 | use File::Glob qw(:globally :nocase); | ||||
217 | my @sources = <*.{c,h,y}>; | ||||
218 | |||||
219 | ## glob on all files in home directory | ||||
220 | use File::Glob ':globally'; | ||||
221 | my @sources = <~gnat/*>; | ||||
222 | |||||
223 | =head1 DESCRIPTION | ||||
224 | |||||
225 | The glob angle-bracket operator C<< <> >> is a pathname generator that | ||||
226 | implements the rules for file name pattern matching used by Unix-like shells | ||||
227 | such as the Bourne shell or C shell. | ||||
228 | |||||
229 | File::Glob::bsd_glob() implements the FreeBSD glob(3) routine, which is | ||||
230 | a superset of the POSIX glob() (described in IEEE Std 1003.2 "POSIX.2"). | ||||
231 | bsd_glob() takes a mandatory C<pattern> argument, and an optional | ||||
232 | C<flags> argument, and returns a list of filenames matching the | ||||
233 | pattern, with interpretation of the pattern modified by the C<flags> | ||||
234 | variable. | ||||
235 | |||||
236 | Since v5.6.0, Perl's CORE::glob() is implemented in terms of bsd_glob(). | ||||
237 | Note that they don't share the same prototype--CORE::glob() only accepts | ||||
238 | a single argument. Due to historical reasons, CORE::glob() will also | ||||
239 | split its argument on whitespace, treating it as multiple patterns, | ||||
240 | whereas bsd_glob() considers them as one pattern. | ||||
241 | |||||
242 | =head2 META CHARACTERS | ||||
243 | |||||
244 | \ Quote the next metacharacter | ||||
245 | [] Character class | ||||
246 | {} Multiple pattern | ||||
247 | * Match any string of characters | ||||
248 | ? Match any single character | ||||
249 | ~ User name home directory | ||||
250 | |||||
251 | The metanotation C<a{b,c,d}e> is a shorthand for C<abe ace ade>. Left to | ||||
252 | right order is preserved, with results of matches being sorted separately | ||||
253 | at a low level to preserve this order. As a special case C<{>, C<}>, and | ||||
254 | C<{}> are passed undisturbed. | ||||
255 | |||||
256 | =head2 POSIX FLAGS | ||||
257 | |||||
258 | The POSIX defined flags for bsd_glob() are: | ||||
259 | |||||
260 | =over 4 | ||||
261 | |||||
262 | =item C<GLOB_ERR> | ||||
263 | |||||
264 | Force bsd_glob() to return an error when it encounters a directory it | ||||
265 | cannot open or read. Ordinarily bsd_glob() continues to find matches. | ||||
266 | |||||
267 | =item C<GLOB_LIMIT> | ||||
268 | |||||
269 | Make bsd_glob() return an error (GLOB_NOSPACE) when the pattern expands | ||||
270 | to a size bigger than the system constant C<ARG_MAX> (usually found in | ||||
271 | limits.h). If your system does not define this constant, bsd_glob() uses | ||||
272 | C<sysconf(_SC_ARG_MAX)> or C<_POSIX_ARG_MAX> where available (in that | ||||
273 | order). You can inspect these values using the standard C<POSIX> | ||||
274 | extension. | ||||
275 | |||||
276 | =item C<GLOB_MARK> | ||||
277 | |||||
278 | Each pathname that is a directory that matches the pattern has a slash | ||||
279 | appended. | ||||
280 | |||||
281 | =item C<GLOB_NOCASE> | ||||
282 | |||||
283 | By default, file names are assumed to be case sensitive; this flag | ||||
284 | makes bsd_glob() treat case differences as not significant. | ||||
285 | |||||
286 | =item C<GLOB_NOCHECK> | ||||
287 | |||||
288 | If the pattern does not match any pathname, then bsd_glob() returns a list | ||||
289 | consisting of only the pattern. If C<GLOB_QUOTE> is set, its effect | ||||
290 | is present in the pattern returned. | ||||
291 | |||||
292 | =item C<GLOB_NOSORT> | ||||
293 | |||||
294 | By default, the pathnames are sorted in ascending ASCII order; this | ||||
295 | flag prevents that sorting (speeding up bsd_glob()). | ||||
296 | |||||
297 | =back | ||||
298 | |||||
299 | The FreeBSD extensions to the POSIX standard are the following flags: | ||||
300 | |||||
301 | =over 4 | ||||
302 | |||||
303 | =item C<GLOB_BRACE> | ||||
304 | |||||
305 | Pre-process the string to expand C<{pat,pat,...}> strings like csh(1). | ||||
306 | The pattern '{}' is left unexpanded for historical reasons (and csh(1) | ||||
307 | does the same thing to ease typing of find(1) patterns). | ||||
308 | |||||
309 | =item C<GLOB_NOMAGIC> | ||||
310 | |||||
311 | Same as C<GLOB_NOCHECK> but it only returns the pattern if it does not | ||||
312 | contain any of the special characters "*", "?" or "[". C<NOMAGIC> is | ||||
313 | provided to simplify implementing the historic csh(1) globbing | ||||
314 | behaviour and should probably not be used anywhere else. | ||||
315 | |||||
316 | =item C<GLOB_QUOTE> | ||||
317 | |||||
318 | Use the backslash ('\') character for quoting: every occurrence of a | ||||
319 | backslash followed by a character in the pattern is replaced by that | ||||
