| File-Monitor documentation | view source | Contained in the File-Monitor distribution. |
File::Monitor::Object - Monitor a filesystem object for changes.
This document describes File::Monitor::Object version 1.00
Created by File::Monitor to monitor a single file or directory.
use File::Monitor;
use File::Monitor::Object;
my $monitor = File::Monitor->new();
for my $file ( @files ) {
$monitor->watch( $file );
}
# First scan just finds out about the monitored files. No changes
# will be reported.
$monitor->scan;
# Later perform a scan and gather any changes
for my $change ( $monitor->scan ) {
# $change is a File::Monitor::Delta
}
Monitors changes to a single file or directory. Don't create a
File::Monitor::Object directly; instead call watch on
File::Monitor.
A File::Monitor::Object represents a single file or directory. The
corresponding file or directory need not exist; a file being created is
one of the events that is monitored for. Similarly if the file or directory
is deleted that will be reported as a change.
Changes of state are returned as a File::Monitor::Delta object.
The state of the monitored file or directory at the time of the last
scan can be queried. Before scan is called these methods will all
return undef. The following methods return the value of the
corresponding field from stat in perlfunc:
dev inode mode num_links uid gid rdev size
atime mtime ctime blk_size blocks
For example:
my $file_size = $object->size;
my $modified = $object->mtime;
If any error occured during the previous scan it may be retrieved like this:
my $last_error = $obj->error;
It is not an error for the file being monitored not to exist.
Finally if a directory is being monitored and the files or recurse
option was specified the list of files in the directory may be retrieved
like this:
my @contained_files = $obj->files;
If files was specified this will return the files and directories
immediately below the monitored directory but not the contents of any
subdirectories. If recurse was specified the entire directory tree
below this directory will be returned.
In either case the returned filenames will be complete absolute paths.
Note that File::Monitor::Object has no magical way to quickly perform
a recursive scan of a directory. If you point it at a directory
containing 1,000,000 files and specify the recurse option directory
scans will take a long time.
new( $args )Create a new File::Monitor::Object. Don't call new directly; use
instead File::Monitor->watch.
scan()Perform a scan of the monitored file or directory and return a list of changes. The returned list will contain either a single File::Monitor::Delta object describing all changes or will be empty if no changes occurred.
if ( my $change = $object->scan ) {
# $change is a File::Monitor::Delta that describes all the
# changes to the monitored file or directory.
}
When scan is first called the current state of the monitored
file/directory will be captured but no change will be reported.
callback( [ $event, ] $coderef )Register a callback. If $event is omitted the callback will be called
for all changes. Specify $event to limit the callback to certain event
types. See File::Monitor::Delta for a full list of events.
$object->callback( sub {
# called for all changes
} );
$object->callback( metadata => sub {
# called for changes to file/directory metatdata
} );
See File::Monitor::Delta for a full list of events that can be monitored.
nameReturns the absolute name of the file or directory being monitored. If
new was passed a relative path it is resolved relative to the current
directory at the time of object creation to make it absolute.
filesIf monitoring a directory and the recurse or files options were
specified to new, files returns a list of contained files. The
returned filenames will be absolute paths.
In addition to the above the following methods may be called to return the value of the corresponding field from stat in perlfunc:
dev inode mode num_links uid gid rdev size
atime mtime ctime blk_size blocks
For example:
my $inode = $obj->inode;
Check the documentation for stat in perlfunc to discover which fields are valid on your platform.
%s is read-onlyYou have attempted to modify a read-only accessor. It may be tempting for example to attempt to change the name of the monitored file or directory like this:
# Won't work
$obj->name( 'somefile.txt' );
All of the attributes exposed by File::Monitor::Object are read-only.
When options are supplied as a hash there may be no other argumentsWhen creating a new File::Monitor::Object you must either supply
new with a reference to a hash of options or, as a special case, pass
a filename and optionally a callback.
The name option must be suppliedThe options hash must contain a key called name that specifies the
name of the file or directory to be monitored.
A filename must be specifiedYou must suppy new with the name of the file or directory to be
monitored.
File::Monitor::Object requires no configuration files or environment variables.
None.
None reported.
No bugs have been reported.
Please report any bugs or feature requests to
bug-file-monitor@rt.cpan.org, or through the web interface at
http://rt.cpan.org.
Andy Armstrong <andy@hexten.net>
Faycal Chraibi originally registered the File::Monitor namespace and then kindly handed it to me.
Copyright (c) 2007, Andy Armstrong <andy@hexten.net>. All rights reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.
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| File-Monitor documentation | view source | Contained in the File-Monitor distribution. |