org.apache.commons.io.FilenameUtils Maven / Gradle / Ivy
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/*
* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
* contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
* this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
* The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
* (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
* the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package org.apache.commons.io;
import java.io.File;
import java.util.ArrayDeque;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.Deque;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.regex.Matcher;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;
import java.util.stream.Stream;
/**
* General file name and file path manipulation utilities. The methods in this class
* operate on strings that represent relative or absolute paths. Nothing in this class
* ever accesses the file system, or depends on whether a path points to a file that exists.
*
* When dealing with file names, you can hit problems when moving from a Windows
* based development machine to a UNIX based production machine.
* This class aims to help avoid those problems.
*
*
* NOTE: You may be able to avoid using this class entirely simply by
* using JDK {@link java.io.File File} objects and the two argument constructor
* {@link java.io.File#File(java.io.File, String) File(File,String)}.
*
*
* Most methods in this class are designed to work the same on both UNIX and Windows.
* Those that don't include 'System', 'Unix', or 'Windows' in their name.
*
*
* Most methods recognize both separators (forward and backslashes), and both
* sets of prefixes. See the Javadoc of each method for details.
*
*
* This class defines six components within a path (sometimes called a file name or a full file name).
* Given an absolute Windows path such as C:\dev\project\file.txt they are:
*
*
* - the full file name, or just file name - C:\dev\project\file.txt
* - the prefix - C:\
* - the path - dev\project\
* - the full path - C:\dev\project\
* - the name - file.txt
* - the base name - file
* - the extension - txt
*
*
* Given an absolute UNIX path such as /dev/project/file.txt they are:
*
*
* - the full file name, or just file name - /dev/project/file.txt
* - the prefix - /
* - the path - dev/project
* - the full path - /dev/project
* - the name - file.txt
* - the base name - file
* - the extension - txt
*
*
* Given a relative Windows path such as dev\project\file.txt they are:
*
*
* - the full file name, or just file name - dev\project\file.txt
* - the prefix - null
* - the path - dev\project\
* - the full path - dev\project\
* - the name - file.txt
* - the base name - file
* - the extension - txt
*
*
* Given an absolute UNIX path such as /dev/project/file.txt they are:
*
*
* - the full path, full file name, or just file name - /dev/project/file.txt
* - the prefix - /
* - the path - dev/project
* - the full path - /dev/project
* - the name - file.txt
* - the base name - file
* - the extension - txt
*
*
*
*
* This class works best if directory names end with a separator.
* If you omit the last separator, it is impossible to determine if the last component
* corresponds to a file or a directory. This class treats final components
* that do not end with a separator as files, not directories.
*
*
* This class only supports UNIX and Windows style names.
* Prefixes are matched as follows:
*
*
* Windows:
* a\b\c.txt --> "" --> relative
* \a\b\c.txt --> "\" --> current drive absolute
* C:a\b\c.txt --> "C:" --> drive relative
* C:\a\b\c.txt --> "C:\" --> absolute
* \\server\a\b\c.txt --> "\\server\" --> UNC
*
* Unix:
* a/b/c.txt --> "" --> relative
* /a/b/c.txt --> "/" --> absolute
* ~/a/b/c.txt --> "~/" --> current user
* ~ --> "~/" --> current user (slash added)
* ~user/a/b/c.txt --> "~user/" --> named user
* ~user --> "~user/" --> named user (slash added)
*
*
* Both prefix styles are matched, irrespective of the machine that you are
* currently running on.
*
*
* @since 1.1
*/
public class FilenameUtils {
private static final String[] EMPTY_STRING_ARRAY = {};
private static final String EMPTY_STRING = "";
private static final int NOT_FOUND = -1;
/**
* The extension separator character.
* @since 1.4
*/
public static final char EXTENSION_SEPARATOR = '.';
/**
* The extension separator String.
* @since 1.4
*/
public static final String EXTENSION_SEPARATOR_STR = Character.toString(EXTENSION_SEPARATOR);
/**
* The UNIX separator character.
*/
private static final char UNIX_NAME_SEPARATOR = '/';
/**
* The Windows separator character.
*/
private static final char WINDOWS_NAME_SEPARATOR = '\\';
/**
* The system separator character.
*/
private static final char SYSTEM_NAME_SEPARATOR = File.separatorChar;
/**
* The separator character that is the opposite of the system separator.
*/
private static final char OTHER_SEPARATOR = flipSeparator(SYSTEM_NAME_SEPARATOR);
private static final Pattern IPV4_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("^(\\d{1,3})\\.(\\d{1,3})\\.(\\d{1,3})\\.(\\d{1,3})$");
private static final int IPV4_MAX_OCTET_VALUE = 255;
private static final int IPV6_MAX_HEX_GROUPS = 8;
private static final int IPV6_MAX_HEX_DIGITS_PER_GROUP = 4;
private static final int MAX_UNSIGNED_SHORT = 0xffff;
private static final int BASE_16 = 16;
private static final Pattern REG_NAME_PART_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("^[a-zA-Z0-9][a-zA-Z0-9-]*$");
/**
* Concatenates a fileName to a base path using normal command line style rules.
*
* The effect is equivalent to resultant directory after changing
* directory to the first argument, followed by changing directory to
* the second argument.
*
*
* The first argument is the base path, the second is the path to concatenate.
* The returned path is always normalized via {@link #normalize(String)},
* thus {@code ..} is handled.
*
*
* If {@code pathToAdd} is absolute (has an absolute prefix), then
* it will be normalized and returned.
* Otherwise, the paths will be joined, normalized and returned.
*
*
* The output will be the same on both UNIX and Windows except
* for the separator character.
*
*
* /foo/ + bar --> /foo/bar
* /foo + bar --> /foo/bar
* /foo + /bar --> /bar
* /foo + C:/bar --> C:/bar
* /foo + C:bar --> C:bar [1]
* /foo/a/ + ../bar --> /foo/bar
* /foo/ + ../../bar --> null
* /foo/ + /bar --> /bar
* /foo/.. + /bar --> /bar
* /foo + bar/c.txt --> /foo/bar/c.txt
* /foo/c.txt + bar --> /foo/c.txt/bar [2]
*
*
* [1] Note that the Windows relative drive prefix is unreliable when
* used with this method.
*
*
* [2] Note that the first parameter must be a path. If it ends with a name, then
* the name will be built into the concatenated path. If this might be a problem,
* use {@link #getFullPath(String)} on the base path argument.
