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brettw@chromium.org59eef1f2013-02-24 14:40:52 +09001// Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
2// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
3// found in the LICENSE file.
4
5// FilePath is a container for pathnames stored in a platform's native string
6// type, providing containers for manipulation in according with the
7// platform's conventions for pathnames. It supports the following path
8// types:
9//
10// POSIX Windows
11// --------------- ----------------------------------
12// Fundamental type char[] wchar_t[]
13// Encoding unspecified* UTF-16
14// Separator / \, tolerant of /
15// Drive letters no case-insensitive A-Z followed by :
16// Alternate root // (surprise!) \\, for UNC paths
17//
18// * The encoding need not be specified on POSIX systems, although some
19// POSIX-compliant systems do specify an encoding. Mac OS X uses UTF-8.
20// Chrome OS also uses UTF-8.
21// Linux does not specify an encoding, but in practice, the locale's
22// character set may be used.
23//
24// For more arcane bits of path trivia, see below.
25//
26// FilePath objects are intended to be used anywhere paths are. An
27// application may pass FilePath objects around internally, masking the
28// underlying differences between systems, only differing in implementation
29// where interfacing directly with the system. For example, a single
30// OpenFile(const FilePath &) function may be made available, allowing all
31// callers to operate without regard to the underlying implementation. On
32// POSIX-like platforms, OpenFile might wrap fopen, and on Windows, it might
33// wrap _wfopen_s, perhaps both by calling file_path.value().c_str(). This
34// allows each platform to pass pathnames around without requiring conversions
35// between encodings, which has an impact on performance, but more imporantly,
36// has an impact on correctness on platforms that do not have well-defined
37// encodings for pathnames.
38//
39// Several methods are available to perform common operations on a FilePath
40// object, such as determining the parent directory (DirName), isolating the
41// final path component (BaseName), and appending a relative pathname string
42// to an existing FilePath object (Append). These methods are highly
43// recommended over attempting to split and concatenate strings directly.
44// These methods are based purely on string manipulation and knowledge of
45// platform-specific pathname conventions, and do not consult the filesystem
46// at all, making them safe to use without fear of blocking on I/O operations.
47// These methods do not function as mutators but instead return distinct
48// instances of FilePath objects, and are therefore safe to use on const
49// objects. The objects themselves are safe to share between threads.
50//
51// To aid in initialization of FilePath objects from string literals, a
52// FILE_PATH_LITERAL macro is provided, which accounts for the difference
53// between char[]-based pathnames on POSIX systems and wchar_t[]-based
54// pathnames on Windows.
55//
56// Paths can't contain NULs as a precaution agaist premature truncation.
57//
58// Because a FilePath object should not be instantiated at the global scope,
59// instead, use a FilePath::CharType[] and initialize it with
60// FILE_PATH_LITERAL. At runtime, a FilePath object can be created from the
61// character array. Example:
62//
63// | const FilePath::CharType kLogFileName[] = FILE_PATH_LITERAL("log.txt");
64// |
65// | void Function() {
66// | FilePath log_file_path(kLogFileName);
67// | [...]
68// | }
69//
70// WARNING: FilePaths should ALWAYS be displayed with LTR directionality, even
71// when the UI language is RTL. This means you always need to pass filepaths
72// through base::i18n::WrapPathWithLTRFormatting() before displaying it in the
73// RTL UI.
74//
75// This is a very common source of bugs, please try to keep this in mind.
76//
77// ARCANE BITS OF PATH TRIVIA
78//
79// - A double leading slash is actually part of the POSIX standard. Systems
80// are allowed to treat // as an alternate root, as Windows does for UNC
81// (network share) paths. Most POSIX systems don't do anything special
82// with two leading slashes, but FilePath handles this case properly
83// in case it ever comes across such a system. FilePath needs this support
84// for Windows UNC paths, anyway.
