NAME
glob - output pathnames matching a pattern
SYNOPSIS
On the command-line:
glob 'eenie{meenie,mynie,moe}*.[ch]'
DESCRIPTION
When this program was originally created, *perl* did not have a builtin glob
feature and would rely on the *csh* to do the work for it. With Perl v5.6 in March 2000, the File::Glob module has done that work without interacting with *csh*.
Pattern Matching Syntax for Filename Expansion
The expressions that are passed as arguments to glob must adhere to csh/tcsh pattern-matching syntax for wildcard filename expansion (also known as globbing). Unquoted words containing an asterisk (*
), question-mark (?
), square-brackets ([...]
), or curly-braces ({...}
), or beginning with a tilde (~), are expanded into an alphabetically sorted list of filenames, as follows:
*
-
Match any (zero or more) characters.
?
-
Match any single character.
- [...]
-
Match any single character in the given character class. The character class is the enclosed list(s) or range(s). A list is a string of characters. A range is two characters separated by a dash (-), and includes all the characters in between the two characters given (inclusive). If a dash (
-
) is intended to be part of the character class it must be the first character given. - {str1,str2,...}
-
Expand the given "word-set" to each string (or filename-matching pattern) in the comma-separated list. Unlike the pattern-matching expressions above, the expansion of this construct is not sorted. For instance,
{foo,bar}
expands tofoo bar
(notbar foo
). As special cases, unmatched{
and}
, and the "empty set" (the string {}) are treated as ordinary characters instead of pattern-matching meta-characters. A backslash (\)
may be used to escape an opening or closing curly brace, or the backslash character itself. Note that word-sets may be nested! ~
-
The home directory of the invoking user as indicated by the value of the variable
$HOME
. - ~username
-
The home directory of the user whose login name is 'username', as indicated by the password entry for the named user.
Only the patterns *, ? and [...] imply pattern matching; an error results if no filename matches a pattern that contains them. When a period or "dot" (.) is the first character in a filename or pathname component, it must be matched explicitly. The filename component separator character (e.g., / or slash) must also be matched explicitly.
OPTIONS
When the first argument is -0 (a minus sign followed by the number zero), then a NUL character ("\0") is used to separate the expanded words and/or filenames when printing them to standard output. Otherwise a newline is used as the word/filename output separator.
RETURNS
When glob is invoked as a script from the command-line, the exit-status returned will be 0 if any files were matched or word-sets were expanded; 1 if no files/word-sets were matched/expanded; and 2 if some other kind of error occurred.
DIAGNOSTICS
If no filenames are matched and pattern-matching characters were used (*
, ?
, or [...]
), then an error message of "No Match" is issued. If a user's home directory is specified using tilde-expansion (e.g., ~username
) but the corresponding username or their home directory cannot be found, then the error message "Unknown user: username" is issued.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1997-2025 Marc Mengel. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
AUTHOR
Marc Mengel <mengel@fnal.gov>
REVISIONS
- brian f foy <briandfoy@pobox.com> - v2.1 February 2025
-
Reimplement this as a thin layer over File::Glob::csh_glob. This program was written before that was a core module, but had several edge cases where it would crash.
- Brad Appleton <bradapp@enteract.com> - v1.2 March 1999
-
Modified to use qr// (and some other minor speedups), to explode subexpressions in curly braces (a la csh -- rather than using just plain alternation), and made callable as a standalone script.