*
*
* @param basePath the base path to attach to, always treated as a path
* @param fullFileNameToAdd the file name (or path) to attach to the base
* @return the concatenated path, or null if invalid
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the result path contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static String concat(final String basePath, final String fullFileNameToAdd) {
final int prefix = getPrefixLength(fullFileNameToAdd);
if (prefix < 0) {
return null;
}
if (prefix > 0) {
return normalize(fullFileNameToAdd);
}
if (basePath == null) {
return null;
}
final int len = basePath.length();
if (len == 0) {
return normalize(fullFileNameToAdd);
}
final char ch = basePath.charAt(len - 1);
if (isSeparator(ch)) {
return normalize(basePath + fullFileNameToAdd);
}
return normalize(basePath + '/' + fullFileNameToAdd);
}
/**
* Determines whether the {@code parent} directory contains the {@code child} (a file or directory).
* This does not read from the file system, and there is no guarantee or expectation that
* these paths actually exist.
*
* The files names are expected to be normalized.
*
*
* Edge cases:
*
* - A {@code directory} must not be null: if null, throw IllegalArgumentException
* - A directory does not contain itself: return false
* - A null child file is not contained in any parent: return false
*
*
* @param canonicalParent the path string to consider as the parent.
* @param canonicalChild the path string to consider as the child.
* @return true if the candidate leaf is under the specified composite. False otherwise.
* @since 2.2
* @see FileUtils#directoryContains(File, File)
*/
public static boolean directoryContains(final String canonicalParent, final String canonicalChild) {
if (isEmpty(canonicalParent) || isEmpty(canonicalChild)) {
return false;
}
if (IOCase.SYSTEM.checkEquals(canonicalParent, canonicalChild)) {
return false;
}
final char separator = toSeparator(canonicalParent.charAt(0) == UNIX_NAME_SEPARATOR);
final String parentWithEndSeparator = canonicalParent.charAt(canonicalParent.length() - 1) == separator ? canonicalParent : canonicalParent + separator;
return IOCase.SYSTEM.checkStartsWith(canonicalChild, parentWithEndSeparator);
}
/**
* Does the work of getting the path.
*
* @param fileName the file name
* @param includeSeparator true to include the end separator
* @return the path
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the result path contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
private static String doGetFullPath(final String fileName, final boolean includeSeparator) {
if (fileName == null) {
return null;
}
final int prefix = getPrefixLength(fileName);
if (prefix < 0) {
return null;
}
if (prefix >= fileName.length()) {
if (includeSeparator) {
return getPrefix(fileName); // add end slash if necessary
}
return fileName;
}
final int index = indexOfLastSeparator(fileName);
if (index < 0) {
return fileName.substring(0, prefix);
}
int end = index + (includeSeparator ? 1 : 0);
if (end == 0) {
end++;
}
return fileName.substring(0, end);
}
/**
* Does the work of getting the path.
*
* @param fileName the file name
* @param separatorAdd 0 to omit the end separator, 1 to return it
* @return the path
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the result path contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
private static String doGetPath(final String fileName, final int separatorAdd) {
if (fileName == null) {
return null;
}
final int prefix = getPrefixLength(fileName);
if (prefix < 0) {
return null;
}
final int index = indexOfLastSeparator(fileName);
final int endIndex = index + separatorAdd;
if (prefix >= fileName.length() || index < 0 || prefix >= endIndex) {
return EMPTY_STRING;
}
return requireNonNullChars(fileName.substring(prefix, endIndex));
}
/**
* Internal method to perform the normalization.
*
* @param fileName the file name
* @param separator The separator character to use
* @param keepSeparator true to keep the final separator
* @return the normalized fileName
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the file name contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
private static String doNormalize(final String fileName, final char separator, final boolean keepSeparator) {
if (fileName == null) {
return null;
}
requireNonNullChars(fileName);
int size = fileName.length();
if (size == 0) {
return fileName;
}
final int prefix = getPrefixLength(fileName);
if (prefix < 0) {
return null;
}
final char[] array = new char[size + 2]; // +1 for possible extra slash, +2 for arraycopy
fileName.getChars(0, fileName.length(), array, 0);
// fix separators throughout
final char otherSeparator = flipSeparator(separator);
for (int i = 0; i < array.length; i++) {
if (array[i] == otherSeparator) {
array[i] = separator;
}
}
// add extra separator on the end to simplify code below
boolean lastIsDirectory = true;
if (array[size - 1] != separator) {
array[size++] = separator;
lastIsDirectory = false;
}
// adjoining slashes
// If we get here, prefix can only be 0 or greater, size 1 or greater
// If prefix is 0, set loop start to 1 to prevent index errors
for (int i = prefix != 0 ? prefix : 1; i < size; i++) {
if (array[i] == separator && array[i - 1] == separator) {
System.arraycopy(array, i, array, i - 1, size - i);
size--;
i--;
}
}
// dot slash
for (int i = prefix + 1; i < size; i++) {
if (array[i] == separator && array[i - 1] == '.' &&
(i == prefix + 1 || array[i - 2] == separator)) {
if (i == size - 1) {
lastIsDirectory = true;
}
System.arraycopy(array, i + 1, array, i - 1, size - i);
size -=2;
i--;
}
}
// double dot slash
outer:
for (int i = prefix + 2; i < size; i++) {
if (array[i] == separator && array[i - 1] == '.' && array[i - 2] == '.' &&
(i == prefix + 2 || array[i - 3] == separator)) {
if (i == prefix + 2) {
return null;
}
if (i == size - 1) {
lastIsDirectory = true;
}
int j;
for (j = i - 4 ; j >= prefix; j--) {
if (array[j] == separator) {
// remove b/../ from a/b/../c
System.arraycopy(array, i + 1, array, j + 1, size - i);
size -= i - j;
i = j + 1;
continue outer;
}
}
// remove a/../ from a/../c
System.arraycopy(array, i + 1, array, prefix, size - i);
size -= i + 1 - prefix;
i = prefix + 1;
}
}
if (size <= 0) { // should never be less than 0
return EMPTY_STRING;
}
if (size <= prefix) { // should never be less than prefix
return new String(array, 0, size);
}
if (lastIsDirectory && keepSeparator) {
return new String(array, 0, size); // keep trailing separator
}
return new String(array, 0, size - 1); // lose trailing separator
}
/**
* Checks whether two file names are exactly equal.