320 | character, avoiding any special interpretation of the character. | ||||
321 | (But see below for exceptions on DOSISH systems). | ||||
322 | |||||
323 | =item C<GLOB_TILDE> | ||||
324 | |||||
325 | Expand patterns that start with '~' to user name home directories. | ||||
326 | |||||
327 | =item C<GLOB_CSH> | ||||
328 | |||||
329 | For convenience, C<GLOB_CSH> is a synonym for | ||||
330 | C<GLOB_BRACE | GLOB_NOMAGIC | GLOB_QUOTE | GLOB_TILDE | GLOB_ALPHASORT>. | ||||
331 | |||||
332 | =back | ||||
333 | |||||
334 | The POSIX provided C<GLOB_APPEND>, C<GLOB_DOOFFS>, and the FreeBSD | ||||
335 | extensions C<GLOB_ALTDIRFUNC>, and C<GLOB_MAGCHAR> flags have not been | ||||
336 | implemented in the Perl version because they involve more complex | ||||
337 | interaction with the underlying C structures. | ||||
338 | |||||
339 | The following flag has been added in the Perl implementation for | ||||
340 | csh compatibility: | ||||
341 | |||||
342 | =over 4 | ||||
343 | |||||
344 | =item C<GLOB_ALPHASORT> | ||||
345 | |||||
346 | If C<GLOB_NOSORT> is not in effect, sort filenames is alphabetical | ||||
347 | order (case does not matter) rather than in ASCII order. | ||||
348 | |||||
349 | =back | ||||
350 | |||||
351 | =head1 DIAGNOSTICS | ||||
352 | |||||
353 | bsd_glob() returns a list of matching paths, possibly zero length. If an | ||||
354 | error occurred, &File::Glob::GLOB_ERROR will be non-zero and C<$!> will be | ||||
355 | set. &File::Glob::GLOB_ERROR is guaranteed to be zero if no error occurred, | ||||
356 | or one of the following values otherwise: | ||||
357 | |||||
358 | =over 4 | ||||
359 | |||||
360 | =item C<GLOB_NOSPACE> | ||||
361 | |||||
362 | An attempt to allocate memory failed. | ||||
363 | |||||
364 | =item C<GLOB_ABEND> | ||||
365 | |||||
366 | The glob was stopped because an error was encountered. | ||||
367 | |||||
368 | =back | ||||
369 | |||||
370 | In the case where bsd_glob() has found some matching paths, but is | ||||
371 | interrupted by an error, it will return a list of filenames B<and> | ||||
372 | set &File::Glob::ERROR. | ||||
373 | |||||
374 | Note that bsd_glob() deviates from POSIX and FreeBSD glob(3) behaviour | ||||
375 | by not considering C<ENOENT> and C<ENOTDIR> as errors - bsd_glob() will | ||||
376 | continue processing despite those errors, unless the C<GLOB_ERR> flag is | ||||
377 | set. | ||||
378 | |||||
379 | Be aware that all filenames returned from File::Glob are tainted. | ||||
380 | |||||
381 | =head1 NOTES | ||||
382 | |||||
383 | =over 4 | ||||
384 | |||||
385 | =item * | ||||
386 | |||||
387 | If you want to use multiple patterns, e.g. C<bsd_glob("a* b*")>, you should | ||||
388 | probably throw them in a set as in C<bsd_glob("{a*,b*}")>. This is because | ||||
389 | the argument to bsd_glob() isn't subjected to parsing by the C shell. | ||||
390 | Remember that you can use a backslash to escape things. | ||||
391 | |||||
392 | =item * | ||||
393 | |||||
394 | On DOSISH systems, backslash is a valid directory separator character. | ||||
395 | In this case, use of backslash as a quoting character (via GLOB_QUOTE) | ||||
396 | interferes with the use of backslash as a directory separator. The | ||||
397 | best (simplest, most portable) solution is to use forward slashes for | ||||
398 | directory separators, and backslashes for quoting. However, this does | ||||
399 | not match "normal practice" on these systems. As a concession to user | ||||
400 | expectation, therefore, backslashes (under GLOB_QUOTE) only quote the | ||||
401 | glob metacharacters '[', ']', '{', '}', '-', '~', and backslash itself. | ||||
402 | All other backslashes are passed through unchanged. | ||||
403 | |||||
404 | =item * | ||||
405 | |||||
406 | Win32 users should use the real slash. If you really want to use | ||||
407 | backslashes, consider using Sarathy's File::DosGlob, which comes with | ||||
408 | the standard Perl distribution. | ||||
409 | |||||
410 | =item * | ||||
411 | |||||
412 | Mac OS (Classic) users should note a few differences. Since | ||||
413 | Mac OS is not Unix, when the glob code encounters a tilde glob (e.g. | ||||
414 | ~user) and the C<GLOB_TILDE> flag is used, it simply returns that | ||||
415 | pattern without doing any expansion. | ||||
416 | |||||
417 | Glob on Mac OS is case-insensitive by default (if you don't use any | ||||
418 | flags). If you specify any flags at all and still want glob | ||||
419 | to be case-insensitive, you must include C<GLOB_NOCASE> in the flags. | ||||
420 | |||||
421 | The path separator is ':' (aka colon), not '/' (aka slash). Mac OS users | ||||
422 | should be careful about specifying relative pathnames. While a full path | ||||
423 | always begins with a volume name, a relative pathname should always | ||||
