module Find
The Find
module supports the top-down traversal of a set of file paths.
For example, to total the size of all files under your home directory, ignoring anything in a “dot” directory (e.g. $HOME/.ssh):
require 'find' total_size = 0 Find.find(ENV["HOME"]) do |path| if FileTest.directory?(path) if File.basename(path).start_with?('.') Find.prune # Don't look any further into this directory. else next end else total_size += FileTest.size(path) end end
Public Class Methods
Calls the associated block with the name of every file and directory listed as arguments, then recursively on their subdirectories, and so on.
Returns an enumerator if no block is given.
See the Find
module documentation for an example.
# File find.rb, line 38 def find(*paths, ignore_error: true) # :yield: path block_given? or return enum_for(__method__, *paths, ignore_error: ignore_error) fs_encoding = Encoding.find("filesystem") paths.collect!{|d| raise Errno::ENOENT, d unless File.exist?(d); d.dup}.each do |path| path = path.to_path if path.respond_to? :to_path enc = path.encoding == Encoding::US_ASCII ? fs_encoding : path.encoding ps = [path] while file = ps.shift catch(:prune) do yield file.dup begin s = File.lstat(file) rescue Errno::ENOENT, Errno::EACCES, Errno::ENOTDIR, Errno::ELOOP, Errno::ENAMETOOLONG, Errno::EINVAL raise unless ignore_error next end if s.directory? then begin fs = Dir.children(file, encoding: enc) rescue Errno::ENOENT, Errno::EACCES, Errno::ENOTDIR, Errno::ELOOP, Errno::ENAMETOOLONG, Errno::EINVAL raise unless ignore_error next end fs.sort! fs.reverse_each {|f| f = File.join(file, f) ps.unshift f } end end end end nil end
Skips the current file or directory, restarting the loop with the next entry. If the current file is a directory, that directory will not be recursively entered. Meaningful only within the block associated with Find::find
.
See the Find
module documentation for an example.
# File find.rb, line 83 def prune throw :prune end
Private Instance Methods
Calls the associated block with the name of every file and directory listed as arguments, then recursively on their subdirectories, and so on.
Returns an enumerator if no block is given.
See the Find
module documentation for an example.
# File find.rb, line 38 def find(*paths, ignore_error: true) # :yield: path block_given? or return enum_for(__method__, *paths, ignore_error: ignore_error) fs_encoding = Encoding.find("filesystem") paths.collect!{|d| raise Errno::ENOENT, d unless File.exist?(d); d.dup}.each do |path| path = path.to_path if path.respond_to? :to_path enc = path.encoding == Encoding::US_ASCII ? fs_encoding : path.encoding ps = [path] while file = ps.shift catch(:prune) do yield file.dup begin s = File.lstat(file) rescue Errno::ENOENT, Errno::EACCES, Errno::ENOTDIR, Errno::ELOOP, Errno::ENAMETOOLONG, Errno::EINVAL raise unless ignore_error next end if s.directory? then begin fs = Dir.children(file, encoding: enc) rescue Errno::ENOENT, Errno::EACCES, Errno::ENOTDIR, Errno::ELOOP, Errno::ENAMETOOLONG, Errno::EINVAL raise unless ignore_error next end fs.sort! fs.reverse_each {|f| f = File.join(file, f) ps.unshift f } end end end end nil end
Skips the current file or directory, restarting the loop with the next entry. If the current file is a directory, that directory will not be recursively entered. Meaningful only within the block associated with Find::find
.
See the Find
module documentation for an example.
# File find.rb, line 83 def prune throw :prune end