This command provides several operations on a file's name or attributes. The
argument is the name of a file in most cases. The
argument indicates what to do with the file name. Any unique abbreviation for
is acceptable. The valid options are:
- file atime name ?time?
-
Returns a decimal string giving the time at which file name was last
accessed. If time is specified, it is an access time to set
for the file. The time is measured in the standard POSIX fashion as
seconds from a fixed starting time (often January 1, 1970). If the file
does not exist or its access time cannot be queried or set then an error is
generated. On Windows, FAT file systems do not support access time.
On zipfs file systems, access time is mapped to the modification
time.
- file attributes name
-
- file attributes name ?option?
-
- file attributes name ?option value option value...?
-
This subcommand returns or sets platform-specific values associated
with a file. The first form returns a list of the platform-specific
options and their values. The second form returns the value for the
given option. The third form sets one or more of the values. The values
are as follows:
On Unix, -group gets or sets the group name for the file. A
group id can be given to the command, but it returns a group name.
-owner gets or sets the user name of the owner of the file. The
command returns the owner name, but the numerical id can be passed when
setting the owner. -permissions retrieves or sets a file's
access permissions, using octal notation by default. This option also
provides limited support for setting permissions using the symbolic
notation accepted by the chmod command, following the form
[ugo]?[[+-=][rwxst],[...]]. Multiple permission
specifications may be given, separated by commas. E.g., u+s,go-rw
would set the setuid bit for a file's owner as well as remove read and
write permission for the file's group and other users. An
ls-style string of the form rwxrwxrwx is also accepted but
must always be 9 characters long. E.g., rwxr-xr-t is equivalent
to 01755. On versions of Unix supporting file flags,
-readonly returns the value of, or sets, or clears the readonly
attribute of a file, i.e., the user immutable flag (uchg) to the
chflags command.
On Windows, -archive gives the value or sets or clears the
archive attribute of the file. -hidden gives the value or sets
or clears the hidden attribute of the file. -longname will
expand each path element to its long version. This attribute cannot be
set. -readonly gives the value or sets or clears the readonly
attribute of the file. -shortname gives a string where every
path element is replaced with its short (8.3) version of the
name if possible. For path elements that cannot be mapped to short
names, the long name is retained. This attribute cannot be set.
-system gives or sets or clears the value of the system
attribute of the file.
On macOS and Darwin, -creator gives or sets the
Finder creator type of the file. -hidden gives or sets or clears
the hidden attribute of the file. -readonly gives or sets or
clears the readonly attribute of the file. -rsrclength gives
the length of the resource fork of the file, this attribute can only be
set to the value 0, which results in the resource fork being stripped
off the file.
On all platforms, files in zipfs mounted archives return the following
attributes. These are all read-only and cannot be directly set.
- -archive
-
The path of the mounted ZIP archive containing the file.
- -compsize
-
The compressed size of the file within the archive.
This is 0 for directories.
- -crc
-
The CRC of the file if present, else 0.
- -mount
-
The path where the containing archive is mounted.
- -offset
-
The offset of the file within the archive.
- -uncompsize
-
The uncompressed size of the file. This is 0 for directories.
Other attributes may be present in the returned list. These should
be ignored.
- file channels ?pattern?
-
If pattern is not specified, returns a list of names of all
registered open channels in this interpreter. If pattern is
specified, only those names matching pattern are returned. Matching
is determined using the same rules as for string match.
- file copy ?-force? ?--? source target
-
- file copy ?-force? ?--? source ?source ...? targetDir
-
The first form makes a copy of the file or directory source under
the pathname target. If target is an existing directory,
then the second form is used. The second form makes a copy inside
targetDir of each source file listed. If a directory is
specified as a source, then the contents of the directory will be
recursively copied into targetDir. Existing files will not be
overwritten unless the -force option is specified (when Tcl will
also attempt to adjust permissions on the destination file or directory
if that is necessary to allow the copy to proceed). When copying
within a single filesystem, file copy will copy soft links (i.e.
the links themselves are copied, not the things they point to). Trying
to overwrite a non-empty directory, overwrite a directory with a file,
or overwrite a file with a directory will all result in errors even if
-force was specified. Arguments are processed in the order
specified, halting at the first error, if any. A -- marks
the end of switches; the argument following the -- will be
treated as a source even if it starts with a -.