424 | begin with a ':'. If specifying a volume name only, a trailing ':' is | ||||
425 | required. | ||||
426 | |||||
427 | The specification of pathnames in glob patterns adheres to the usual Mac | ||||
428 | OS conventions: The path separator is a colon ':', not a slash '/'. A | ||||
429 | full path always begins with a volume name. A relative pathname on Mac | ||||
430 | OS must always begin with a ':', except when specifying a file or | ||||
431 | directory name in the current working directory, where the leading colon | ||||
432 | is optional. If specifying a volume name only, a trailing ':' is | ||||
433 | required. Due to these rules, a glob like E<lt>*:E<gt> will find all | ||||
434 | mounted volumes, while a glob like E<lt>*E<gt> or E<lt>:*E<gt> will find | ||||
435 | all files and directories in the current directory. | ||||
436 | |||||
437 | Note that updirs in the glob pattern are resolved before the matching begins, | ||||
438 | i.e. a pattern like "*HD:t?p::a*" will be matched as "*HD:a*". Note also, | ||||
439 | that a single trailing ':' in the pattern is ignored (unless it's a volume | ||||
440 | name pattern like "*HD:"), i.e. a glob like E<lt>:*:E<gt> will find both | ||||
441 | directories I<and> files (and not, as one might expect, only directories). | ||||
442 | You can, however, use the C<GLOB_MARK> flag to distinguish (without a file | ||||
443 | test) directory names from file names. | ||||
444 | |||||
445 | If the C<GLOB_MARK> flag is set, all directory paths will have a ':' appended. | ||||
446 | Since a directory like 'lib:' is I<not> a valid I<relative> path on Mac OS, | ||||
447 | both a leading and a trailing colon will be added, when the directory name in | ||||
448 | question doesn't contain any colons (e.g. 'lib' becomes ':lib:'). | ||||
449 | |||||
450 | =back | ||||
451 | |||||
452 | =head1 SEE ALSO | ||||
453 | |||||
454 | L<perlfunc/glob>, glob(3) | ||||
455 | |||||
456 | =head1 AUTHOR | ||||
457 | |||||
458 | The Perl interface was written by Nathan Torkington E<lt>gnat@frii.comE<gt>, | ||||
459 | and is released under the artistic license. Further modifications were | ||||
460 | made by Greg Bacon E<lt>gbacon@cs.uah.eduE<gt>, Gurusamy Sarathy | ||||
461 | E<lt>gsar@activestate.comE<gt>, and Thomas Wegner | ||||
462 | E<lt>wegner_thomas@yahoo.comE<gt>. The C glob code has the | ||||
463 | following copyright: | ||||
464 | |||||
465 | Copyright (c) 1989, 1993 The Regents of the University of California. | ||||
466 | All rights reserved. | ||||
467 | |||||
468 | This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by | ||||
469 | Guido van Rossum. | ||||
470 | |||||
471 | Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without | ||||
472 | modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions | ||||
473 | are met: | ||||
474 | |||||
475 | 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright | ||||
476 | notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. | ||||
477 | 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright | ||||
478 | notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the | ||||
479 | documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. | ||||
480 | 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors | ||||
481 | may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software | ||||
482 | without specific prior written permission. | ||||
483 | |||||
484 | THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND | ||||
485 | ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE | ||||
486 | IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE | ||||
487 | ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE | ||||
488 | FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL | ||||
489 | DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS | ||||
490 | OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) | ||||
491 | HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT | ||||
492 | LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY | ||||
493 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF | ||||
494 | SUCH DAMAGE. | ||||
495 | |||||
496 | =cut | ||||
# spent 20µs within File::Glob::CORE:match which was called 2 times, avg 10µs/call:
# once (13µs+0s) by Net::HTTP::Methods::zlib_ok at line 113 of File/Glob.pm
# once (7µs+0s) by File::Glob::import at line 65 of File/Glob.pm | |||||
# spent 56µs within File::Glob::CORE:subst which was called 5 times, avg 11µs/call:
# 5 times (56µs+0s) by File::Glob::AUTOLOAD at line 86 of File/Glob.pm, avg 11µs/call | |||||
# spent 38µs within File::Glob::constant which was called 5 times, avg 8µs/call:
# 5 times (38µs+0s) by File::Glob::AUTOLOAD at line 87 of File/Glob.pm, avg 8µs/call |