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Current Path : /proc/328295/root/usr/share/perl5/Archive/ |
Current File : //proc/328295/root/usr/share/perl5/Archive/Extract.pm |
package Archive::Extract; use strict; use Cwd qw[cwd chdir]; use Carp qw[carp]; use IPC::Cmd qw[run can_run]; use FileHandle; use File::Path qw[mkpath]; use File::Spec; use File::Basename qw[dirname basename]; use Params::Check qw[check]; use Module::Load::Conditional qw[can_load check_install]; use Locale::Maketext::Simple Style => 'gettext'; ### solaris has silly /bin/tar output ### use constant ON_SOLARIS => $^O eq 'solaris' ? 1 : 0; use constant FILE_EXISTS => sub { -e $_[0] ? 1 : 0 }; ### VMS may require quoting upper case command options use constant ON_VMS => $^O eq 'VMS' ? 1 : 0; ### Windows needs special treatment of Tar options use constant ON_WIN32 => $^O eq 'MSWin32' ? 1 : 0; ### we can't use this extraction method, because of missing ### modules/binaries: use constant METHOD_NA => []; ### If these are changed, update @TYPES and the new() POD use constant TGZ => 'tgz'; use constant TAR => 'tar'; use constant GZ => 'gz'; use constant ZIP => 'zip'; use constant BZ2 => 'bz2'; use constant TBZ => 'tbz'; use constant Z => 'Z'; use constant LZMA => 'lzma'; use vars qw[$VERSION $PREFER_BIN $PROGRAMS $WARN $DEBUG $_ALLOW_BIN $_ALLOW_PURE_PERL $_ALLOW_TAR_ITER ]; $VERSION = '0.38'; $PREFER_BIN = 0; $WARN = 1; $DEBUG = 0; $_ALLOW_PURE_PERL = 1; # allow pure perl extractors $_ALLOW_BIN = 1; # allow binary extractors $_ALLOW_TAR_ITER = 1; # try to use Archive::Tar->iter if available # same as all constants my @Types = ( TGZ, TAR, GZ, ZIP, BZ2, TBZ, Z, LZMA ); local $Params::Check::VERBOSE = $Params::Check::VERBOSE = 1; =pod =head1 NAME Archive::Extract - A generic archive extracting mechanism =head1 SYNOPSIS use Archive::Extract; ### build an Archive::Extract object ### my $ae = Archive::Extract->new( archive => 'foo.tgz' ); ### extract to cwd() ### my $ok = $ae->extract; ### extract to /tmp ### my $ok = $ae->extract( to => '/tmp' ); ### what if something went wrong? my $ok = $ae->extract or die $ae->error; ### files from the archive ### my $files = $ae->files; ### dir that was extracted to ### my $outdir = $ae->extract_path; ### quick check methods ### $ae->is_tar # is it a .tar file? $ae->is_tgz # is it a .tar.gz or .tgz file? $ae->is_gz; # is it a .gz file? $ae->is_zip; # is it a .zip file? $ae->is_bz2; # is it a .bz2 file? $ae->is_tbz; # is it a .tar.bz2 or .tbz file? $ae->is_lzma; # is it a .lzma file? ### absolute path to the archive you provided ### $ae->archive; ### commandline tools, if found ### $ae->bin_tar # path to /bin/tar, if found $ae->bin_gzip # path to /bin/gzip, if found $ae->bin_unzip # path to /bin/unzip, if found $ae->bin_bunzip2 # path to /bin/bunzip2 if found $ae->bin_unlzma # path to /bin/unlzma if found =head1 DESCRIPTION Archive::Extract is a generic archive extraction mechanism. It allows you to extract any archive file of the type .tar, .tar.gz, .gz, .Z, tar.bz2, .tbz, .bz2, .zip or .lzma without having to worry how it does so, or use different interfaces for each type by using either perl modules, or commandline tools on your system. See the C<HOW IT WORKS> section further down for details. =cut ### see what /bin/programs are available ### $PROGRAMS = {}; for my $pgm (qw[tar unzip gzip bunzip2 uncompress unlzma]) { $PROGRAMS->{$pgm} = can_run($pgm); } ### mapping from types to extractor methods ### my $Mapping = { # binary program # pure perl module is_tgz => { bin => '_untar_bin', pp => '_untar_at' }, is_tar => { bin => '_untar_bin', pp => '_untar_at' }, is_gz => { bin => '_gunzip_bin', pp => '_gunzip_cz' }, is_zip => { bin => '_unzip_bin', pp => '_unzip_az' }, is_tbz => { bin => '_untar_bin', pp => '_untar_at' }, is_bz2 => { bin => '_bunzip2_bin', pp => '_bunzip2_bz2'}, is_Z => { bin => '_uncompress_bin', pp => '_gunzip_cz' }, is_lzma => { bin => '_unlzma_bin', pp => '_unlzma_cz' }, }; { ### use subs so we re-generate array refs etc for the no-overide flags ### if we don't, then we reuse the same arrayref, meaning objects store ### previous errors my $tmpl = { archive => sub { { required => 1, allow => FILE_EXISTS } }, type => sub { { default => '', allow => [ @Types ] } }, _error_msg => sub { { no_override => 1, default => [] } }, _error_msg_long => sub { { no_override => 1, default => [] } }, }; ### build accesssors ### for my $method( keys %$tmpl, qw[_extractor _gunzip_to files extract_path], ) { no strict 'refs'; *$method = sub { my $self = shift; $self->{$method} = $_[0] if @_; return $self->{$method}; } } =head1 METHODS =head2 $ae = Archive::Extract->new(archive => '/path/to/archive',[type => TYPE]) Creates a new C<Archive::Extract> object based on the archive file you passed it. Automatically determines the type of archive based on the extension, but you can override that by explicitly providing the C<type> argument. Valid values for C<type> are: =over 4 =item tar Standard tar files, as produced by, for example, C</bin/tar>. Corresponds to a C<.tar> suffix. =item tgz Gzip compressed tar files, as produced by, for example C</bin/tar -z>. Corresponds to a C<.tgz> or C<.tar.gz> suffix. =item gz Gzip compressed file, as produced by, for example C</bin/gzip>. Corresponds to a C<.gz> suffix. =item Z Lempel-Ziv compressed file, as produced by, for example C</bin/compress>. Corresponds to a C<.Z> suffix. =item zip Zip compressed file, as produced by, for example C</bin/zip>. Corresponds to a C<.zip>, C<.jar> or C<.par> suffix. =item bz2 Bzip2 compressed file, as produced by, for example, C</bin/bzip2>. Corresponds to a C<.bz2> suffix. =item tbz Bzip2 compressed tar file, as produced by, for exmample C</bin/tar -j>. Corresponds to a C<.tbz> or C<.tar.bz2> suffix. =item lzma Lzma compressed file, as produced by C</bin/lzma>. Corresponds to a C<.lzma> suffix. =back Returns a C<Archive::Extract> object on success, or false on failure. =cut ### constructor ### sub new { my $class = shift; my %hash = @_; ### see above why we use subs here and generate the template; ### it's basically to not re-use arrayrefs my %utmpl = map { $_ => $tmpl->{$_}->() } keys %$tmpl; my $parsed = check( \%utmpl, \%hash ) or return; ### make sure we have an absolute path ### my $ar = $parsed->{archive} = File::Spec->rel2abs( $parsed->{archive} ); ### figure out the type, if it wasn't already specified ### unless ( $parsed->{type} ) { $parsed->{type} = $ar =~ /.+?\.(?:tar\.gz|tgz)$/i ? TGZ : $ar =~ /.+?\.gz$/i ? GZ : $ar =~ /.+?\.tar$/i ? TAR : $ar =~ /.+?\.(zip|jar|par)$/i ? ZIP : $ar =~ /.+?\.(?:tbz2?|tar\.bz2?)$/i ? TBZ : $ar =~ /.+?\.bz2$/i ? BZ2 : $ar =~ /.+?\.Z$/ ? Z : $ar =~ /.+?\.lzma$/ ? LZMA : ''; } bless $parsed, $class; ### don't know what type of file it is ### XXX this *has* to be an object call, not a package call return $parsed->_error(loc("Cannot determine file type for '%1'", $parsed->{archive} )) unless $parsed->{type}; return $parsed; } } =head2 $ae->extract( [to => '/output/path'] ) Extracts the archive represented by the C<Archive::Extract> object to the path of your choice as specified by the C<to> argument. Defaults to C<cwd()>. Since C<.gz> files never hold a directory, but only a single file; if the C<to> argument is an existing directory, the file is extracted there, with its C<.gz> suffix stripped. If the C<to> argument is not an existing directory, the C<to> argument is understood to be a filename, if the archive type is C<gz>. In the case that you did not specify a C<to> argument, the output file will be the name of the archive file, stripped from its C<.gz> suffix, in the current working