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package CPANPLUS::Internals::Utils; use strict; use CPANPLUS::Error; use CPANPLUS::Internals::Constants; use Cwd qw[chdir cwd]; use File::Copy; use Params::Check qw[check]; use Module::Load::Conditional qw[can_load]; use Locale::Maketext::Simple Class => 'CPANPLUS', Style => 'gettext'; use version; use vars qw[$VERSION]; $VERSION = "0.9138"; local $Params::Check::VERBOSE = 1; =pod =head1 NAME CPANPLUS::Internals::Utils - convenience functions for CPANPLUS =head1 SYNOPSIS my $bool = $cb->_mkdir( dir => 'blah' ); my $bool = $cb->_chdir( dir => 'blah' ); my $bool = $cb->_rmdir( dir => 'blah' ); my $bool = $cb->_move( from => '/some/file', to => '/other/file' ); my $bool = $cb->_move( from => '/some/dir', to => '/other/dir' ); my $cont = $cb->_get_file_contents( file => '/path/to/file' ); my $version = $cb->_perl_version( perl => $^X ); =head1 DESCRIPTION C<CPANPLUS::Internals::Utils> holds a few convenience functions for CPANPLUS libraries. =head1 METHODS =head2 $cb->_mkdir( dir => '/some/dir' ) C<_mkdir> creates a full path to a directory. Returns true on success, false on failure. =cut sub _mkdir { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $tmpl = { dir => { required => 1 }, }; my $args = check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or ( error(loc( Params::Check->last_error ) ), return ); unless( can_load( modules => { 'File::Path' => 0.0 } ) ) { error( loc("Could not use File::Path! This module should be core!") ); return; } eval { File::Path::mkpath($args->{dir}) }; if($@) { chomp($@); error(loc(qq[Could not create directory '%1': %2], $args->{dir}, $@ )); return; } return 1; } =pod =head2 $cb->_chdir( dir => '/some/dir' ) C<_chdir> changes directory to a dir. Returns true on success, false on failure. =cut sub _chdir { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $tmpl = { dir => { required => 1, allow => DIR_EXISTS }, }; my $args = check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; unless( chdir $args->{dir} ) { error( loc(q[Could not chdir into '%1'], $args->{dir}) ); return; } return 1; } =pod =head2 $cb->_rmdir( dir => '/some/dir' ); Removes a directory completely, even if it is non-empty. Returns true on success, false on failure. =cut sub _rmdir { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $tmpl = { dir => { required => 1, allow => IS_DIR }, }; my $args = check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; unless( can_load( modules => { 'File::Path' => 0.0 } ) ) { error( loc("Could not use File::Path! This module should be core!") ); return; } eval { File::Path::rmtree($args->{dir}) }; if($@) { chomp($@); error(loc(qq[Could not delete directory '%1': %2], $args->{dir}, $@ )); return; } return 1; } =pod =head2 $cb->_perl_version ( perl => 'some/perl/binary' ); C<_perl_version> returns the version of a certain perl binary. It does this by actually running a command. Returns the perl version on success and false on failure. =cut sub _perl_version { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $perl; my $tmpl = { perl => { required => 1, store => \$perl }, }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; my $perl_version; ### special perl, or the one we are running under? if( $perl eq $^X ) { ### just load the config require Config; $perl_version = $Config::Config{version}; } else { my $cmd = $perl . ' -MConfig -eprint+Config::config_vars+version'; ($perl_version) = (`$cmd` =~ /version='(.*)'/); } return $perl_version if defined $perl_version; return; } =pod =head2 $cb->_version_to_number( version => $version ); Returns a proper module version, or '0.0' if none was available. =cut sub _version_to_number { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $version; my $tmpl = { version => { default => '0.0', store => \$version }, }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; $version =~ s!_!!g; # *sigh* return $version if $version =~ /^\d*(?:\.\d+)?$/; if ( my ($vers) = $version =~ /^(v?\d+(?:\.\d+(?:\.\d+)?)?)/ ) { return eval { version->parse($vers)->numify }; } return '0.0'; } =pod =head2 $cb->_whoami Returns the name of the subroutine you're currently in. =cut sub _whoami { my $name = (caller 1)[3]; $name =~ s/.