*
* No processing is performed on the file names other than comparison.
* This is merely a null-safe case-sensitive string equality.
*
*
* @param fileName1 the first file name, may be null
* @param fileName2 the second file name, may be null
* @return true if the file names are equal, null equals null
* @see IOCase#SENSITIVE
*/
public static boolean equals(final String fileName1, final String fileName2) {
return equals(fileName1, fileName2, false, IOCase.SENSITIVE);
}
/**
* Checks whether two file names are equal, optionally normalizing and providing
* control over the case-sensitivity.
*
* @param fileName1 the first file name, may be null
* @param fileName2 the second file name, may be null
* @param normalize whether to normalize the file names
* @param ioCase what case sensitivity rule to use, null means case-sensitive
* @return true if the file names are equal, null equals null
* @since 1.3
*/
public static boolean equals(String fileName1, String fileName2, final boolean normalize, final IOCase ioCase) {
if (fileName1 == null || fileName2 == null) {
return fileName1 == null && fileName2 == null;
}
if (normalize) {
fileName1 = normalize(fileName1);
if (fileName1 == null) {
return false;
}
fileName2 = normalize(fileName2);
if (fileName2 == null) {
return false;
}
}
return IOCase.value(ioCase, IOCase.SENSITIVE).checkEquals(fileName1, fileName2);
}
/**
* Checks whether two file names are equal after both have been normalized.
*
* Both file names are first passed to {@link #normalize(String)}.
* The check is then performed in a case-sensitive manner.
*
*
* @param fileName1 the first file name, may be null
* @param fileName2 the second file name, may be null
* @return true if the file names are equal, null equals null
* @see IOCase#SENSITIVE
*/
public static boolean equalsNormalized(final String fileName1, final String fileName2) {
return equals(fileName1, fileName2, true, IOCase.SENSITIVE);
}
/**
* Checks whether two file names are equal using the case rules of the system
* after both have been normalized.
*
* Both file names are first passed to {@link #normalize(String)}.
* The check is then performed case-sensitively on UNIX and
* case-insensitively on Windows.
*
*
* @param fileName1 the first file name, may be null
* @param fileName2 the second file name, may be null
* @return true if the file names are equal, null equals null
* @see IOCase#SYSTEM
*/
public static boolean equalsNormalizedOnSystem(final String fileName1, final String fileName2) {
return equals(fileName1, fileName2, true, IOCase.SYSTEM);
}
/**
* Checks whether two file names are equal using the case rules of the system.
*
* No processing is performed on the file names other than comparison.
* The check is case-sensitive on UNIX and case-insensitive on Windows.
*
*
* @param fileName1 the first file name, may be null
* @param fileName2 the second file name, may be null
* @return true if the file names are equal, null equals null
* @see IOCase#SYSTEM
*/
public static boolean equalsOnSystem(final String fileName1, final String fileName2) {
return equals(fileName1, fileName2, false, IOCase.SYSTEM);
}
/**
* Flips the Windows name separator to Linux and vice-versa.
*
* @param ch The Windows or Linux name separator.
* @return The Windows or Linux name separator.
*/
static char flipSeparator(final char ch) {
if (ch == UNIX_NAME_SEPARATOR) {
return WINDOWS_NAME_SEPARATOR;
}
if (ch == WINDOWS_NAME_SEPARATOR) {
return UNIX_NAME_SEPARATOR;
}
throw new IllegalArgumentException(String.valueOf(ch));
}
/**
* Special handling for NTFS ADS: Don't accept colon in the file name.
*
* @param fileName a file name
* @return ADS offsets.
*/
private static int getAdsCriticalOffset(final String fileName) {
// Step 1: Remove leading path segments.
final int offset1 = fileName.lastIndexOf(SYSTEM_NAME_SEPARATOR);
final int offset2 = fileName.lastIndexOf(OTHER_SEPARATOR);
if (offset1 == -1) {
if (offset2 == -1) {
return 0;
}
return offset2 + 1;
}
if (offset2 == -1) {
return offset1 + 1;
}
return Math.max(offset1, offset2) + 1;
}
/**
* Gets the base name, minus the full path and extension, from a full file name.
*
* This method will handle a path in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The text after the last forward or backslash and before the last dot is returned.
*
*
* a/b/c.txt --> c
* a\b\c.txt --> c
* a/b/c.foo.txt --> c.foo
* a.txt --> a
* a/b/c --> c
* a/b/c/ --> ""
*
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on.
*
*
* @param fileName the file name, null returns null
* @return the name of the file without the path, or an empty string if none exists
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the file name contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static String getBaseName(final String fileName) {
return removeExtension(getName(fileName));
}
/**
* Gets the extension of a fileName.
*
* This method returns the textual part of the file name after the last dot.
* There must be no directory separator after the dot.
*
*
* foo.txt --> "txt"
* a/b/c.jpg --> "jpg"
* a/b.txt/c --> ""
* a/b/c --> ""
*
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on, with the
* exception of a possible {@link IllegalArgumentException} on Windows (see below).
*
*
* Note: This method used to have a hidden problem for names like "foo.exe:bar.txt".
* In this case, the name wouldn't be the name of a file, but the identifier of an
* alternate data stream (bar.txt) on the file foo.exe. The method used to return
* ".txt" here, which would be misleading. Commons IO 2.7 and later throw
* an {@link IllegalArgumentException} for names like this.
*
*
* @param fileName the file name to retrieve the extension of.
* @return the extension of the file or an empty string if none exists or {@code null}
* if the file name is {@code null}.
* @throws IllegalArgumentException Windows only: the file name parameter is, in fact,
* the identifier of an Alternate Data Stream, for example "foo.exe:bar.txt".
*/
public static String getExtension(final String fileName) throws IllegalArgumentException {
if (fileName == null) {
return null;
}
final int index = indexOfExtension(fileName);
if (index == NOT_FOUND) {
return EMPTY_STRING;
}
return fileName.substring(index + 1);
}
/**
* Gets the full path (prefix + path) from a full file name.
*
* This method will handle a file in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The method is entirely text based, and returns the text before and
* including the last forward or backslash.