- file delete ?-force? ?--? ?pathname ... ?
-
Removes the file or directory specified by each pathname
argument. Non-empty directories will be removed only if the
-force option is specified. When operating on symbolic links,
the links themselves will be deleted, not the objects they point to.
Trying to delete a non-existent file is not considered an error.
Trying to delete a read-only file will cause the file to be deleted,
even if the -force flags is not specified. If the -force
option is specified on a directory, Tcl will attempt both to change
permissions and move the current directory
“pwd”
out of the given path if that is necessary to allow the deletion to
proceed. Arguments are processed in the order specified, halting at
the first error, if any.
A -- marks the end of switches; the argument following the
-- will be treated as a pathname even if it starts with
a -.
- file dirname name
-
Returns a name comprised of all of the path components in name
excluding the last element. If name is a relative file name and
only contains one path element, then returns
“.”.
If name refers to a root directory, then the root directory is
returned. For example,
file dirname c:/
returns c:/.
- file executable name
-
Returns 1 if file name is executable by the current user,
0 otherwise. On Windows, which does not have an executable attribute,
the command treats all directories and any files with extensions
exe, com, cmd or bat as executable.
- file exists name
-
Returns 1 if file name exists and the current user has
search privileges for the directories leading to it, 0 otherwise.
- file extension name
-
Returns all of the characters in name after and including the last
dot in the last element of name. If there is no dot in the last
element of name then returns the empty string.
- file home ?username?
-
If no argument is specified, the command returns the home directory
of the current user. This is generally the value of the $HOME
environment variable except that on Windows platforms backslashes
in the path are replaced by forward slashes. An error is raised if
the $HOME environment variable is not set.
If username is specified, the command returns the home directory
configured in the system for the specified user. Note this may be
different than the value of the $HOME environment variable
even when username corresponds to the current user. An error is
raised if the username does not correspond to a user account
on the system.
- file isdirectory name
-
Returns 1 if file name is a directory, 0 otherwise.
- file isfile name
-
Returns 1 if file name is a regular file, 0 otherwise.
- file join name ?name ...?
-
Takes one or more file names and combines them, using the correct path
separator for the current platform. If a particular name is
relative, then it will be joined to the previous file name argument.
Otherwise, any earlier arguments will be discarded, and joining will
proceed from the current argument. For example,
file join a b /foo bar
returns /foo/bar.
Note that any of the names can contain separators, and that the result
is always canonical for the current platform: / for Unix and
Windows.
- file link ?-linktype? linkName ?target?
-
If only one argument is given, that argument is assumed to be
linkName, and this command returns the value of the link given by
linkName (i.e. the name of the file it points to). If
linkName is not a link or its value cannot be read (as, for example,
seems to be the case with hard links, which look just like ordinary
files), then an error is returned.
If 2 arguments are given, then these are assumed to be linkName
and target. If linkName already exists, or if target
does not exist, an error will be returned. Otherwise, Tcl creates a new
link called linkName which points to the existing filesystem
object at target (which is also the returned value), where the
type of the link is platform-specific (on Unix a symbolic link will be
the default). This is useful for the case where the user wishes to
create a link in a cross-platform way, and does not care what type of
link is created.
If the user wishes to make a link of a specific type only, (and signal an
error if for some reason that is not possible), then the optional
-linktype argument should be given. Accepted values for
-linktype are
“-symbolic”
and
“-hard”.
On Unix, symbolic links can be made to relative paths, and those paths
must be relative to the actual linkName's location (not to the
cwd), but on all other platforms where relative links are not supported,
target paths will always be converted to absolute, normalized form
before the link is created (and therefore relative paths are interpreted
as relative to the cwd). When creating links on filesystems that either do not
support any links, or do not support the specific type requested, an
error message will be returned. Most Unix platforms support both
symbolic and hard links (the latter for files only). Windows
supports symbolic directory links and hard file links on NTFS drives.
- file lstat name ?varName?
