FILE: C:\Program Files (x86)\Plesk\perl\lib\File\Copy.pm
--
# File/Copy.pm. Written in 1994 by Aaron Sherman . This
# source code has been placed in the public domain by the author.
# Please be kind and preserve the documentation.
#
# Additions copyright 1996 by Charles Bailey. Permission is granted
# to distribute the revised code under the same terms as Perl itself.
package File::Copy;
use 5.035007;
use strict;
use warnings; no warnings 'newline';
no warnings 'experimental::builtin';
use builtin 'blessed';
use overload;
use File::Spec;
use Config;
# We want HiRes stat and utime if available
BEGIN { eval q{ use Time::HiRes qw( stat utime ) } };
our(@ISA, @EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK, $VERSION, $Too_Big, $Syscopy_is_copy);
sub copy;
sub syscopy;
sub cp;
sub mv;
$VERSION = '2.41';
require Exporter;
@ISA = qw(Exporter);
@EXPORT = qw(copy move);
@EXPORT_OK = qw(cp mv);
$Too_Big = 1024 * 1024 * 2;
sub croak {
require Carp;
goto &Carp::croak;
}
sub carp {
require Carp;
goto &Carp::carp;
}
sub _catname {
my($from, $to) = @_;
if (not defined &basename) {
require File::Basename;
File::Basename->import( 'basename' );
}
return File::Spec->catfile($to, basename($from));
}
# _eq($from, $to) tells whether $from and $to are identical
sub _eq {
my ($from, $to) = map {
blessed($_) && overload::Method($_, q{""})
? "$_"
: $_
} (@_);
return '' if ( (ref $from) xor (ref $to) );
return $from == $to if ref $from;
return $from eq $to;
}
sub copy {
croak("Usage: copy(FROM, TO [, BUFFERSIZE]) ")
unless(@_ == 2 || @_ == 3);
my $from = shift;
my $to = shift;
my $size;
if (@_) {
$size = shift(@_) + 0;
croak("Bad buffer size for copy: $size\n") unless ($size > 0);
}
my $from_a_handle = (ref($from)
? (ref($from) eq 'GLOB'
|| UNIVERSAL::isa($from, 'GLOB')
|| UNIVERSAL::isa($from, 'IO::Handle'))
: (ref(\$from) eq 'GLOB'));
my $to_a_handle = (ref($to)
? (ref($to) eq 'GLOB'
|| UNIVERSAL::isa($to, 'GLOB')
|| UNIVERSAL::isa($to, 'IO::Handle'))
: (ref(\$to) eq 'GLOB'));
if (_eq($from, $to)) { # works for references, too
carp("'$from' and '$to' are identical (not copied)");
return 0;
}
if (!$from_a_handle && !$to_a_handle && -d $to && ! -d $from) {
$to = _catname($from, $to);
}
if ((($Config{d_symlink} && $Config{d_readlink}) || $Config{d_link}) &&
!($^O eq 'os2')) {
my @fs = stat($from);
if (@fs) {
my @ts = stat($to);
if (@ts && $fs[0] == $ts[0] && $fs[1] eq $ts[1] && !-p $from) {
carp("'$from' and '$to' are identical (not copied)");
return 0;
}
}
}
elsif (_eq($from, $to)) {
carp("'$from' and '$to' are identical (not copied)");
return 0;
}
if (defined &syscopy && !$Syscopy_is_copy
&& !$to_a_handle
&& !($from_a_handle && $^O eq 'os2' ) # OS/2 cannot handle handles
&& !($from_a_handle && $^O eq 'MSWin32')
)
{
if ($^O eq 'VMS' && -e $from
&& ! -d $to && ! -d $from) {
# VMS natively inherits path components from the source of a
# copy, but we want the Unixy behavior of inheriting from
# the current working directory. Also, default in a trailing
# dot for null file types.
$to = VMS::Filespec::rmsexpand(VMS::Filespec::vmsify($to), '.');
# Get rid of the old versions to be like UNIX
1 while unlink $to;
}
return syscopy($from, $to) || 0;
}
my $closefrom = 0;
my $closeto = 0;
my ($status, $r, $buf);
local($\) = '';
my $from_h;
if ($from_a_handle) {
$from_h = $from;
} else {
open $from_h, "<", $from or goto fail_open1;
binmode $from_h or die "($!,$^E)";
$closefrom = 1;
}
# Seems most logical to do this here, in case future changes would want to
# make this croak for some reason.
unless (defined $size) {
$size = tied(*$from_h) ? 0 : -s $from_h || 0;
$size = 1024 if ($size < 512);
$size = $Too_Big if ($size > $Too_Big);
}
my $to_h;
if ($to_a_handle) {
$to_h = $to;
} else {
$to_h = \do { local *FH }; # XXX is this line obsolete?
open $to_h, ">", $to or goto fail_open2;
binmode $to_h or die "($!,$^E)";
$closeto = 1;
}
$! = 0;
for (;;) {
my ($r, $w, $t);
defined($r = sysread($from_h, $buf, $size))
or goto fail_inner;
last unless $r;
for ($w = 0; $w < $r; $w += $t) {
$t = syswrite($to_h, $buf, $r - $w, $w)
or goto fail_inner;
}
}
close($to_h) || goto fail_open2 if $closeto;
close($from_h) || goto fail_open1 if $closefrom;
# Use this idiom to avoid uninitialized value warning.
return 1;
# All of these contortions try to preserve error messages...
fail_inner:
if ($closeto) {
$status = $!;
$! = 0;
close $to_h;
$! = $status unless $!;
}
fail_open2:
if ($closefrom) {
$status = $!;
$! = 0;
close $from_h;
$! = $status unless $!;
}
fail_open1:
return 0;
}
sub cp {
my($from,$to) = @_;
my(@fromstat) = stat $from;
my(@tostat) = stat $to;
my $perm;
return 0 unless copy(@_) and @fromstat;
if (@tostat) {
$perm = $tostat[2];
} else {
$perm = $fromstat[2] & ~(umask || 0);
@tostat = stat $to;
}
# Might be more robust to look for S_I* in Fcntl, but we're
# trying to avoid dependence on any XS-containing modules,
# since File::Copy is used during the Perl build.
$perm &= 07777;
if ($perm & 06000) {
croak("Unable to check setuid/setgid permissions for $to: $!")
