This module provides additional operations on files. This covers both more obscure and possible non-portable low-level operations and high-level utilities.
Using these Prolog primitives is typically to be preferred over using operating system primitives through shell/1 or process_create/3 because (1) there are no potential file name quoting issues, (2) there is no dependency on operating system commands and (3) using the implementations from this library is usually faster.
now
to indicate the current time. Defined options
are:
link()
) or removing (unlink()
) names.Below are some example queries. The first retrieves the access-time, while the second sets the last-modified time to the current time.
?- set_time_file(foo, [access(Access)], []). ?- set_time_file(foo, [], [modified(now)]).
hard
or symbolic
.
With some limitations, these functions also work on Windows. First of all, the underlying filesystem must support links. This requires NTFS. Second, symbolic links are only supported in Vista and later.
?- relative_file_name('/home/janw/nice', '/home/janw/deep/dir/file', Path). Path = '../../nice'. ?- relative_file_name(Path, '/home/janw/deep/dir/file', '../../nice'). Path = '/home/janw/nice'.
Add a terminating /
to get a path relative to a directory, e.g.
?- relative_file_name('/home/janw/deep/dir/file', './', Path). Path = 'deep/dir/file'.
atom_concat(Directory, File, Path)
, but it ensures
there is exactly one / between the two parts. Notes:
true
(default false
), recurse into subdirectoriestrue
(default), follow symbolic links.fail
, warning
or error
.
Default is warning
. Errors notably happen if a directory is
unreadable or a link points nowhere.true
(default), also return hidden files.This predicate is safe against cycles introduced by symbolic links to directories.
The idea for a non-deterministic file search predicate comes from Nicos Angelopoulos.
+Mode
, -Mode
or
a plain Mode, which adds new permissions, revokes permissions or
sets the exact permissions. Mode itself is an integer, a POSIX
mode name or a list of POSIX mode names. Defines names are suid
,
sgid
, svtx
and all names defined by the regular expression
[ugo]*[rwx]*
. Specifying none of "ugo" is the same as specifying
all of them. For example, to make a file executable for the owner
(user) and group, we can use:
?- chmod(myfile, +ugx).