*
*
* C:\a\b\c.txt --> C:\a\b\
* ~/a/b/c.txt --> ~/a/b/
* a.txt --> ""
* a/b/c --> a/b/
* a/b/c/ --> a/b/c/
* C: --> C:
* C:\ --> C:\
* ~ --> ~/
* ~/ --> ~/
* ~user --> ~user/
* ~user/ --> ~user/
*
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on.
*
*
* @param fileName the file name, null returns null
* @return the path of the file, an empty string if none exists, null if invalid
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the result path contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static String getFullPath(final String fileName) {
return doGetFullPath(fileName, true);
}
/**
* Gets the full path (prefix + path) from a full file name,
* excluding the final directory separator.
*
* This method will handle a file in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The method is entirely text based, and returns the text before the
* last forward or backslash.
*
*
* C:\a\b\c.txt --> C:\a\b
* ~/a/b/c.txt --> ~/a/b
* a.txt --> ""
* a/b/c --> a/b
* a/b/c/ --> a/b/c
* C: --> C:
* C:\ --> C:\
* ~ --> ~
* ~/ --> ~
* ~user --> ~user
* ~user/ --> ~user
*
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on.
*
*
* @param fileName the file name, null returns null
* @return the path of the file, an empty string if none exists, null if invalid
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the result path contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static String getFullPathNoEndSeparator(final String fileName) {
return doGetFullPath(fileName, false);
}
/**
* Gets the name minus the path from a full file name.
*
* This method will handle a file in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The text after the last forward or backslash is returned.
*
*
* a/b/c.txt --> c.txt
* a\b\c.txt --> c.txt
* a.txt --> a.txt
* a/b/c --> c
* a/b/c/ --> ""
*
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on.
*
*
* @param fileName the file name, null returns null
* @return the name of the file without the path, or an empty string if none exists
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the file name contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static String getName(final String fileName) {
if (fileName == null) {
return null;
}
return requireNonNullChars(fileName).substring(indexOfLastSeparator(fileName) + 1);
}
/**
* Gets the path from a full file name, which excludes the prefix and the name.
*
* This method will handle a file in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The method is entirely text based, and returns the text before and
* including the last forward or backslash.
*
*
* C:\a\b\c.txt --> a\b\
* ~/a/b/c.txt --> a/b/
* a.txt --> ""
* a/b/c --> a/b/
* a/b/c/ --> a/b/c/
*
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on.
*
*
* This method drops the prefix from the result.
* See {@link #getFullPath(String)} for the method that retains the prefix.
*
*
* @param fileName the file name, null returns null
* @return the path of the file, an empty string if none exists, null if invalid
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the result path contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static String getPath(final String fileName) {
return doGetPath(fileName, 1);
}
/**
* Gets the path (which excludes the prefix) from a full file name, and
* also excluding the final directory separator.
*
* This method will handle a file in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The method is entirely text based, and returns the text before the
* last forward or backslash.
*
*
* C:\a\b\c.txt --> a\b
* ~/a/b/c.txt --> a/b
* a.txt --> ""
* a/b/c --> a/b
* a/b/c/ --> a/b/c
*
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on.
*
*
* This method drops the prefix from the result.
* See {@link #getFullPathNoEndSeparator(String)} for the method that retains the prefix.
*
*
* @param fileName the file name, null returns null
* @return the path of the file, an empty string if none exists, null if invalid
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the result path contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static String getPathNoEndSeparator(final String fileName) {
return doGetPath(fileName, 0);
}
/**
* Gets the prefix such as {@code C:/} or {@code ~/} from a full file name,
*
* This method will handle a file in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The prefix includes the first slash in the full file name where applicable.
*
*
* Windows:
* a\b\c.txt --> "" --> relative
* \a\b\c.txt --> "\" --> current drive absolute
* C:a\b\c.txt --> "C:" --> drive relative
* C:\a\b\c.txt --> "C:\" --> absolute
* \\server\a\b\c.txt --> "\\server\" --> UNC
*
* Unix:
* a/b/c.txt --> "" --> relative
* /a/b/c.txt --> "/" --> absolute
* ~/a/b/c.txt --> "~/" --> current user
* ~ --> "~/" --> current user (slash added)
* ~user/a/b/c.txt --> "~user/" --> named user
* ~user --> "~user/" --> named user (slash added)
*
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on.
* ie. both UNIX and Windows prefixes are matched regardless.
*
*
* @param fileName the file name, null returns null
* @return the prefix of the file, null if invalid
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the result contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static String getPrefix(final String fileName) {
if (fileName == null) {
return null;
}
final int len = getPrefixLength(fileName);
if (len < 0) {
return null;
}
if (len > fileName.length()) {
requireNonNullChars(fileName);
return fileName + UNIX_NAME_SEPARATOR;
}
return requireNonNullChars(fileName.substring(0, len));
}
/**
* Returns the length of the file name prefix, such as {@code C:/} or {@code ~/}.
*
* This method will handle a file in either UNIX or Windows format.
*
*
* The prefix length includes the first slash in the full file name
* if applicable. Thus, it is possible that the length returned is greater
* than the length of the input string.
*
*
* Windows:
* a\b\c.txt --> 0 --> relative
* \a\b\c.txt --> 1 --> current drive absolute
* C:a\b\c.txt --> 2 --> drive relative
* C:\a\b\c.txt --> 3 --> absolute
* \\server\a\b\c.txt --> 9 --> UNC
* \\\a\b\c.txt --> -1 --> error
*
* Unix:
* a/b/c.txt --> 0 --> relative
* /a/b/c.txt --> 1 --> absolute
* ~/a/b/c.txt --> 2 --> current user
* ~ --> 2 --> current user (slash added)
* ~user/a/b/c.txt --> 6 --> named user
* ~user --> 6 --> named user (slash added)
* //server/a/b/c.txt --> 9
* ///a/b/c.txt --> -1 --> error
* C: --> 0 --> valid file name as only null character and / are reserved characters
*
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on.
* ie. both UNIX and Windows prefixes are matched regardless.
*
*
* Note that a leading // (or \\) is used to indicate a UNC name on Windows.
* These must be followed by a server name, so double-slashes are not collapsed
* to a single slash at the start of the file name.