85// References:
86// The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, sections 3.266 ("Pathname")
87// and 4.12 ("Pathname Resolution"), available at:
88// http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap03.html#tag_03_266
89// http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap04.html#tag_04_12
90//
91// - Windows treats c:\\ the same way it treats \\. This was intended to
92// allow older applications that require drive letters to support UNC paths
93// like \\server\share\path, by permitting c:\\server\share\path as an
94// equivalent. Since the OS treats these paths specially, FilePath needs
95// to do the same. Since Windows can use either / or \ as the separator,
96// FilePath treats c://, c:\\, //, and \\ all equivalently.
97// Reference:
98// The Old New Thing, "Why is a drive letter permitted in front of UNC
99// paths (sometimes)?", available at:
100// http://blogs.msdn.com/oldnewthing/archive/2005/11/22/495740.aspx
101
102#ifndef BASE_FILES_FILE_PATH_H_
103#define BASE_FILES_FILE_PATH_H_
104
105#include <stddef.h>
106#include <string>
107#include <vector>
108
109#include "base/base_export.h"
110#include "base/compiler_specific.h"
111#include "base/hash_tables.h"
112#include "base/string16.h"
tfarina@chromium.orgb6d49112013-03-30 23:29:00 +0900113#include "base/strings/string_piece.h" // For implicit conversions.
brettw@chromium.org59eef1f2013-02-24 14:40:52 +0900114#include "build/build_config.h"
115
116// Windows-style drive letter support and pathname separator characters can be
117// enabled and disabled independently, to aid testing. These #defines are
118// here so that the same setting can be used in both the implementation and
119// in the unit test.
120#if defined(OS_WIN)
121#define FILE_PATH_USES_DRIVE_LETTERS
122#define FILE_PATH_USES_WIN_SEPARATORS
123#endif // OS_WIN
124
125class Pickle;
126class PickleIterator;
127
128namespace base {
129
130// An abstraction to isolate users from the differences between native
131// pathnames on different platforms.
132class BASE_EXPORT FilePath {
133 public:
134#if defined(OS_POSIX)
135 // On most platforms, native pathnames are char arrays, and the encoding
136 // may or may not be specified. On Mac OS X, native pathnames are encoded
137 // in UTF-8.
138 typedef std::string StringType;
139#elif defined(OS_WIN)
140 // On Windows, for Unicode-aware applications, native pathnames are wchar_t
141 // arrays encoded in UTF-16.
142 typedef std::wstring StringType;
143#endif // OS_WIN
144
145 typedef StringType::value_type CharType;
146
147 // Null-terminated array of separators used to separate components in
148 // hierarchical paths. Each character in this array is a valid separator,
149 // but kSeparators[0] is treated as the canonical separator and will be used
150 // when composing pathnames.
151 static const CharType kSeparators[];
152
153 // A special path component meaning "this directory."
154 static const CharType kCurrentDirectory[];
155
156 // A special path component meaning "the parent directory."
157 static const CharType kParentDirectory[];
158
159 // The character used to identify a file extension.
160 static const CharType kExtensionSeparator;
161
162 FilePath();
163 FilePath(const FilePath& that);
164 explicit FilePath(const StringType& path);
165 ~FilePath();
166 FilePath& operator=(const FilePath& that);
167
168 bool operator==(const FilePath& that) const;
169
170 bool operator!=(const FilePath& that) const;
171
172 // Required for some STL containers and operations
173 bool operator<(const FilePath& that) const {
174 return path_ < that.path_;
175 }
176
177 const StringType& value() const { return path_; }
178
179 bool empty() const { return path_.empty(); }
180
181 void clear() { path_.clear(); }
182
183 // Returns true if |character| is in kSeparators.
184 static bool IsSeparator(CharType character);
185
186 // Returns a vector of all of the components of the provided path. It is
187 // equivalent to calling DirName().value() on the path's root component,
188 // and BaseName().value() on each child component.
189 void GetComponents(std::vector<FilePath::StringType>* components) const;
190
191 // Returns true if this FilePath is a strict parent of the |child|. Absolute
192 // and relative paths are accepted i.e. is /foo parent to /foo/bar and
193 // is foo parent to foo/bar. Does not convert paths to absolute, follow
194 // symlinks or directory navigation (e.g. ".."). A path is *NOT* its own
195 // parent.