directory. C<extract> will try a pure perl solution first, and then fall back to commandline tools if they are available. See the C<GLOBAL VARIABLES> section below on how to alter this behaviour. It will return true on success, and false on failure. On success, it will also set the follow attributes in the object: =over 4 =item $ae->extract_path This is the directory that the files where extracted to. =item $ae->files This is an array ref with the paths of all the files in the archive, relative to the C<to> argument you specified. To get the full path to an extracted file, you would use: File::Spec->catfile( $to, $ae->files->[0] ); Note that all files from a tar archive will be in unix format, as per the tar specification. =back =cut sub extract { my $self = shift; my %hash = @_; ### reset error messages $self->_error_msg( [] ); $self->_error_msg_long( [] ); my $to; my $tmpl = { to => { default => '.', store => \$to } }; check( $tmpl, \%hash ) or return; ### so 'to' could be a file or a dir, depending on whether it's a .gz ### file, or basically anything else. ### so, check that, then act accordingly. ### set an accessor specifically so _gunzip can know what file to extract ### to. my $dir; { ### a foo.gz file if( $self->is_gz or $self->is_bz2 or $self->is_Z or $self->is_lzma ) { my $cp = $self->archive; $cp =~ s/\.(?:gz|bz2?|Z|lzma)$//i; ### to is a dir? if ( -d $to ) { $dir = $to; $self->_gunzip_to( basename($cp) ); ### then it's a filename } else { $dir = dirname($to); $self->_gunzip_to( basename($to) ); } ### not a foo.gz file } else { $dir = $to; } } ### make the dir if it doesn't exist ### unless( -d $dir ) { eval { mkpath( $dir ) }; return $self->_error(loc("Could not create path '%1': %2", $dir, $@)) if $@; } ### get the current dir, to restore later ### my $cwd = cwd(); my $ok = 1; EXTRACT: { ### chdir to the target dir ### unless( chdir $dir ) { $self->_error(loc("Could not chdir to '%1': %2", $dir, $!)); $ok = 0; last EXTRACT; } ### set files to an empty array ref, so there's always an array ### ref IN the accessor, to avoid errors like: ### Can't use an undefined value as an ARRAY reference at ### ../lib/Archive/Extract.pm line 742. (rt #19815) $self->files( [] ); ### find out the dispatch methods needed for this type of ### archive. Do a $self->is_XXX to figure out the type, then ### get the hashref with bin + pure perl dispatchers. my ($map) = map { $Mapping->{$_} } grep { $self->$_ } keys %$Mapping; ### add pure perl extractor if allowed & add bin extractor if allowed my @methods; push @methods, $map->{'pp'} if $_ALLOW_PURE_PERL; push @methods, $map->{'bin'} if $_ALLOW_BIN; ### reverse it if we prefer bin extractors @methods = reverse @methods if $PREFER_BIN; my($na, $fail); for my $method (@methods) { print "# Extracting with ->$method\n" if $DEBUG; my $rv = $self->$method; ### a positive extraction if( $rv and $rv ne METHOD_NA ) { print "# Extraction succeeded\n" if $DEBUG; $self->_extractor($method); last; ### method is not available } elsif ( $rv and $rv eq METHOD_NA ) { print "# Extraction method not available\n" if $DEBUG; $na++; } else { print "# Extraction method failed\n" if $DEBUG; $fail++; } } ### warn something went wrong if we didn't get an extractor unless( $self->_extractor ) { my $diag = $fail ? loc("Extract failed due to errors") : $na ? loc("Extract failed; no extractors available") : ''; $self->_error($diag); $ok = 0; } } ### and chdir back ### unless( chdir $cwd ) { $self->_error(loc("Could not chdir back to start dir '%1': %2'", $cwd, $!)); } return $ok; } =pod =head1 ACCESSORS =head2 $ae->error([BOOL]) Returns the last encountered error as string. Pass it a true value to get the C<Carp::longmess()> output instead. =head2 $ae->extract_path This is the directory the archive got extracted to. See C<extract()> for