CwdSection: Perl Programmers Reference Guide (3)Updated: 2001-09-21 |
CwdSection: Perl Programmers Reference Guide (3)Updated: 2001-09-21 |
use Cwd;
my $dir = getcwd;
use Cwd 'abs_path';
my $abs_path = abs_path($file);
By default, it exports the functions cwd(), getcwd(), fastcwd(), and fastgetcwd() into the caller's namespace.
my $cwd = getcwd();
Returns the current working directory.
Re-implements the getcwd(3) (or getwd(3)) functions in Perl.
my $cwd = cwd();
The cwd() is the most natural form for the current architecture. For most systems it is identical to `pwd` (but without the trailing line terminator).
my $cwd = fastcwd();
A more dangerous version of getcwd(), but potentially faster.
It might conceivably chdir() you out of a directory that it can't chdir() you back into. If fastcwd encounters a problem it will return undef but will probably leave you in a different directory. For a measure of extra security, if everything appears to have worked, the fastcwd() function will check that it leaves you in the same directory that it started in. If it has changed it will "die" with the message ``Unstable directory path, current directory changed unexpectedly''. That should never happen.
my $cwd = fastgetcwd();
The fastgetcwd() function is provided as a synonym for cwd().
my $abs_path = abs_path($file);
Uses the same algorithm as getcwd(). Symbolic links and relative-path components (``.'' and ``..'') are resolved to return the canonical pathname, just like realpath(3).
my $abs_path = realpath($file);
A synonym for abs_path().
my $abs_path = fast_abs_path($file);
A more dangerous, but potentially faster version of abs_path.
use Cwd qw(chdir);
then your PWD environment variable will be kept up to date. Note that it will only be kept up to date if all packages which use chdir import it from Cwd.
Now maintained by Ken Williams <KWILLIAMS@cpan.org>