196 bool IsParent(const FilePath& child) const;
197
198 // If IsParent(child) holds, appends to path (if non-NULL) the
199 // relative path to child and returns true. For example, if parent
200 // holds "/Users/johndoe/Library/Application Support", child holds
201 // "/Users/johndoe/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default", and
202 // *path holds "/Users/johndoe/Library/Caches", then after
203 // parent.AppendRelativePath(child, path) is called *path will hold
204 // "/Users/johndoe/Library/Caches/Google/Chrome/Default". Otherwise,
205 // returns false.
206 bool AppendRelativePath(const FilePath& child, FilePath* path) const;
207
208 // Returns a FilePath corresponding to the directory containing the path
209 // named by this object, stripping away the file component. If this object
210 // only contains one component, returns a FilePath identifying
211 // kCurrentDirectory. If this object already refers to the root directory,
212 // returns a FilePath identifying the root directory.
213 FilePath DirName() const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
214
215 // Returns a FilePath corresponding to the last path component of this
216 // object, either a file or a directory. If this object already refers to
217 // the root directory, returns a FilePath identifying the root directory;
218 // this is the only situation in which BaseName will return an absolute path.
219 FilePath BaseName() const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
220
221 // Returns ".jpg" for path "C:\pics\jojo.jpg", or an empty string if
222 // the file has no extension. If non-empty, Extension() will always start
223 // with precisely one ".". The following code should always work regardless
224 // of the value of path.
225 // new_path = path.RemoveExtension().value().append(path.Extension());
226 // ASSERT(new_path == path.value());
227 // NOTE: this is different from the original file_util implementation which
228 // returned the extension without a leading "." ("jpg" instead of ".jpg")
229 StringType Extension() const;
230
231 // Returns "C:\pics\jojo" for path "C:\pics\jojo.jpg"
232 // NOTE: this is slightly different from the similar file_util implementation
233 // which returned simply 'jojo'.
234 FilePath RemoveExtension() const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
235
236 // Inserts |suffix| after the file name portion of |path| but before the
237 // extension. Returns "" if BaseName() == "." or "..".
238 // Examples:
239 // path == "C:\pics\jojo.jpg" suffix == " (1)", returns "C:\pics\jojo (1).jpg"
240 // path == "jojo.jpg" suffix == " (1)", returns "jojo (1).jpg"
241 // path == "C:\pics\jojo" suffix == " (1)", returns "C:\pics\jojo (1)"
242 // path == "C:\pics.old\jojo" suffix == " (1)", returns "C:\pics.old\jojo (1)"
243 FilePath InsertBeforeExtension(
244 const StringType& suffix) const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
245 FilePath InsertBeforeExtensionASCII(
246 const base::StringPiece& suffix) const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
247
248 // Adds |extension| to |file_name|. Returns the current FilePath if
249 // |extension| is empty. Returns "" if BaseName() == "." or "..".
250 FilePath AddExtension(
251 const StringType& extension) const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
252
253 // Replaces the extension of |file_name| with |extension|. If |file_name|
254 // does not have an extension, then |extension| is added. If |extension| is
255 // empty, then the extension is removed from |file_name|.
256 // Returns "" if BaseName() == "." or "..".
257 FilePath ReplaceExtension(
258 const StringType& extension) const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
259
260 // Returns true if the file path matches the specified extension. The test is
261 // case insensitive. Don't forget the leading period if appropriate.
262 bool MatchesExtension(const StringType& extension) const;
263
264 // Returns a FilePath by appending a separator and the supplied path
265 // component to this object's path. Append takes care to avoid adding
266 // excessive separators if this object's path already ends with a separator.
267 // If this object's path is kCurrentDirectory, a new FilePath corresponding
268 // only to |component| is returned. |component| must be a relative path;
269 // it is an error to pass an absolute path.