details. =head2 $ae->files This is an array ref holding all the paths from the archive. See C<extract()> for details. =head2 $ae->archive This is the full path to the archive file represented by this C<Archive::Extract> object. =head2 $ae->type This is the type of archive represented by this C<Archive::Extract> object. See accessors below for an easier way to use this. See the C<new()> method for details. =head2 $ae->types Returns a list of all known C<types> for C<Archive::Extract>'s C<new> method. =cut sub types { return @Types } =head2 $ae->is_tgz Returns true if the file is of type C<.tar.gz>. See the C<new()> method for details. =head2 $ae->is_tar Returns true if the file is of type C<.tar>. See the C<new()> method for details. =head2 $ae->is_gz Returns true if the file is of type C<.gz>. See the C<new()> method for details. =head2 $ae->is_Z Returns true if the file is of type C<.Z>. See the C<new()> method for details. =head2 $ae->is_zip Returns true if the file is of type C<.zip>. See the C<new()> method for details. =head2 $ae->is_lzma Returns true if the file is of type C<.lzma>. See the C<new()> method for details. =cut ### quick check methods ### sub is_tgz { return $_[0]->type eq TGZ } sub is_tar { return $_[0]->type eq TAR } sub is_gz { return $_[0]->type eq GZ } sub is_zip { return $_[0]->type eq ZIP } sub is_tbz { return $_[0]->type eq TBZ } sub is_bz2 { return $_[0]->type eq BZ2 } sub is_Z { return $_[0]->type eq Z } sub is_lzma { return $_[0]->type eq LZMA } =pod =head2 $ae->bin_tar Returns the full path to your tar binary, if found. =head2 $ae->bin_gzip Returns the full path to your gzip binary, if found =head2 $ae->bin_unzip Returns the full path to your unzip binary, if found =head2 $ae->bin_unlzma Returns the full path to your unlzma binary, if found =cut ### paths to commandline tools ### sub bin_gzip { return $PROGRAMS->{'gzip'} if $PROGRAMS->{'gzip'} } sub bin_unzip { return $PROGRAMS->{'unzip'} if $PROGRAMS->{'unzip'} } sub bin_tar { return $PROGRAMS->{'tar'} if $PROGRAMS->{'tar'} } sub bin_bunzip2 { return $PROGRAMS->{'bunzip2'} if $PROGRAMS->{'bunzip2'} } sub bin_uncompress { return $PROGRAMS->{'uncompress'} if $PROGRAMS->{'uncompress'} } sub bin_unlzma { return $PROGRAMS->{'unlzma'} if $PROGRAMS->{'unlzma'} } =head2 $bool = $ae->have_old_bunzip2 Older versions of C</bin/bunzip2>, from before the C<bunzip2 1.0> release, require all archive names to end in C<.bz2> or it will not extract them. This method checks if you have a recent version of C<bunzip2> that allows any extension, or an older one that doesn't. =cut sub have_old_bunzip2 { my $self = shift; ### no bunzip2? no old bunzip2 either :) return unless $self->bin_bunzip2; ### if we can't run this, we can't be sure if it's too old or not ### XXX stupid stupid stupid bunzip2 doesn't understand --version ### is not a request to extract data: ### $ bunzip2 --version ### bzip2, a block-sorting file compressor. Version 1.0.2, 30-Dec-2001. ### [...] ### bunzip2: I won't read compressed data from a terminal. ### bunzip2: For help, type: `bunzip2 --help'. ### $ echo $? ### 1 ### HATEFUL! ### double hateful: bunzip2 --version also hangs if input is a pipe ### See #32370: Archive::Extract will hang if stdin is a pipe [+PATCH] ### So, we have to provide *another* argument which is a fake filename, ### just so it wont try to read from stdin to print its version.. ### *sigh* ### Even if the file exists, it won't clobber or change it. my $buffer; scalar run( command => [$self->bin_bunzip2, '--version', 'NoSuchFile'], verbose => 0, buffer => \$buffer ); ### no output return unless $buffer; my ($version) = $buffer =~ /version \s+ (\d+)/ix; return 1 if $version < 1; return; } ################################# # # Untar code # ################################# ### annoying issue with (gnu) tar on