unless @tostat;
if ($perm & 04000 and # setuid
$fromstat[4] != $tostat[4]) { # owner must match
$perm &= ~06000;
}
if ($perm & 02000 && $> != 0) { # if not root, setgid
my $ok = $fromstat[5] == $tostat[5]; # group must match
if ($ok) { # and we must be in group
$ok = grep { $_ == $fromstat[5] } split /\s+/, $)
}
$perm &= ~06000 unless $ok;
}
}
return 0 unless @tostat;
return 1 if $perm == ($tostat[2] & 07777);
return eval { chmod $perm, $to; } ? 1 : 0;
}
sub _move {
croak("Usage: move(FROM, TO) ") unless @_ == 3;
my($from,$to,$fallback) = @_;
my($fromsz,$tosz1,$tomt1,$tosz2,$tomt2,$sts,$ossts);
if (-d $to && ! -d $from) {
$to = _catname($from, $to);
}
($tosz1,$tomt1) = (stat($to))[7,9];
$fromsz = -s $from;
if ($^O eq 'os2' and defined $tosz1 and defined $fromsz) {
# will not rename with overwrite
unlink $to;
}
if ($^O eq 'VMS' && -e $from
&& ! -d $to && ! -d $from) {
# VMS natively inherits path components from the source of a
# copy, but we want the Unixy behavior of inheriting from
# the current working directory. Also, default in a trailing
# dot for null file types.
$to = VMS::Filespec::rmsexpand(VMS::Filespec::vmsify($to), '.');
# Get rid of the old versions to be like UNIX
1 while unlink $to;
}
return 1 if rename $from, $to;
# Did rename return an error even though it succeeded, because $to
# is on a remote NFS file system, and NFS lost the server's ack?
return 1 if defined($fromsz) && !-e $from && # $from disappeared
(($tosz2,$tomt2) = (stat($to))[7,9]) && # $to's there
((!defined $tosz1) || # not before or
($tosz1 != $tosz2 or $tomt1 != $tomt2)) && # was changed
$tosz2 == $fromsz; # it's all there
($tosz1,$tomt1) = (stat($to))[7,9]; # just in case rename did something
{
local $@;
eval {
local $SIG{__DIE__};
$fallback->($from,$to) or die;
my($atime, $mtime) = (stat($from))[8,9];
utime($atime, $mtime, $to);
unlink($from) or die;
};
return 1 unless $@;
}
($sts,$ossts) = ($! + 0, $^E + 0);
($tosz2,$tomt2) = ((stat($to))[7,9],0,0) if defined $tomt1;
unlink($to) if !defined($tomt1) or $tomt1 != $tomt2 or $tosz1 != $tosz2;
($!,$^E) = ($sts,$ossts);
return 0;
}
sub move { _move(@_,\©); }
sub mv { _move(@_,\&cp); }
# &syscopy is an XSUB under OS/2
unless (defined &syscopy) {
if ($^O eq 'VMS') {
*syscopy = \&rmscopy;
} elsif ($^O eq 'MSWin32' && defined &DynaLoader::boot_DynaLoader) {
# Win32::CopyFile() fill only work if we can load Win32.xs
*syscopy = sub {
return 0 unless @_ == 2;
return Win32::CopyFile(@_, 1);
};
} else {
$Syscopy_is_copy = 1;
*syscopy = \©
}
}
1;
__END__
=head1 NAME
File::Copy - Copy files or filehandles
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use File::Copy;
copy("sourcefile", "destinationfile") or die "Copy failed: $!";
copy("Copy.pm", \*STDOUT);
move("/dev1/sourcefile", "/dev2/destinationfile");
use File::Copy "cp";
my $n = FileHandle->new("/a/file", "r");
cp($n, "x");
=head1 DESCRIPTION
The File::Copy module provides two basic functions, C and
C, which are useful for getting the contents of a file from
one place to another.
=over 4
=item copy
X X
The C function takes two
parameters: a file to copy from and a file to copy to. Either
argument may be a string, a FileHandle reference or a FileHandle
glob. Obviously, if the first argument is a filehandle of some
sort, it will be read from, and if it is a file I it will
be opened for reading. Likewise, the second argument will be
written to. If the second argument does not exist but the parent
directory does exist, then it will be created. Trying to copy
a file into a non-existent directory is an error.
Trying to copy a file on top of itself is also an error.
C will not overwrite read-only files.
If the destination (second argument) already exists and is a directory,
and the source (first argument) is not a filehandle, then the source
file will be copied into the directory specified by the destination,
using the same base name as the source file. It's a failure to have a
filehandle as the source when the destination is a directory.
B Files are opened in binary mode where
applicable. To get a consistent behaviour when copying from a
filehandle to a file, use C on the filehandle.
An optional third parameter can be used to specify the buffer
size used for copying. This is the number of bytes from the
first file, that will be held in memory at any given time, before
being written to the second file. The default buffer size depends
upon the file, but will generally be the whole file (up to 2MB), or
1k for filehandles that do not reference files (eg. sockets).
You may use the syntax C