270 FilePath Append(const StringType& component) const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
271 FilePath Append(const FilePath& component) const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
272
273 // Although Windows StringType is std::wstring, since the encoding it uses for
274 // paths is well defined, it can handle ASCII path components as well.
275 // Mac uses UTF8, and since ASCII is a subset of that, it works there as well.
276 // On Linux, although it can use any 8-bit encoding for paths, we assume that
277 // ASCII is a valid subset, regardless of the encoding, since many operating
278 // system paths will always be ASCII.
279 FilePath AppendASCII(const base::StringPiece& component)
280 const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
281
282 // Returns true if this FilePath contains an absolute path. On Windows, an
283 // absolute path begins with either a drive letter specification followed by
284 // a separator character, or with two separator characters. On POSIX
285 // platforms, an absolute path begins with a separator character.
286 bool IsAbsolute() const;
287
brettw@chromium.org99b198e2013-04-12 14:17:15 +0900288 // Returns true if the patch ends with a path separator character.
289 bool EndsWithSeparator() const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
290
291 // Returns a copy of this FilePath that ends with a trailing separator. If
292 // the input path is empty, an empty FilePath will be returned.
293 FilePath AsEndingWithSeparator() const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
294
brettw@chromium.org59eef1f2013-02-24 14:40:52 +0900295 // Returns a copy of this FilePath that does not end with a trailing
296 // separator.
297 FilePath StripTrailingSeparators() const WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
298
299 // Returns true if this FilePath contains any attempt to reference a parent
300 // directory (i.e. has a path component that is ".."
301 bool ReferencesParent() const;
302
303 // Return a Unicode human-readable version of this path.
304 // Warning: you can *not*, in general, go from a display name back to a real
305 // path. Only use this when displaying paths to users, not just when you
306 // want to stuff a string16 into some other API.
307 string16 LossyDisplayName() const;
308
309 // Return the path as ASCII, or the empty string if the path is not ASCII.
310 // This should only be used for cases where the FilePath is representing a
311 // known-ASCII filename.
312 std::string MaybeAsASCII() const;
313
314 // Return the path as UTF-8.
315 //
316 // This function is *unsafe* as there is no way to tell what encoding is
317 // used in file names on POSIX systems other than Mac and Chrome OS,
318 // although UTF-8 is practically used everywhere these days. To mitigate
319 // the encoding issue, this function internally calls
320 // SysNativeMBToWide() on POSIX systems other than Mac and Chrome OS,
321 // per assumption that the current locale's encoding is used in file
322 // names, but this isn't a perfect solution.
323 //
324 // Once it becomes safe to to stop caring about non-UTF-8 file names,
325 // the SysNativeMBToWide() hack will be removed from the code, along
326 // with "Unsafe" in the function name.
327 std::string AsUTF8Unsafe() const;
328
329 // Older Chromium code assumes that paths are always wstrings.
330 // This function converts wstrings to FilePaths, and is
331 // useful to smooth porting that old code to the FilePath API.
332 // It has "Hack" its name so people feel bad about using it.
333 // http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=24672
334 //
335 // If you are trying to be a good citizen and remove these, ask yourself:
336 // - Am I interacting with other Chrome code that deals with files? Then
337 // try to convert the API into using FilePath.
338 // - Am I interacting with OS-native calls? Then use value() to get at an
339 // OS-native string format.
340 // - Am I using well-known file names, like "config.ini"? Then use the
341 // ASCII functions (we require paths to always be supersets of ASCII).
342 // - Am I displaying a string to the user in some UI? Then use the
343 // LossyDisplayName() function, but keep in mind that you can't
344 // ever use the result of that again as a path.
345 static FilePath FromWStringHack(const std::wstring& wstring);
346
347 // Returns a FilePath object from a path name in UTF-8. This function
348 // should only be used for cases where you are sure that the input
349 // string is UTF-8.
350 //
351 // Like AsUTF8Unsafe(), this function is unsafe. This function
352 // internally calls SysWideToNativeMB() on POSIX systems other than Mac
353 // and Chrome OS, to mitigate the encoding issue. See the comment at
354 // AsUTF8Unsafe() for details.