+:://; $name } =pod =head2 _get_file_contents( file => $file ); Returns the contents of a file =cut sub _get_file_contents { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $file; my $tmpl = { file => { required => 1, store => \$file } }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; my $fh = OPEN_FILE->($file) or return; my $contents = do { local $/; <$fh> }; return $contents; } =pod =head2 $cb->_move( from => $file|$dir, to => $target ); Moves a file or directory to the target. Returns true on success, false on failure. =cut sub _move { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $from; my $to; my $tmpl = { file => { required => 1, allow => [IS_FILE,IS_DIR], store => \$from }, to => { required => 1, store => \$to } }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; if( File::Copy::move( $from, $to ) ) { return 1; } else { error(loc("Failed to move '%1' to '%2': %3", $from, $to, $!)); return; } } =pod =head2 $cb->_copy( from => $file|$dir, to => $target ); Moves a file or directory to the target. Returns true on success, false on failure. =cut sub _copy { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my($from,$to); my $tmpl = { file =>{ required => 1, allow => [IS_FILE,IS_DIR], store => \$from }, to => { required => 1, store => \$to } }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; if( File::Copy::copy( $from, $to ) ) { return 1; } else { error(loc("Failed to copy '%1' to '%2': %3", $from, $to, $!)); return; } } =head2 $cb->_mode_plus_w( file => '/path/to/file' ); Sets the +w bit for the file. Returns true on success, false on failure. =cut sub _mode_plus_w { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; require File::stat; my $file; my $tmpl = { file => { required => 1, allow => IS_FILE, store => \$file }, }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; ### set the mode to +w for a file and +wx for a dir my $x = File::stat::stat( $file ); my $mask = -d $file ? 0100 : 0200; if( $x and chmod( $x->mode|$mask, $file ) ) { return 1; } else { error(loc("Failed to '%1' '%2': '%3'", 'chmod +w', $file, $!)); return; } } =head2 $uri = $cb->_host_to_uri( scheme => SCHEME, host => HOST, path => PATH ); Turns a CPANPLUS::Config style C<host> entry into an URI string. Returns the uri on success, and false on failure =cut sub _host_to_uri { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my($scheme, $host, $path); my $tmpl = { scheme => { required => 1, store => \$scheme }, host => { default => 'localhost', store => \$host }, path => { default => '', store => \$path }, }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; ### it's an URI, so unixify the path. ### VMS has a special method for just that $path = ON_VMS ? VMS::Filespec::unixify($path) : File::Spec::Unix->catdir( File::Spec->splitdir( $path ) ); return "$scheme://" . File::Spec::Unix->catdir( $host, $path ); } =head2 $cb->_vcmp( VERSION, VERSION ); Normalizes the versions passed and does a '<=>' on them, returning the result. =cut sub _vcmp { my $self = shift; my ($x, $y) = @_; $x = $self->_version_to_number(version => $x); $y = $self->_version_to_number(version => $y); return $x <=> $y; } =head2 $cb->_home_dir Returns the user's homedir, or C<cwd> if it could not be found =cut sub _home_dir { if ( can_load( modules => { 'File::HomeDir' => 0.0 } ) ) { if ( defined $ENV{APPDATA} && length $ENV{APPDATA} && !ON_WIN32 ) { msg("'APPDATA' env var is set and not on MSWin32, " . "please use 'PERL5_CPANPLUS_HOME' instead to change .cpanplus location", 1 ); } return File::HomeDir->my_home if -d File::HomeDir->my_home; } my @os_home_envs = qw( APPDATA HOME USERPROFILE WINDIR SYS$LOGIN ); for my $env ( @os_home_envs ) { next unless exists $ENV{ $env }; next unless defined $ENV{ $env } && length $ENV{ $env }; return $ENV{ $env } if -d $ENV{ $env }; } return cwd(); } =head2 $path = $cb->_safe_path( path => $path ); Returns a path that's safe to us on Win32 and VMS. Only cleans up the path on Win32 if the path exists. On VMS, it encodes dots to _ using C<VMS::Filespec::vmsify> =cut sub _safe_path { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $path; my $tmpl = { path => { required => 1, store => \$path }, }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; if( ON_WIN32 ) { ### only need to fix it up if there's spaces in the path return $path unless $path =~ /\s+/; ### clean up paths if we are on win32 return Win32::GetShortPathName( $path ) || $path; } elsif ( ON_VMS ) { ### XXX According to John Malmberg, there's an VMS issue: ### catdir on VMS can not currently deal with directory components ### with dots in them. ### Fixing this is a a three step procedure, which will work for ### VMS in its traditional ODS-2 mode, and it will also work if ### VMS is in the ODS-5 mode that is being implemented. ### If the path is already in VMS syntax, assume that we are done. ### VMS format is a path with a trailing ']' or ':' return $path if $path =~ /\:|\]$/; ### 1. Make sure that the value to be converted, $path is ### in UNIX directory syntax by appending a '/' to it. $path .