Expand description
Support for matching file paths against Unix shell style patterns.
The glob
and glob_with
functions allow querying the filesystem for all
files that match a particular pattern (similar to the libc glob
function).
The methods on the Pattern
type provide functionality for checking if
individual paths match a particular pattern (similar to the libc fnmatch
function).
For consistency across platforms, and for Windows support, this module
is implemented entirely in Rust rather than deferring to the libc
glob
/fnmatch
functions.
§Examples
To print all jpg files in /media/
and all of its subdirectories.
use glob::glob;
for entry in glob("/media/**/*.jpg").expect("Failed to read glob pattern") {
match entry {
Ok(path) => println!("{:?}", path.display()),
Err(e) => println!("{:?}", e),
}
}
To print all files containing the letter “a”, case insensitive, in a local
directory relative to the current working directory. This ignores errors
instead of printing them.
use glob::glob_with;
use glob::MatchOptions;
let options = MatchOptions {
case_sensitive: false,
require_literal_separator: false,
require_literal_leading_dot: false,
};
for entry in glob_with("local/*a*", options).unwrap() {
if let Ok(path) = entry {
println!("{:?}", path.display())
}
}
Structs§
- A glob iteration error.
- Configuration options to modify the behaviour of
Pattern::matches_with(..)
. - An iterator that yields
Path
s from the filesystem that match a particular pattern. - A compiled Unix shell style pattern.
- A pattern parsing error.
Functions§
- Return an iterator that produces all the
Path
s that match the given pattern using default match options, which may be absolute or relative to the current working directory. - Return an iterator that produces all the
Path
s that match the given pattern using the specified match options, which may be absolute or relative to the current working directory.
Type Aliases§
- An alias for a glob iteration result.