*
*
* @param fileName the file name to find the prefix in, null returns -1
* @return the length of the prefix, -1 if invalid or null
*/
public static int getPrefixLength(final String fileName) {
if (fileName == null) {
return NOT_FOUND;
}
final int len = fileName.length();
if (len == 0) {
return 0;
}
char ch0 = fileName.charAt(0);
if (ch0 == ':') {
return NOT_FOUND;
}
if (len == 1) {
if (ch0 == '~') {
return 2; // return a length greater than the input
}
return isSeparator(ch0) ? 1 : 0;
}
if (ch0 == '~') {
int posUnix = fileName.indexOf(UNIX_NAME_SEPARATOR, 1);
int posWin = fileName.indexOf(WINDOWS_NAME_SEPARATOR, 1);
if (posUnix == NOT_FOUND && posWin == NOT_FOUND) {
return len + 1; // return a length greater than the input
}
posUnix = posUnix == NOT_FOUND ? posWin : posUnix;
posWin = posWin == NOT_FOUND ? posUnix : posWin;
return Math.min(posUnix, posWin) + 1;
}
final char ch1 = fileName.charAt(1);
if (ch1 == ':') {
ch0 = Character.toUpperCase(ch0);
if (ch0 >= 'A' && ch0 <= 'Z') {
if (len == 2 && !FileSystem.getCurrent().supportsDriveLetter()) {
return 0;
}
if (len == 2 || !isSeparator(fileName.charAt(2))) {
return 2;
}
return 3;
}
if (ch0 == UNIX_NAME_SEPARATOR) {
return 1;
}
return NOT_FOUND;
}
if (!isSeparator(ch0) || !isSeparator(ch1)) {
return isSeparator(ch0) ? 1 : 0;
}
int posUnix = fileName.indexOf(UNIX_NAME_SEPARATOR, 2);
int posWin = fileName.indexOf(WINDOWS_NAME_SEPARATOR, 2);
if (posUnix == NOT_FOUND && posWin == NOT_FOUND || posUnix == 2 || posWin == 2) {
return NOT_FOUND;
}
posUnix = posUnix == NOT_FOUND ? posWin : posUnix;
posWin = posWin == NOT_FOUND ? posUnix : posWin;
final int pos = Math.min(posUnix, posWin) + 1;
final String hostnamePart = fileName.substring(2, pos - 1);
return isValidHostName(hostnamePart) ? pos : NOT_FOUND;
}
/**
* Returns the index of the last extension separator character, which is a dot.
*
* This method also checks that there is no directory separator after the last dot. To do this it uses
* {@link #indexOfLastSeparator(String)} which will handle a file in either UNIX or Windows format.
*
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on, with the
* exception of a possible {@link IllegalArgumentException} on Windows (see below).
*
* Note: This method used to have a hidden problem for names like "foo.exe:bar.txt".
* In this case, the name wouldn't be the name of a file, but the identifier of an
* alternate data stream (bar.txt) on the file foo.exe. The method used to return
* ".txt" here, which would be misleading. Commons IO 2.7, and later versions, are throwing
* an {@link IllegalArgumentException} for names like this.
*
* @param fileName
* the file name to find the last extension separator in, null returns -1
* @return the index of the last extension separator character, or -1 if there is no such character
* @throws IllegalArgumentException Windows only: the file name parameter is, in fact,
* the identifier of an Alternate Data Stream, for example "foo.exe:bar.txt".
*/
public static int indexOfExtension(final String fileName) throws IllegalArgumentException {
if (fileName == null) {
return NOT_FOUND;
}
if (isSystemWindows()) {
// Special handling for NTFS ADS: Don't accept colon in the file name.
final int offset = fileName.indexOf(':', getAdsCriticalOffset(fileName));
if (offset != -1) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("NTFS ADS separator (':') in file name is forbidden.");
}
}
final int extensionPos = fileName.lastIndexOf(EXTENSION_SEPARATOR);
final int lastSeparator = indexOfLastSeparator(fileName);
return lastSeparator > extensionPos ? NOT_FOUND : extensionPos;
}
/**
* Returns the index of the last directory separator character.
*
* This method will handle a file in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The position of the last forward or backslash is returned.
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on.
*
* @param fileName the file name to find the last path separator in, null returns -1
* @return the index of the last separator character, or -1 if there
* is no such character
*/
public static int indexOfLastSeparator(final String fileName) {
if (fileName == null) {
return NOT_FOUND;
}
final int lastUnixPos = fileName.lastIndexOf(UNIX_NAME_SEPARATOR);
final int lastWindowsPos = fileName.lastIndexOf(WINDOWS_NAME_SEPARATOR);
return Math.max(lastUnixPos, lastWindowsPos);
}
private static boolean isEmpty(final String string) {
return string == null || string.isEmpty();
}
/**
* Checks whether the extension of the file name is one of those specified.
*
* This method obtains the extension as the textual part of the file name
* after the last dot. There must be no directory separator after the dot.
* The extension check is case-sensitive on all platforms.
*
* @param fileName the file name, null returns false
* @param extensions the extensions to check for, null checks for no extension
* @return true if the file name is one of the extensions
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the file name contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static boolean isExtension(final String fileName, final Collection extensions) {
if (fileName == null) {
return false;
}
requireNonNullChars(fileName);
if (extensions == null || extensions.isEmpty()) {
return indexOfExtension(fileName) == NOT_FOUND;
}
return extensions.contains(getExtension(fileName));
}
/**
* Checks whether the extension of the file name is that specified.
*
* This method obtains the extension as the textual part of the file name
* after the last dot. There must be no directory separator after the dot.
* The extension check is case-sensitive on all platforms.
*
* @param fileName the file name, null returns false
* @param extension the extension to check for, null or empty checks for no extension
* @return true if the file name has the specified extension
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the file name contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static boolean isExtension(final String fileName, final String extension) {
if (fileName == null) {
return false;
}
requireNonNullChars(fileName);
if (isEmpty(extension)) {
return indexOfExtension(fileName) == NOT_FOUND;
}
return getExtension(fileName).equals(extension);
}
/**
* Checks whether the extension of the file name is one of those specified.
*
* This method obtains the extension as the textual part of the file name
* after the last dot. There must be no directory separator after the dot.
* The extension check is case-sensitive on all platforms.
*
* @param fileName the file name, null returns false
* @param extensions the extensions to check for, null checks for no extension
* @return true if the file name is one of the extensions
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the file name contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static boolean isExtension(final String fileName, final String... extensions) {
if (fileName == null) {
return false;
}
requireNonNullChars(fileName);
if (extensions == null || extensions.length == 0) {
return indexOfExtension(fileName) == NOT_FOUND;
}
final String fileExt = getExtension(fileName);
return Stream.of(extensions).anyMatch(fileExt::equals);
}
/**
* Checks whether a given string represents a valid IPv4 address.
*
* @param name the name to validate
* @return true if the given name is a valid IPv4 address
*/
// mostly copied from org.apache.commons.validator.routines.InetAddressValidator#isValidInet4Address
private static boolean isIPv4Address(final String name) {
final Matcher m = IPV4_PATTERN.matcher(name);
if (!m.matches() || m.groupCount() != 4) {
return false;
}
// verify that address subgroups are legal
for (int i = 1; i <= 4; i++) {
final String ipSegment = m.group(i);
final int iIpSegment = Integer.parseInt(ipSegment);
if (iIpSegment > IPV4_MAX_OCTET_VALUE) {
return false;
}
if (ipSegment.length() > 1 && ipSegment.startsWith("0")) {
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
// copied from org.apache.commons.validator.routines.InetAddressValidator#isValidInet6Address
/**
* Checks whether a given string represents a valid IPv6 address.
*
* @param inet6Address the name to validate
* @return true if the given name is a valid IPv6 address
*/
private static boolean isIPv6Address(final String inet6Address) {
final boolean containsCompressedZeroes = inet6Address.contains("::");
if (containsCompressedZeroes && inet6Address.indexOf("::") != inet6Address.lastIndexOf("::")) {
return false;
}
if (inet6Address.startsWith(":") && !inet6Address.startsWith("::")
|| inet6Address.endsWith(":") && !inet6Address.endsWith("::")) {
return false;
}
String[] octets = inet6Address.split(":");
if (containsCompressedZeroes) {
final List octetList = new ArrayList<>(Arrays.asList(octets));
if (inet6Address.endsWith("::")) {
// String.split() drops ending empty segments
octetList.add("");
} else if (inet6Address.startsWith("::") && !octetList.isEmpty()) {
octetList.remove(0);
}
octets = octetList.toArray(EMPTY_STRING_ARRAY);
}
if (octets.length > IPV6_MAX_HEX_GROUPS) {
return false;
}
int validOctets = 0;
int emptyOctets = 0; // consecutive empty chunks
for (int index = 0; index < octets.length; index++) {
final String octet = octets[index];
if (octet.isEmpty()) {
emptyOctets++;
if (emptyOctets > 1) {
return false;
}
} else {
emptyOctets = 0;
// Is last chunk an IPv4 address?
if (index == octets.length - 1 && octet.contains(".")) {
if (!isIPv4Address(octet)) {
return false;
}
validOctets += 2;
continue;
}
if (octet.length() > IPV6_MAX_HEX_DIGITS_PER_GROUP) {
return false;
}
final int octetInt;
try {
octetInt = Integer.parseInt(octet, BASE_16);
} catch (final NumberFormatException e) {
return false;
}
if (octetInt < 0 || octetInt > MAX_UNSIGNED_SHORT) {
return false;
}
}
validOctets++;
}
return validOctets <= IPV6_MAX_HEX_GROUPS && (validOctets >= IPV6_MAX_HEX_GROUPS || containsCompressedZeroes);
}
/**
* Checks whether a given string is a valid host name according to
* RFC 3986 - not accepting IP addresses.
*
* @see "https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-3.2.2"
* @param name the hostname to validate
* @return true if the given name is a valid host name
*/
private static boolean isRFC3986HostName(final String name) {
final String[] parts = name.split("\\.", -1);
for (int i = 0; i < parts.length; i++) {
if (parts[i].isEmpty()) {
// trailing dot is legal, otherwise we've hit a .. sequence
return i == parts.length - 1;
}
if (!REG_NAME_PART_PATTERN.matcher(parts[i]).matches()) {
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
/**
* Checks if the character is a separator.
*
* @param ch the character to check
* @return true if it is a separator character
*/
private static boolean isSeparator(final char ch) {
return ch == UNIX_NAME_SEPARATOR || ch == WINDOWS_NAME_SEPARATOR;
}
/**
* Determines if Windows file system is in use.
*
* @return true if the system is Windows
*/
static boolean isSystemWindows() {
return SYSTEM_NAME_SEPARATOR == WINDOWS_NAME_SEPARATOR;
}
/**
* Checks whether a given string is a valid host name according to
* RFC 3986.
*
* Accepted are IP addresses (v4 and v6) as well as what the
* RFC calls a "reg-name". Percent encoded names don't seem to be
* valid names in UNC paths.
*
* @see "https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-3.2.2"
* @param name the hostname to validate
* @return true if the given name is a valid host name
*/
private static boolean isValidHostName(final String name) {
return isIPv6Address(name) || isRFC3986HostName(name);
}
/**
* Normalizes a path, removing double and single dot path steps.
*
* This method normalizes a path to a standard format.
* The input may contain separators in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The output will contain separators in the format of the system.
*
* A trailing slash will be retained.
* A double slash will be merged to a single slash (but UNC names are handled).
* A single dot path segment will be removed.
* A double dot will cause that path segment and the one before to be removed.
* If the double dot has no parent path segment, {@code null} is returned.
*
* The output will be the same on both UNIX and Windows except
* for the separator character.
*
* /foo// --> /foo/
* /foo/./ --> /foo/
* /foo/../bar --> /bar
* /foo/../bar/ --> /bar/
* /foo/../bar/../baz --> /baz
* //foo//./bar --> //foo/bar
* /../ --> null
* ../foo --> null
* foo/bar/.. --> foo/
* foo/../../bar --> null
* foo/../bar --> bar
* //server/foo/../bar --> //server/bar
* //server/../bar --> null
* C:\foo\..\bar --> C:\bar
* C:\..\bar --> null
* ~/foo/../bar/ --> ~/bar/
* ~/../bar --> null
*
* (Note the file separator will be correct for Windows/Unix.)
*
* @param fileName the file name to normalize, null returns null
* @return the normalized fileName, or null if invalid
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the file name contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static String normalize(final String fileName) {
return doNormalize(fileName, SYSTEM_NAME_SEPARATOR, true);
}
/**
* Normalizes a path, removing double and single dot path steps.
*
* This method normalizes a path to a standard format.
* The input may contain separators in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The output will contain separators in the format specified.
*
* A trailing slash will be retained.
* A double slash will be merged to a single slash (but UNC names are handled).
* A single dot path segment will be removed.
* A double dot will cause that path segment and the one before to be removed.
* If the double dot has no parent path segment to work with, {@code null}
* is returned.
*
* The output will be the same on both UNIX and Windows except
* for the separator character.
*
* /foo// --> /foo/
* /foo/./ --> /foo/
* /foo/../bar --> /bar
* /foo/../bar/ --> /bar/
* /foo/../bar/../baz --> /baz
* //foo//./bar --> /foo/bar
* /../ --> null
* ../foo --> null
* foo/bar/.. --> foo/
* foo/../../bar --> null
* foo/../bar --> bar
* //server/foo/../bar --> //server/bar
* //server/../bar --> null
* C:\foo\..\bar --> C:\bar
* C:\..\bar --> null
* ~/foo/../bar/ --> ~/bar/
* ~/../bar --> null
*
* The output will be the same on both UNIX and Windows including
* the separator character.
*
* @param fileName the file name to normalize, null returns null
* @param unixSeparator {@code true} if a UNIX separator should
* be used or {@code false} if a Windows separator should be used.
* @return the normalized fileName, or null if invalid
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the file name contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
* @since 2.0
*/
public static String normalize(final String fileName, final boolean unixSeparator) {
return doNormalize(fileName, toSeparator(unixSeparator), true);
}
/**
* Normalizes a path, removing double and single dot path steps,
* and removing any final directory separator.
*
* This method normalizes a path to a standard format.
* The input may contain separators in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The output will contain separators in the format of the system.
*
* A trailing slash will be removed.
* A double slash will be merged to a single slash (but UNC names are handled).
* A single dot path segment will be removed.
* A double dot will cause that path segment and the one before to be removed.
* If the double dot has no parent path segment to work with, {@code null}
* is returned.
*
* The output will be the same on both UNIX and Windows except
* for the separator character.
*
* /foo// --> /foo
* /foo/./ --> /foo
* /foo/../bar --> /bar
* /foo/../bar/ --> /bar
* /foo/../bar/../baz --> /baz
* //foo//./bar --> /foo/bar
* /../ --> null
* ../foo --> null
* foo/bar/.. --> foo
* foo/../../bar --> null
* foo/../bar --> bar
* //server/foo/../bar --> //server/bar
* //server/../bar --> null
* C:\foo\..\bar --> C:\bar
* C:\..\bar --> null
* ~/foo/../bar/ --> ~/bar
* ~/../bar --> null
*
* (Note the file separator returned will be correct for Windows/Unix)
*
* @param fileName the file name to normalize, null returns null
* @return the normalized fileName, or null if invalid
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the file name contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static String normalizeNoEndSeparator(final String fileName) {
return doNormalize(fileName, SYSTEM_NAME_SEPARATOR, false);
}
/**
* Normalizes a path, removing double and single dot path steps,
* and removing any final directory separator.
*
* This method normalizes a path to a standard format.
* The input may contain separators in either UNIX or Windows format.
* The output will contain separators in the format specified.
*
* A trailing slash will be removed.
* A double slash will be merged to a single slash (but UNC names are handled).
* A single dot path segment will be removed.
* A double dot will cause that path segment and the one before to be removed.
* If the double dot has no parent path segment to work with, {@code null}
* is returned.
*
* The output will be the same on both UNIX and Windows including
* the separator character.
*
* /foo// --> /foo
* /foo/./ --> /foo
* /foo/../bar --> /bar
* /foo/../bar/ --> /bar
* /foo/../bar/../baz --> /baz
* //foo//./bar --> /foo/bar
* /../ --> null
* ../foo --> null
* foo/bar/.. --> foo
* foo/../../bar --> null
* foo/../bar --> bar
* //server/foo/../bar --> //server/bar
* //server/../bar --> null
* C:\foo\..\bar --> C:\bar
* C:\..\bar --> null
* ~/foo/../bar/ --> ~/bar
* ~/../bar --> null
*
*
* @param fileName the file name to normalize, null returns null
* @param unixSeparator {@code true} if a UNIX separator should
* be used or {@code false} if a Windows separator should be used.
* @return the normalized fileName, or null if invalid
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the file name contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
* @since 2.0
*/
public static String normalizeNoEndSeparator(final String fileName, final boolean unixSeparator) {
return doNormalize(fileName, toSeparator(unixSeparator), false);
}
/**
* Removes the extension from a fileName.
*
* This method returns the textual part of the file name before the last dot.
* There must be no directory separator after the dot.
*
* foo.txt --> foo
* .txt --> "" (empty string)
* a\b\c.jpg --> a\b\c
* /a/b/c.jpg --> /a/b/c
* a\b\c --> a\b\c
* a.b\c --> a.b\c
*
*
* The output will be the same irrespective of the machine that the code is running on.
*
* @param fileName the file name, null returns null
* @return the file name minus the extension
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the file name contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
public static String removeExtension(final String fileName) {
if (fileName == null) {
return null;
}
requireNonNullChars(fileName);
final int index = indexOfExtension(fileName);
if (index == NOT_FOUND) {
return fileName;
}
return fileName.substring(0, index);
}
/**
* Checks the input for null characters ({@code U+0000}), a sign of unsanitized data being passed to file level functions.
*
* This may be used to defend against poison byte attacks.
*
* @param path the path to check
* @return The input
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if path contains the null character ({@code U+0000})
*/
private static String requireNonNullChars(final String path) {
if (path.indexOf(0) >= 0) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException(
"Null character present in file/path name. There are no known legitimate use cases for such data, but several injection attacks may use it");
}
return path;
}
/**
* Converts all separators to the system separator.
*
* @param path the path to be changed, null ignored.
* @return the updated path.
*/
public static String separatorsToSystem(final String path) {
return FileSystem.getCurrent().normalizeSeparators(path);
}
/**
* Converts all separators to the UNIX separator of forward slash.
*
* @param path the path to be changed, null ignored.
* @return the new path.
*/
public static String separatorsToUnix(final String path) {
return FileSystem.LINUX.normalizeSeparators(path);
}
/**
* Converts all separators to the Windows separator of backslash.
*
* @param path the path to be changed, null ignored.
* @return the updated path.
*/
public static String separatorsToWindows(final String path) {
return FileSystem.WINDOWS.normalizeSeparators(path);
}
/**
* Splits a string into a number of tokens.