= '/' unless $path =~ m|/$|; ### 2. Use VMS::Filespec::vmsify($path . '/') to convert the dots to ### underscores if needed. The trailing '/' is needed as so that ### C<vmsify> knows that it should use directory translation instead of ### filename translation, as filename translation leaves one dot. $path = VMS::Filespec::vmsify( $path ); ### 3. Use $path = File::Spec->splitdir( VMS::Filespec::vmsify( ### $path . '/') to remove the directory delimiters. ### From John Malmberg: ### File::Spec->catdir will put the path back together. ### The '/' trick only works if the string is a directory name ### with UNIX style directory delimiters or no directory delimiters. ### It is to force vmsify to treat the input specification as UNIX. ### ### There is a VMS::Filespec::unixpath() to do the appending of the '/' ### to the specification, which will do a VMS::Filespec::vmsify() ### if needed. ### However it is not a good idea to call vmsify() on a pathname ### returned by unixify(), and it is not a good idea to call unixify() ### on a pathname returned by vmsify(). Because of the nature of the ### conversion, not all file specifications can make the round trip. ### ### I think that directory specifications can safely make the round ### trip, but not ones containing filenames. $path = File::Spec->catdir( File::Spec->splitdir( $path ) ) } return $path; } =head2 ($pkg, $version, $ext) = $cb->_split_package_string( package => PACKAGE_STRING ); Splits the name of a CPAN package string up into its package, version and extension parts. For example, C<Foo-Bar-1.2.tar.gz> would return the following parts: Package: Foo-Bar Version: 1.2 Extension: tar.gz =cut { my $del_re = qr/[-_\+]/i; # delimiter between elements my $pkg_re = qr/[a-z] # any letters followed by [a-z\d]* # any letters, numbers (?i:\.pm)? # followed by '.pm'--authors do this :( (?: # optionally repeating: $del_re # followed by a delimiter [a-z] # any letters followed by [a-z\d]* # any letters, numbers (?i:\.pm)? # followed by '.pm'--authors do this :( )* /xi; my $ver_re = qr/[a-z]*\d*?[a-z]* # contains a digit and possibly letters (?: # however, some start with a . only :( [-._] # followed by a delimiter [a-z\d]+ # and more digits and or letters )*? /xi; my $ext_re = qr/[a-z] # a letter, followed by [a-z\d]* # letters and or digits, optionally (?: \. # followed by a dot and letters [a-z\d]+ # and or digits (like .tar.bz2) )? # optionally /xi; my $ver_ext_re = qr/ ($ver_re+) # version, optional (?: \. # a literal . ($ext_re) # extension, )? # optional, but requires version /xi; ### composed regex for CPAN packages my $full_re = qr/ ^ ( # the whole thing ($pkg_re+) # package (?: $del_re # delimiter $ver_ext_re # version + extension )? ) $ /xi; ### composed regex for perl packages my $perl = PERL_CORE; my $perl_re = qr/ ^ ( # the whole thing ($perl) # package name for 'perl' (?: $ver_ext_re # version + extension )? ) $ /xi; sub _split_package_string { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $str; my $tmpl = { package => { required => 1, store => \$str } }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; ### 2 different regexes, one for the 'perl' package, ### one for ordinary CPAN packages.. try them both, ### first match wins. for my $re ( $full_re, $perl_re ) { ### try the next if the match fails $str =~ $re or next; my $full = $1 || ''; my $pkg = $2 || ''; my $ver = $3 || ''; my $ext = $4 || ''; ### this regex resets the capture markers! ### strip the trailing delimiter $pkg =~ s/$del_re$//; ### strip the .pm package suffix some authors insist on adding $pkg =~ s/\.pm$//i; return ($pkg, $ver, $ext, $full ); } return; } } { my %escapes = map { chr($_) => sprintf("%%%02X", $_) } 0 .. 255; sub _uri_encode { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $str; my $tmpl = { uri => { store => \$str, required => 1 } }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; ### XXX taken straight from URI::Encode ### Default unsafe characters. RFC 2732 ^(uric - reserved) $str =~ s|([^A-Za-z0-9\-_.!~*'()])|$escapes{$1}|g; return $str; } sub _uri_decode { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $str; my $tmpl = { uri => { store => \$str, required => 1 } }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; ### XXX use unencode routine in utils? $str =~ s/%([0-9A-Fa-f]{2})/chr(hex($1))/eg; return $str; } } sub _update_timestamp { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; my $file; my $tmpl = { file => { required => 1, store => \$file, allow => FILE_EXISTS } }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; ### `touch` the file, so windoze knows it's new -jmb ### works on *nix too, good fix -Kane ### make sure it is writable first, otherwise the `touch` will fail my $now = time; unless( chmod( 0644, $file) && utime ($now, $now, $file) ) { error( loc("Couldn't touch %1", $file) ); return; } return 1; } 1; # Local variables: # c-indentation-style: bsd # c-basic-offset: 4 # indent-tabs-mode: nil # End: # vim: expandtab shiftwidth=4: