Warning! this library assumes we are in a POSIX compliant OS.
val realpath : string ‑> stringrealpath path returns the canonicalized absolute pathname of path.
val is_posix_pathname_component : string ‑> boolis_posix_pathname_component f
Returns true if f is a valid path component on a POSIX compliant OS
Note that this checks a path component, and not a full path.
http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/000095399/basedefs/xbd_chap03.html#tag_03_169
temp_file ?perm ?in_dir_name prefix suffix
Returns the name of a fresh temporary file in the temporary directory. The base name
of the temporary file is formed by concatenating prefix, then .tmp., then a 6-digit
hex number, then suffix. The temporary file is created empty. The file is guaranteed
to be fresh, i.e. not already existing in the directory.
temp_dir_nameParameter perm: the permission of the temporary file. The default value is 0o600
(readable and writable only by the file owner)
Note that prefix and suffix will be changed when necessary to make the final filename valid POSIX.
temp_dir is the same as temp_file but creates a temporary directory.
val temp_dir_name : stringThe name of the temporary directory:
Under Unix, the value of the TMPDIR environment variable, or "/tmp" if the variable
is not set.
Under Windows, the value of the TEMP environment variable, or "." if the variable
is not set.
val open_temp_file : ?perm:int ‑> ?in_dir:string ‑> string ‑> string ‑> string * Core__.Import.Out_channel.tSame as Core_filename.temp_file, but returns both the name of a fresh
temporary file, and an output channel opened (atomically) on
this file. This function is more secure than temp_file: there
is no risk that the temporary file will be modified (e.g. replaced
by a symbolic link) before the program opens it.
val parent_dir_name : stringThe conventional name for the parent of the current directory
(e.g. .. in Unix).
val concat : string ‑> string ‑> stringconcat p1 p2 returns a path equivalent to p1 ^ "/" ^ p2.
In the resulting path p1 (resp. p2) has all its trailing (resp. leading)
"." and "/" removed. eg:
concat "a/." ".//b" => "a/b"
concat "." "b" => "./b"
concat "a" "." => "a/."
concat "a" "/b" => "a/b"
p1 is empty.val is_relative : string ‑> boolReturn true if the file name is relative to the current
directory, false if it is absolute (i.e. in Unix, starts
with /).
val is_implicit : string ‑> boolReturn true if the file name is relative and does not start
with an explicit reference to the current directory (./ or
../ in Unix), false if it starts with an explicit reference
to the root directory or the current directory.
val check_suffix : string ‑> string ‑> boolcheck_suffix name suff returns true if the filename name
ends with the suffix suff.
val chop_suffix : string ‑> string ‑> stringchop_suffix name suff removes the suffix suff from
the filename name. The behavior is undefined if name does not
end with the suffix suff.
val chop_extension : string ‑> stringReturn the given file name without its extension. The extension
is the shortest suffix starting with a period and not including
a directory separator, .xyz for instance.
Raise Invalid_argument if the given name does not contain
an extension.
val split_extension : string ‑> string * string optionsplit_extension fn return the portion of the filename before the
extension and the (optional) extension.
Example:
split_extension "/foo/my_file" = ("/foo/my_file", None)
split_extension "/foo/my_file.txt" = ("/foo/my_file", Some "txt")
split_extension "/home/c.falls/my_file" = ("/home/c.falls/my_file", None)
val basename : string ‑> stringRespects the posix semantic.
Split a file name into directory name / base file name.
concat (dirname name) (basename name) returns a file name
which is equivalent to name. Moreover, after setting the
current directory to dirname name (with Sys.chdir),
references to basename name (which is a relative file name)
designate the same file as name before the call to Sys.chdir.
The result is not specified if the argument is not a valid file name (for example, under Unix if there is a NUL character in the string).
val parts : string ‑> string listparts filename returns a list of path components in order. For instance:
/tmp/foo/bar/baz -> "/"; "tmp"; "foo"; "bar"; "baz". The first component is always
either "." for relative paths or "/" for absolute ones.
val of_parts : string list ‑> stringof_parts parts joins a list of path components into a path. It does roughly the
opposite of parts, but they fail to be precisely mutually inverse because of
ambiguities like multiple consecutive slashes and . components.
Raises an error if given an empty list.
val quote : string ‑> stringReturn a quoted version of a file name, suitable for use as one argument in a command line, escaping all meta-characters. Warning: under Windows, the output is only suitable for use with programs that follow the standard Windows quoting conventions.
See Sys.quote for an alternative implementation that is more human readable but less
portable.