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9.5. Processing All Files in a Directory

Problem

You want to do something to each file in a particular directory.

Solution

Use opendir to open the directory and then readdir to retrieve every filename:

opendir(DIR, $dirname) or die "can't opendir $dirname: $!";
while (defined($file = readdir(DIR))) {
    # do something with "$dirname/$file"
}
closedir(DIR);

Discussion

The opendir, readdir, and closedir functions operate on directories as open, < >, and close operate on files. Both use handles, but the directory handles used by opendir and friends are different from the file handles used by open and friends. In particular, you can't use < > on a directory handle.

In scalar context, readdir returns the next filename in the directory until it reaches the end of the directory when it returns undef. In list context it returns the rest of the filenames in the directory or an empty list if there were no files left. As explained in the Introduction, the filenames returned by readdir do not include the directory name. When you work with the filenames returned by readdir, you must either move to the right directory first or prepend the directory to the filename.

This shows one way of prepending:

$dir = "/usr/local/bin";
print "Text files in $dir are:\n";
opendir(BIN, $dir) or die "Can't open $dir: $!";
while( defined ($file = readdir BIN) ) {
    print "$file\n" if -T "$dir/$file";
}
closedir(BIN);

We test $file with defined because simply saying while ($file = readdir BIN) would only be testing truth and not definedness. Although the loop would end when readdir ran out of files to return, it would also end prematurely if a file had the name "0".

The readdir function will return the special directories "." (the directory itself) and ".." (the parent of the directory). Most people skip the files with code like:

while ( defined ($file = readdir BIN) ) {
    next if $file =~ /^\.\.?$/;     # skip . and ..
    # ...
}

Like filehandles, directory handles are per-package constructs. Further, you have two ways of getting a local directory handle: use local *DIRHANDLE or use an object module (see Recipe 7.16). The appropriate module in this case is DirHandle. The following code uses DirHandle and produces a sorted list of plain files that aren't dotfiles (that is, whose names don't begin with a "."):

use DirHandle;

sub plainfiles {
   my $dir = shift;
   my $dh = DirHandle->new($dir)   or die "can't opendir $dir: $!";
   return sort                     # sort pathnames
          grep {    -f     }       # choose only "plain" files
          map  { "$dir/$_" }       # create full paths
          grep {  !/^\./   }       # filter out dot files
          $dh->read();             # read all entries
}

DirHandle's read method behaves just like readdir, returning the rest of the filenames. The bottom grep only returns those that don't begin with a period. The map turns the filenames returned by read into fully qualified filenames, and the top grep filters out directories, links, etc. The resulting list is then sorted and returned.

In addition to readdir, there's also rewinddir (to move the directory handle back to the start of the filename list), seekdir (to move to a specific offset in the list), and telldir (to find out how far from the start of the list you are).

See Also

The closedir, opendir, readdir, rewinddir, seekdir, and telldir functions in perlfunc (1) and in Chapter 3 of Programming Perl; documentation for the standard DirHandle module (also in Chapter 7 of Programming Perl)


Previous: 9.4. Recognizing Two Names for the Same FilePerl CookbookNext: 9.6. Globbing, or Getting a List of Filenames Matching a Pattern
9.4. Recognizing Two Names for the Same FileBook Index9.6. Globbing, or Getting a List of Filenames Matching a Pattern

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