module Sys:sig..end
val argv : string arrayval executable_name : string?follow_symlinks defaults to true.val file_exists : ?follow_symlinks:bool -> string -> [ `No | `Unknown | `Yes ]file_exists ~follow_symlinks path
Test whether the file in path exists on the file system.
If follow_symlinks is true and path is a symlink the result concerns
the target of the symlink.
`Unknown is returned for files for which we cannot successfully determine
whether they are on the system or not (e.g. files in directories to which we
do not have read permission).
val file_exists_exn : ?follow_symlinks:bool -> string -> boolfile_exists but blows up on `Unknownval is_directory : ?follow_symlinks:bool -> string -> [ `No | `Unknown | `Yes ]`Yes if the file exists and is a directoryval is_file : ?follow_symlinks:bool -> string -> [ `No | `Unknown | `Yes ]`Yes if the file exists and is a regular fileval is_directory_exn : ?follow_symlinks:bool -> string -> boolval is_file_exn : ?follow_symlinks:bool -> string -> boolval remove : string -> unitval rename : string -> string -> unitrename may
replace it, or raise an exception, depending on your operating system.val getenv : string -> string optionNone
if the variable is unbound.val getenv_exn : string -> stringval command : string -> int
command_exn command runs command and then raises an exception if it
returns with nonzero exit status.
val command_exn : string -> unitval chdir : string -> unitval getcwd : unit -> stringval readdir : string -> string array"." and ".." in
Unix) are not returned. Each string in the result is a file name rather
than a complete path. There is no guarantee that the name strings in the
resulting array will appear in any specific order; they are not, in
particular, guaranteed to appear in alphabetical order.val fold_dir : init:'acc -> f:('acc -> string -> 'acc) -> string -> 'accval ls_dir : string -> string listreaddir, but return a list rather than an array.val interactive : bool Pervasives.reffalse in standalone programs and to
true if the code is being executed under the interactive toplevel system
ocaml.val os_type : string"Unix" (for all Unix versions, including Linux and Mac OS X),"Win32" (for MS-Windows, OCaml compiled with MSVC++ or Mingw),"Cygwin" (for MS-Windows, OCaml compiled with Cygwin).val word_size : intexception Break
Sys.catch_break is on.val catch_break : bool -> unitWarning: catch_break uses deep ocaml runtime magic to raise Sys.Break inside of the main execution context. Consider explicitly handling Signal.int instead. If all you want to do is terminate on CTRL-C you don't have to do any special setup, that's the default behavior.
catch_break governs whether interactive interrupt (ctrl-C) terminates the
program or raises the Break exception. Call catch_break true to enable
raising Break, and catch_break false to let the system terminate the
program on user interrupt.
val ocaml_version : stringocaml_version is the version of Objective Caml. It is a string of the form
"major.minor[.patchlevel][+additional-info]", where major, minor, and
patchlevel are integers, and additional-info is an arbitrary string. The
[.patchlevel] and [+additional-info] parts may be absent.val execution_mode : unit -> [ `Bytecode | `Native ]execution_mode tests whether the code being executed was compiled natively
or to bytecode.val c_int_size : unit -> intc_int_size returns the number of bits in a C int. Note that this can be
different from word_size. For example, Linux x86-64 should have
word_size = 64, but c_int_size () = 32