355 static FilePath FromUTF8Unsafe(const std::string& utf8);
356
357 void WriteToPickle(Pickle* pickle) const;
358 bool ReadFromPickle(PickleIterator* iter);
359
360 // Normalize all path separators to backslash on Windows
361 // (if FILE_PATH_USES_WIN_SEPARATORS is true), or do nothing on POSIX systems.
362 FilePath NormalizePathSeparators() const;
363
364 // Compare two strings in the same way the file system does.
365 // Note that these always ignore case, even on file systems that are case-
366 // sensitive. If case-sensitive comparison is ever needed, add corresponding
367 // methods here.
368 // The methods are written as a static method so that they can also be used
369 // on parts of a file path, e.g., just the extension.
370 // CompareIgnoreCase() returns -1, 0 or 1 for less-than, equal-to and
371 // greater-than respectively.
372 static int CompareIgnoreCase(const StringType& string1,
373 const StringType& string2);
374 static bool CompareEqualIgnoreCase(const StringType& string1,
375 const StringType& string2) {
376 return CompareIgnoreCase(string1, string2) == 0;
377 }
378 static bool CompareLessIgnoreCase(const StringType& string1,
379 const StringType& string2) {
380 return CompareIgnoreCase(string1, string2) < 0;
381 }
382
383#if defined(OS_MACOSX)
384 // Returns the string in the special canonical decomposed form as defined for
385 // HFS, which is close to, but not quite, decomposition form D. See
386 // http://developer.apple.com/mac/library/technotes/tn/tn1150.html#UnicodeSubtleties
387 // for further comments.
388 // Returns the epmty string if the conversion failed.
389 static StringType GetHFSDecomposedForm(const FilePath::StringType& string);
390
391 // Special UTF-8 version of FastUnicodeCompare. Cf:
392 // http://developer.apple.com/mac/library/technotes/tn/tn1150.html#StringComparisonAlgorithm
393 // IMPORTANT: The input strings must be in the special HFS decomposed form!
394 // (cf. above GetHFSDecomposedForm method)
395 static int HFSFastUnicodeCompare(const StringType& string1,
396 const StringType& string2);
397#endif
398
399 private:
400 // Remove trailing separators from this object. If the path is absolute, it
401 // will never be stripped any more than to refer to the absolute root
402 // directory, so "////" will become "/", not "". A leading pair of
403 // separators is never stripped, to support alternate roots. This is used to
404 // support UNC paths on Windows.
405 void StripTrailingSeparatorsInternal();
406
407 StringType path_;
408};
409
410} // namespace base
411
412// This is required by googletest to print a readable output on test failures.
413BASE_EXPORT extern void PrintTo(const base::FilePath& path, std::ostream* out);
414
415// Macros for string literal initialization of FilePath::CharType[], and for
416// using a FilePath::CharType[] in a printf-style format string.
417#if defined(OS_POSIX)
418#define FILE_PATH_LITERAL(x) x
419#define PRFilePath "s"
420#define PRFilePathLiteral "%s"
421#elif defined(OS_WIN)
422#define FILE_PATH_LITERAL(x) L ## x
423#define PRFilePath "ls"
424#define PRFilePathLiteral L"%ls"
425#endif // OS_WIN
426
427// Provide a hash function so that hash_sets and maps can contain FilePath
428// objects.
429namespace BASE_HASH_NAMESPACE {
430#if defined(COMPILER_GCC)
431
432template<>
433struct hash<base::FilePath> {
434 size_t operator()(const base::FilePath& f) const {
435 return hash<base::FilePath::StringType>()(f.value());
436 }
437};
438
439#elif defined(COMPILER_MSVC)
440
441inline size_t hash_value(const base::FilePath& f) {
442 return hash_value(f.value());
443}
444
445#endif // COMPILER
446
447} // namespace BASE_HASH_NAMESPACE
448
449#endif // BASE_FILES_FILE_PATH_H_