-
Same as stat option (see below) except uses the lstat
kernel call instead of stat. This means that if name
refers to a symbolic link the information returned is for the link
rather than the file it refers to. On systems that do not support
symbolic links this option behaves exactly the same as the
stat option.
- file mkdir ?dir ...?
-
Creates each directory specified. For each pathname dir specified,
this command will create all non-existing parent directories as
well as dir itself. If an existing directory is specified, then
no action is taken and no error is returned. Trying to overwrite an existing
file with a directory will result in an error. Arguments are processed in
the order specified, halting at the first error, if any.
- file mtime name ?time?
-
Returns a decimal string giving the time at which file name was last
modified. If time is specified, it is a modification time to set for
the file (equivalent to Unix touch). The time is measured in the
standard POSIX fashion as seconds from a fixed starting time (often January
1, 1970). If the file does not exist or its modified time cannot be queried
or set then an error is generated.
On zipfs file systems, modification time cannot be explicitly set.
- file nativename name
-
Returns the platform-specific name of the file. This is useful if the
filename is needed to pass to a platform-specific call, such as to a
subprocess via exec under Windows (see EXAMPLES below).
- file normalize name
-
Returns a unique normalized path representation for the file-system
object (file, directory, link, etc), whose string value can be used as a
unique identifier for it. A normalized path is an absolute path which has
all
“../”
and
“./”
removed. Also it is one which is in the
“standard”
format for the native platform. On Unix, this means the segments
leading up to the path must be free of symbolic links/aliases (but the
very last path component may be a symbolic link), and on Windows it also
means we want the long form with that form's case-dependence (which
gives us a unique, case-dependent path). The one exception concerning the
last link in the path is necessary, because Tcl or the user may wish to
operate on the actual symbolic link itself (for example file delete,
file rename, file copy are defined to operate on symbolic
links, not on the things that they point to).
- file owned name
-
Returns 1 if file name is owned by the current user, 0
otherwise.
- file pathtype name
-
Returns one of absolute, relative, volumerelative. If
name refers to a specific file on a specific volume, the path type will
be absolute. If name refers to a file relative to the current
working directory, then the path type will be relative. If name
refers to a file relative to the current working directory on a specified
volume, or to a specific file on the current working volume, then the path
type is volumerelative.
- file readable name
-
Returns 1 if file name is readable by the current user,
0 otherwise.
- file readlink name
-
Returns the value of the symbolic link given by name (i.e. the name
of the file it points to). If name is not a symbolic link or its
value cannot be read, then an error is returned. On systems that do not
support symbolic links this option is undefined.
- file rename ?-force? ?--? source target
-
- file rename ?-force? ?--? source ?source ...? targetDir
-
The first form takes the file or directory specified by pathname
source and renames it to target, moving the file if the
pathname target specifies a name in a different directory. If
target is an existing directory, then the second form is used.
The second form moves each source file or directory into the
directory targetDir. Existing files will not be overwritten
unless the -force option is specified. When operating inside a
single filesystem, Tcl will rename symbolic links rather than the
things that they point to. Trying to overwrite a non-empty directory,
overwrite a directory with a file, or a file with a directory will all
result in errors. Arguments are processed in the order specified,
halting at the first error, if any. A -- marks the end of
switches; the argument following the -- will be treated as a
source even if it starts with a -.
- file rootname name
-
Returns all of the characters in name up to but not including the
last
“.”
character in the last component of name. If the last
component of name does not contain a dot, then returns name.
- file separator ?name?
-
If no argument is given, returns the character which is used to separate
path segments for native files on this platform. If a path is given,
the filesystem responsible for that path is asked to return its
separator character. If no file system accepts name, an error
is generated.
- file size name
-
Returns a decimal string giving the size of file name in bytes. If
the file does not exist or its size cannot be queried then an error is
generated.
- file split name
-
Returns a list whose elements are the path components in name. The
first element of the list will have the same path type as name.
All other elements will be relative. Path separators will be discarded
unless they are needed to ensure that an element is unambiguously relative.
- file stat name ?varName?
-
Invokes the stat kernel call on name, and returns a
dictionary with the information returned from the kernel call. If
varName is given, it uses the variable to hold the information.