* The text is split by '?' and '*'.
* Where multiple '*' occur consecutively they are collapsed into a single '*'.
*
* @param text the text to split
* @return the array of tokens, never null
*/
static String[] splitOnTokens(final String text) {
// used by wildcardMatch
// package level so a unit test may run on this
if (text.indexOf('?') == NOT_FOUND && text.indexOf('*') == NOT_FOUND) {
return new String[] { text };
}
final char[] array = text.toCharArray();
final ArrayList list = new ArrayList<>();
final StringBuilder buffer = new StringBuilder();
char prevChar = 0;
for (final char ch : array) {
if (ch == '?' || ch == '*') {
if (buffer.length() != 0) {
list.add(buffer.toString());
buffer.setLength(0);
}
if (ch == '?') {
list.add("?");
} else if (prevChar != '*') {// ch == '*' here; check if previous char was '*'
list.add("*");
}
} else {
buffer.append(ch);
}
prevChar = ch;
}
if (buffer.length() != 0) {
list.add(buffer.toString());
}
return list.toArray(EMPTY_STRING_ARRAY);
}
/**
* Returns '/' if given true, '\\' otherwise.
*
* @param unixSeparator which separator to return.
* @return '/' if given true, '\\' otherwise.
*/
private static char toSeparator(final boolean unixSeparator) {
return unixSeparator ? UNIX_NAME_SEPARATOR : WINDOWS_NAME_SEPARATOR;
}
/**
* Checks a fileName to see if it matches the specified wildcard matcher,
* always testing case-sensitive.
*
* The wildcard matcher uses the characters '?' and '*' to represent a
* single or multiple (zero or more) wildcard characters.
* This is the same as often found on DOS/Unix command lines.
* The check is case-sensitive always.
*
* wildcardMatch("c.txt", "*.txt") --> true
* wildcardMatch("c.txt", "*.jpg") --> false
* wildcardMatch("a/b/c.txt", "a/b/*") --> true
* wildcardMatch("c.txt", "*.???") --> true
* wildcardMatch("c.txt", "*.????") --> false
*
* N.B. the sequence "*?" does not work properly at present in match strings.
*
* @param fileName the file name to match on
* @param wildcardMatcher the wildcard string to match against
* @return true if the file name matches the wildcard string
* @see IOCase#SENSITIVE
*/
public static boolean wildcardMatch(final String fileName, final String wildcardMatcher) {
return wildcardMatch(fileName, wildcardMatcher, IOCase.SENSITIVE);
}
/**
* Checks a fileName to see if it matches the specified wildcard matcher
* allowing control over case-sensitivity.
*
* The wildcard matcher uses the characters '?' and '*' to represent a
* single or multiple (zero or more) wildcard characters.
* N.B. the sequence "*?" does not work properly at present in match strings.
*
* @param fileName the file name to match on
* @param wildcardMatcher the wildcard string to match against
* @param ioCase what case sensitivity rule to use, null means case-sensitive
* @return true if the file name matches the wildcard string
* @since 1.3
*/
public static boolean wildcardMatch(final String fileName, final String wildcardMatcher, IOCase ioCase) {
if (fileName == null && wildcardMatcher == null) {
return true;
}
if (fileName == null || wildcardMatcher == null) {
return false;
}
ioCase = IOCase.value(ioCase, IOCase.SENSITIVE);
final String[] wcs = splitOnTokens(wildcardMatcher);
boolean anyChars = false;
int textIdx = 0;
int wcsIdx = 0;
final Deque backtrack = new ArrayDeque<>(wcs.length);
// loop around a backtrack stack, to handle complex * matching
do {
if (!backtrack.isEmpty()) {
final int[] array = backtrack.pop();
wcsIdx = array[0];
textIdx = array[1];
anyChars = true;
}
// loop whilst tokens and text left to process
while (wcsIdx < wcs.length) {
if (wcs[wcsIdx].equals("?")) {
// ? so move to next text char
textIdx++;
if (textIdx > fileName.length()) {
break;
}
anyChars = false;
} else if (wcs[wcsIdx].equals("*")) {
// set any chars status
anyChars = true;
if (wcsIdx == wcs.length - 1) {
textIdx = fileName.length();
}
} else {
// matching text token
if (anyChars) {
// any chars then try to locate text token
textIdx = ioCase.checkIndexOf(fileName, textIdx, wcs[wcsIdx]);
if (textIdx == NOT_FOUND) {
// token not found
break;
}
final int repeat = ioCase.checkIndexOf(fileName, textIdx + 1, wcs[wcsIdx]);
if (repeat >= 0) {
backtrack.push(new int[] {wcsIdx, repeat});
}
} else if (!ioCase.checkRegionMatches(fileName, textIdx, wcs[wcsIdx])) {
// matching from current position
// couldn't match token
break;
}
// matched text token, move text index to end of matched token
textIdx += wcs[wcsIdx].length();
anyChars = false;
}
wcsIdx++;
}
// full match
if (wcsIdx == wcs.length && textIdx == fileName.length()) {
return true;
}
} while (!backtrack.isEmpty());
return false;
}
/**
* Checks a fileName to see if it matches the specified wildcard matcher
* using the case rules of the system.
*
* The wildcard matcher uses the characters '?' and '*' to represent a
* single or multiple (zero or more) wildcard characters.
* This is the same as often found on DOS/Unix command lines.
* The check is case-sensitive on UNIX and case-insensitive on Windows.
*
* wildcardMatch("c.txt", "*.txt") --> true
* wildcardMatch("c.txt", "*.jpg") --> false
* wildcardMatch("a/b/c.txt", "a/b/*") --> true
* wildcardMatch("c.txt", "*.???") --> true
* wildcardMatch("c.txt", "*.????") --> false
*
* N.B. the sequence "*?" does not work properly at present in match strings.
*
* @param fileName the file name to match on
* @param wildcardMatcher the wildcard string to match against
* @return true if the file name matches the wildcard string
* @see IOCase#SYSTEM
*/
public static boolean wildcardMatchOnSystem(final String fileName, final String wildcardMatcher) {
return wildcardMatch(fileName, wildcardMatcher, IOCase.SYSTEM);
}
/**
* Instances should NOT be constructed in standard programming.
*
* @deprecated TODO Make private in 3.0.
*/
@Deprecated
public FilenameUtils() {
// empty
}
}