directory-tree-0.11.0: A simple directory-like tree datatype, with useful IO functions

Portabilityportable Provides a simple data structure mirroring a directory tree on the
Stabilityexperimental
MaintainerBrandon Simmons <brandon.m.simmons@gmail.com>
Safe HaskellNone

System.Directory.Tree

Contents

Description

filesystem, as well as useful functions for reading and writing file and directory structures in the IO monad.

Errors are caught in a special constructor in the DirTree type.

Defined instances of Functor, Traversable and Foldable allow for easily operating on a directory of files. For example, you could use Foldable.foldr to create a hash of the entire contents of a directory.

The functions readDirectoryWithL and buildL allow for doing directory-traversing IO lazily as required by the execution of pure code. This allows you to treat large directories the same way as you would a lazy infinite list.

The AnchoredDirTree type is a simple wrapper for DirTree to keep track of a base directory context for the DirTree.

Please send me any requests, bugs, or other feedback on this module!

Synopsis

Data types for representing directory trees

data DirTree a Source

the String in the name field is always a file name, never a full path. The free type variable is used in the File constructor and can hold Handles, Strings representing a file's contents or anything else you can think of. We catch any IO errors in the Failed constructor. an Exception can be converted to a String with show.

Constructors

Failed 

Fields

name :: FileName
 
err :: IOException
 
Dir 

Fields

name :: FileName
 
contents :: [DirTree a]
 
File 

Fields

name :: FileName
 
file :: a
 

Instances

Functor DirTree 
Foldable DirTree 
Traversable DirTree 
Eq a => Eq (DirTree a)

Two DirTrees are equal if they have the same constructor, the same name (and in the case of Dirs) their sorted contents are equal:

(Eq (DirTree a), Ord a, Eq a) => Ord (DirTree a)

First compare constructors: Failed < Dir < File... Then compare name... Then compare free variable parameter of File constructors

Show a => Show (DirTree a) 

data AnchoredDirTree a Source

a simple wrapper to hold a base directory name, which can be either an absolute or relative path. This lets us give the DirTree a context, while still letting us store only directory and file names (not full paths) in the DirTree. (uses an infix constructor; don't be scared)

Constructors

:/ 

Fields

anchor :: FilePath
 
dirTree :: DirTree a
 

type FileName = StringSource

an element in a FilePath:

High level IO functions

readDirectory :: FilePath -> IO (AnchoredDirTree String)Source

build an AnchoredDirTree, given the path to a directory, opening the files using readFile. Uses readDirectoryWith internally and has the effect of traversing the entire directory structure. See readDirectoryWithL for lazy production of a DirTree structure.

readDirectoryWith :: (FilePath -> IO a) -> FilePath -> IO (AnchoredDirTree a)Source

same as readDirectory but allows us to, for example, use ByteString.readFile to return a tree of ByteStrings.

readDirectoryWithL :: (FilePath -> IO a) -> FilePath -> IO (AnchoredDirTree a)Source

A lazy version of readDirectoryWith that does IO operations as needed i.e. as the tree is traversed in pure code. NOTE: This function uses unsafePerformIO under the hood. I believe our use here is safe, but this function is experimental in this release:

writeDirectory :: AnchoredDirTree String -> IO (AnchoredDirTree ())Source

write a DirTree of strings to disk. Clobbers files of the same name. Doesn't affect files in the directories (if any already exist) with different names. Returns a new AnchoredDirTree where failures were lifted into a Failed constructor:

writeDirectoryWith :: (FilePath -> a -> IO b) -> AnchoredDirTree a -> IO (AnchoredDirTree b)Source

writes the directory structure to disk and uses the provided function to write the contents of Files to disk. The return value of the function will become the new contents of the returned, where IO errors at each node are replaced with Failed constructors. The returned tree can be compared to the passed tree to see what operations, if any, failed:

Lower level functions

build :: FilePath -> IO (AnchoredDirTree FilePath)Source

builds a DirTree from the contents of the directory passed to it, saving the base directory in the Anchored* wrapper. Errors are caught in the tree in the Failed constructor. The file fields initially are populated with full paths to the files they are abstracting.

buildL :: FilePath -> IO (AnchoredDirTree FilePath)Source

identical to build but does directory reading IO lazily as needed:

openDirectory :: FilePath -> IOMode -> IO (AnchoredDirTree Handle)Source

a simple application of readDirectoryWith openFile:

writeJustDirs :: AnchoredDirTree a -> IO (AnchoredDirTree a)Source

writes the directory structure (not files) of a DirTree to the anchored directory. Returns a structure identical to the supplied tree with errors replaced by Failed constructors:

Manipulating FilePaths

zipPaths :: AnchoredDirTree a -> DirTree (FilePath, a)Source

tuple up the complete file path with the file contents, by building up the path, trie-style, from the root. The filepath will be relative to "anchored" directory.

This allows us to, for example, mapM_ uncurry writeFile over a DirTree of strings, although writeDirectory does a better job of this.

free :: AnchoredDirTree a -> DirTree aSource

Deprecated: Use record 'dirTree'

DEPRECATED. Use record dirTree instead.

Utility functions

Shape comparison and equality

equalShape :: DirTree a -> DirTree b -> BoolSource

Tests equality of two trees, ignoring their free variable portion. Can be used to check if any files have been added or deleted, for instance.

comparingShape :: DirTree a -> DirTree b -> OrderingSource

a compare function that ignores the free file type variable:

Handling failure

successful :: DirTree a -> BoolSource

True if there are no Failed constructors in the tree

anyFailed :: DirTree a -> BoolSource

True if any Failed constructors in the tree

failed :: DirTree a -> BoolSource

returns true if argument is a Failed constructor:

failures :: DirTree a -> [DirTree a]Source

returns a list of Failed constructors only:

failedMap :: (FileName -> IOException -> DirTree a) -> DirTree a -> DirTree aSource

maps a function to convert Failed DirTrees to Files or Dirs

Tree Manipulations

flattenDir :: DirTree a -> [DirTree a]Source

Flattens a DirTree into a (never empty) list of tree constructors. Dir constructors will have [] as their contents:

sortDir :: Ord a => DirTree a -> DirTree aSource

Recursively sort a directory tree according to the Ord instance

sortDirShape :: DirTree a -> DirTree aSource

Recursively sort a tree as in sortDir but ignore the file contents of a File constructor

filterDir :: (DirTree a -> Bool) -> DirTree a -> DirTree aSource

applies the predicate to each constructor in the tree, removing it (and its children, of course) when the predicate returns False. The topmost constructor will always be preserved:

Navigation

dropTo :: FileName -> AnchoredDirTree a -> Maybe (AnchoredDirTree a)Source

If the argument is a Dir containing a sub-DirTree matching FileName then return that subtree, appending the name of the old root Dir to the anchor of the AnchoredDirTree wrapper. Otherwise return Nothing.

Operators

(</$>) :: Functor f => (DirTree a -> DirTree b) -> f (AnchoredDirTree a) -> f (AnchoredDirTree b)Source

Allows for a function on a bare DirTree to be applied to an AnchoredDirTree within a Functor. Very similar to and useful in combination with <$>:

Lenses

These are compatible with the lens library

_contents :: Applicative f => ([DirTree a] -> f [DirTree a]) -> DirTree a -> f (DirTree a)Source

_file :: Applicative f => (a -> f a) -> DirTree a -> f (DirTree a)Source

_name :: Functor f => (FileName -> f FileName) -> DirTree a -> f (DirTree a)Source