VarName is treated as an array variable, and in such case the
command returns the empty string. The following elements are set:
atime, ctime, dev, gid, ino, mode,
mtime, nlink, size, type, uid. Each element
except type is a decimal string with the value of the corresponding
field from the stat return structure; see the manual entry for
stat for details on the meanings of the values. The type
element gives the type of the file in the same form returned by the
command file type.
- file system name
-
Returns a list of one or two elements, the first of which is the name of
the filesystem to use for the file, and the second, if given, an
arbitrary string representing the filesystem-specific nature or type of
the location within that filesystem. If a filesystem only supports one
type of file, the second element may not be supplied. For example the
native files have a first element
“native”,
and a second element which when given is a platform-specific type name
for the file's system (e.g.
“NTFS”,
“FAT”,
on Windows). A generic virtual file system might return
the list
“vfs ftp”
to represent a file on a remote ftp site mounted as a
virtual filesystem through an extension called
“vfs”.
If the file does not belong to any filesystem, an error is generated.
- file tail name
-
Returns all of the characters in the last filesystem component of
name. Any trailing directory separator in name is ignored.
If name contains no separators then returns name. So,
file tail a/b, file tail a/b/ and file tail b all
return b.
- file tempdir ?template?
-
Creates a temporary directory (guaranteed to be newly created and writable by
the current script) and returns its name. If template is given, it
specifies one of or both of the existing directory (on a filesystem controlled
by the operating system) to contain the temporary directory, and the base part
of the directory name; it is considered to have the location of the directory
if there is a directory separator in the name, and the base part is everything
after the last directory separator (if non-empty). The default containing
directory is determined by system-specific operations, and the default base
name prefix is
“tcl”.
The following output is typical and illustrative; the actual output will vary
between platforms:
% file tempdir
/var/tmp/tcl_u0kuy5
% file tempdir /tmp/myapp
/tmp/myapp_8o7r9L
% file tempdir /tmp/
/tmp/tcl_1mOJHD
% file tempdir myapp
/var/tmp/myapp_0ihS0n
- file tempfile ?nameVar? ?template?
-
Creates a temporary file and returns a read-write channel opened on that file.
If the nameVar is given, it specifies a variable that the name of the
temporary file will be written into; if absent, Tcl will attempt to arrange
for the temporary file to be deleted once it is no longer required. If the
template is present, it specifies parts of the template of the filename
to use when creating it (such as the directory, base-name or extension) though
some platforms may ignore some or all of these parts and use a built-in
default instead.
Note that temporary files are only ever created on the native
filesystem. As such, they can be relied upon to be used with operating-system
native APIs and external programs that require a filename.
- file tildeexpand name
-
Returns the result of performing tilde substitution on name. If the name
begins with a tilde, then the file name will be interpreted as if the first
element is replaced with the location of the home directory for the given user.
If the tilde is followed immediately by a path separator, the $HOME
environment variable is substituted. Otherwise the characters between the
tilde and the next separator are taken as a user name, which is used to
retrieve the user's home directory for substitution. An error is raised if the
$HOME environment variable or user does not exist.
If the file name does not begin with a tilde, it is returned unmodified.
- file type name
-
Returns a string giving the type of file name, which will be one of
file, directory, characterSpecial, blockSpecial,
fifo, link, or socket.
- file volumes
-
Returns the absolute paths to the volumes mounted on the system, as a
proper Tcl list. Without any virtual filesystems mounted as root
volumes, on UNIX, the command will always return
“/”,
since all filesystems are locally mounted.
On Windows, it will return a list of the available local drives
(e.g.
“a:/ c:/”).
If any virtual filesystem has mounted additional
volumes, they will be in the returned list.
- file writable name
-
Returns 1 if file name is writable by the current user,
0 otherwise.
This procedure shows how to search for C files in a given directory
that have a correspondingly-named object file in the current
directory:
Rename a file and leave a symbolic link pointing from the old location
to the new place:
On Windows, a file can be
“started”
easily enough (equivalent to double-clicking on it in the Explorer
interface) but the name passed to the operating system must be in
native format:
Copyright © 1993 The Regents of the University of California.
Copyright © 1994-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.