win32, as illustrated by this ### bug: https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=40138 ### which shows that (gnu) tar will interpret a file name with a : ### in it as a remote file name, so C:\tmp\foo.txt is interpreted ### as a remote shell, and the extract fails. { my @ExtraTarFlags; if( ON_WIN32 and my $cmd = __PACKAGE__->bin_tar ) { ### if this is gnu tar we are running, we need to use --force-local push @ExtraTarFlags, '--force-local' if `$cmd --version` =~ /gnu tar/i; } ### use /bin/tar to extract ### sub _untar_bin { my $self = shift; ### check for /bin/tar ### ### check for /bin/gzip if we need it ### ### if any of the binaries are not available, return NA { my $diag = not $self->bin_tar ? loc("No '%1' program found", '/bin/tar') : $self->is_tgz && !$self->bin_gzip ? loc("No '%1' program found", '/bin/gzip') : $self->is_tbz && !$self->bin_bunzip2 ? loc("No '%1' program found", '/bin/bunzip2') : ''; if( $diag ) { $self->_error( $diag ); return METHOD_NA; } } ### XXX figure out how to make IPC::Run do this in one call -- ### currently i don't know how to get output of a command after a pipe ### trapped in a scalar. Mailed barries about this 5th of june 2004. ### see what command we should run, based on whether ### it's a .tgz or .tar ### XXX solaris tar and bsdtar are having different outputs ### depending whether you run with -x or -t ### compensate for this insanity by running -t first, then -x { my $cmd = $self->is_tgz ? [$self->bin_gzip, '-cdf', $self->archive, '|', $self->bin_tar, '-tf', '-'] : $self->is_tbz ? [$self->bin_bunzip2, '-cd', $self->archive, '|', $self->bin_tar, '-tf', '-'] : [$self->bin_tar, @ExtraTarFlags, '-tf', $self->archive]; ### run the command ### newer versions of 'tar' (1.21 and up) now print record size ### to STDERR as well if v OR t is given (used to be both). This ### is a 'feature' according to the changelog, so we must now only ### inspect STDOUT, otherwise, failures like these occur: ### nntp.perl.org/group/perl.cpan.testers/2009/02/msg3230366.html my $buffer = ''; my @out = run( command => $cmd, buffer => \$buffer, verbose => $DEBUG ); ### command was unsuccessful unless( $out[0] ) { return $self->_error(loc( "Error listing contents of archive '%1': %2", $self->archive, $buffer )); } ### no buffers available? if( !IPC::Cmd->can_capture_buffer and !$buffer ) { $self->_error( $self->_no_buffer_files( $self->archive ) ); } else { ### if we're on solaris we /might/ be using /bin/tar, which has ### a weird output format... we might also be using ### /usr/local/bin/tar, which is gnu tar, which is perfectly ### fine... so we have to do some guessing here =/ my @files = map { chomp; !ON_SOLARIS ? $_ : (m|^ x \s+ # 'xtract' -- sigh (.+?), # the actual file name \s+ [\d,.]+ \s bytes, \s+ [\d,.]+ \s tape \s blocks |x ? $1 : $_); ### only STDOUT, see above. Sometims, extra whitespace ### is present, so make sure we only pick lines with ### a length } grep { length } map { split $/, $_ } @{$out[3]}; ### store the files that are in the archive ### $self->files(\@files); } } ### now actually extract it ### { my $cmd = $self->is_tgz ? [$self->bin_gzip, '-cdf', $self->archive, '|', $self->bin_tar, '-xf', '-'] : $self->is_tbz ? [$self->bin_bunzip2, '-cd', $self->archive, '|', $self->bin_tar, '-xf', '-'] : [$self->bin_tar, @ExtraTarFlags, '-xf', $self->archive]; my $buffer = ''; unless( scalar run( command => $cmd, buffer => \$buffer, verbose => $DEBUG ) ) { return $self->_error(loc("Error extracting archive '%1': %2", $self->archive, $buffer )); } ### we might not have them, due to lack of buffers if( $self->files ) { ### now that we've extracted, figure out where we extracted to my $dir = $self->__get_extract_dir( $self->files ); ### store the extraction dir ### $self->extract_path( $dir ); } } ### we got here, no error happened return 1; } } ### use archive::tar to extract ### sub _untar_at { my $self = shift; ### Loading Archive::Tar is going to set it to 1, so make it local ### within this block, starting with its initial value. Whatever ### Achive::Tar does will be undone when we return. ### ### Also, later, set $Archive::Tar::WARN to $Archive::Extract::WARN ### so users don't have to even think about this variable. If they ### do, they still get their set value outside of this call. local $Archive::Tar::WARN = $Archive::Tar::WARN; ### we definitely need Archive::Tar, so load that first { my $use_list = { 'Archive::Tar' => '0.0' }; unless( can_load( modules => $use_list ) ) { $self->_error(loc("You do not have '%1' installed - " . "Please install it as soon as possible.", 'Archive::Tar')); return METHOD_NA; } } ### we might pass it a filehandle if it's a .tbz file.. my $fh_to_read = $self->archive; ### we will need Compress::Zlib too, if it's a tgz... and IO::Zlib ### if A::T's version is 0.99 or higher if( $self->is_tgz ) { my $use_list = { 'Compress::Zlib' => '0.0' }; $use_list->{ 'IO::Zlib' } = '0.0' if $Archive::Tar::VERSION >= '0.99'; unless( can_load( modules => $use_list ) ) { my $which = join '/', sort keys %$use_list; $self->_error(loc( "You do not have '%1' installed - Please ". "install it as soon as possible.", $which) ); return METHOD_NA; } } elsif ( $self->is_tbz ) { my $use_list = { 'IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2' => '0.0' }; unless( can_load( modules => $use_list ) ) { $self->_error(loc( "You do not have '%1' installed - Please " . "install it as soon as possible.", 'IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2') ); return METHOD_NA; } my $bz = IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2->new( $self->archive ) or return $self->_error(loc("Unable to open '%1': %2", $self->archive, $IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2::Bunzip2Error)); $fh_to_read = $bz; } my @files; { ### $Archive::Tar::WARN is 1 by default in Archive::Tar, but we've ### localized $Archive::Tar::WARN already. $Archive::Tar::WARN = $Archive::Extract::WARN; ### only tell it it's compressed if it's a .tgz, as we give it a file ### handle if it's a .tbz my @read = ( $fh_to_read, ( $self->is_tgz ? 1 : 0 ) ); ### for version of Archive::Tar > 1.04 local $Archive::Tar::CHOWN = 0; ### use the iterator if we can. it's a feature of A::T 1.40 and up if ( $_ALLOW_TAR_ITER && Archive::Tar->can( 'iter' ) ) { my $next; unless ( $next = Archive::Tar->iter( @read ) ) { return $self->_error(loc( "Unable to read '%1': %2", $self->archive, $Archive::Tar::error)); } while ( my $file = $next->() ) { push @files, $file->full_path; $file->extract or return $self->_error(loc( "Unable to read '%1': %2", $self->archive, $Archive::Tar::error)); } ### older version, read the archive into memory } else { my $tar = Archive::Tar->new(); unless( $tar->read( @read ) ) { return $self->_error(loc("Unable to read '%1': %2", $self->archive, $Archive::Tar::error)); } ### workaround to prevent Archive::Tar from setting uid, which ### is a potential security hole. -autrijus ### have to do it here, since A::T needs to be /loaded/ first ### { no strict 'refs'; local $^W; ### older versions of archive::tar <= 0.23 *Archive::Tar::chown = sub {}; } { local $^W; # quell 'splice() offset past end of array' warnings # on older versions of A::T ### older archive::tar always returns $self, return value ### slightly fux0r3d because of it. $tar->extract or return $self->_error(loc( "Unable to extract '%1': %2", $self->archive, $Archive::Tar::error )); } @files = $tar->list_files; } } my $dir = $self->__get_extract_dir( \@files ); ### store the files that are in the archive ### $self->files(\@files); ### store the extraction dir ### $self->extract_path( $dir ); ### check if the dir actually appeared ### return 1 if -d $self->extract_path; ### no dir, we failed ### return $self->_error(loc("Unable to extract '%1': %2", $self->archive, $Archive::Tar::error )); } ################################# # # Gunzip code # ################################# sub _gunzip_bin { my $self = shift; ### check for /bin/gzip -- we need it ### unless( $self->bin_gzip ) { $self->_error(loc("No '%1' program found", '/bin/gzip')); return METHOD_NA; } my $fh = FileHandle->new('>'. $self->_gunzip_to) or return $self->_error(loc("Could not open '%1' for writing: %2", $self->_gunzip_to, $! )); my $cmd = [ $self->bin_gzip, '-cdf', $self->archive ]; my $buffer; unless( scalar run( command => $cmd, verbose => $DEBUG, buffer => \$buffer ) ) { return $self->_error(loc("Unable to gunzip '%1': %2", $self->archive, $buffer)); } ### no buffers available? if( !IPC::Cmd->can_capture_buffer and !$buffer ) { $self->_error( $self->_no_buffer_content( $self->archive ) ); } $self->_print($fh, $buffer) if defined $buffer; close $fh; ### set what files where extract, and where they went ### $self->files( [$self->_gunzip_to] ); $self->extract_path( File::Spec->rel2abs(cwd()) ); return 1; } sub _gunzip_cz { my $self = shift; my $use_list = { 'Compress::Zlib' => '0.0' }; unless( can_load( modules => $use_list ) ) { $self->_error(loc("You do not have '%1' installed - Please " . "install it as soon as possible.", 'Compress::Zlib')); return METHOD_NA; } my $gz = Compress::Zlib::gzopen( $self->archive, "rb" ) or return $self->_error(loc("Unable to open '%1': %2", $self->archive, $Compress::Zlib::gzerrno)); my $fh = FileHandle->new('>'. $self->_gunzip_to) or return $self->_error(loc("Could not open '%1' for writing: %2", $self->_gunzip_to, $! )); my $buffer; $self->_print($fh, $buffer) while $gz->gzread($buffer) > 0; $fh->close; ### set what files where extract, and where they went ### $self->files( [$self->_gunzip_to] ); $self->extract_path( File::Spec->rel2abs(cwd()) ); return 1; } ################################# # # Uncompress code # ################################# sub _uncompress_bin { my $self = shift; ### check for /bin/gzip -- we need it ### unless( $self->bin_uncompress ) { $self->_error(loc("No '%1' program found", '/bin/uncompress')); return METHOD_NA; } my $fh = FileHandle->new('>'. $self->_gunzip_to) or return $self->_error(loc("Could not open '%1' for writing: %2", $self->_gunzip_to, $! )); my $cmd = [ $self->bin_uncompress, '-c', $self->archive ]; my $buffer; unless( scalar run( command => $cmd, verbose => $DEBUG, buffer => \$buffer ) ) { return $self->_error(loc("Unable to uncompress '%1': %2", $self->archive, $buffer)); } ### no buffers available? if( !IPC::Cmd->can_capture_buffer and !$buffer ) { $self->_error( $self->_no_buffer_content( $self->archive ) ); } $self->_print($fh, $buffer) if defined $buffer; close $fh; ### set what files where extract, and where they went ### $self->files( [$self->_gunzip_to] ); $self->extract_path( File::Spec->rel2abs(cwd()) ); return 1; } ################################# # # Unzip code # ################################# sub _unzip_bin { my $self = shift; ### check for /bin/gzip if we need it ### unless( $self->bin_unzip ) { $self->_error(loc("No '%1' program found", '/bin/unzip')); return METHOD_NA; } ### first, get the files.. it must be 2 different commands with 'unzip' :( { ### on VMS, capital letter options have to be quoted. This is ### peported by John Malmberg on P5P Tue 21 Aug 2007 05:05:11 ### Subject: [patch@31735]Archive Extract fix on VMS. my $opt = ON_VMS ? '"-Z"' : '-Z'; my $cmd = [ $self->bin_unzip, $opt, '-1', $self->archive ]; my $buffer = ''; unless( scalar run( command => $cmd, verbose => $DEBUG, buffer => \$buffer ) ) { return $self->_error(loc("Unable to unzip '%1': %2", $self->archive, $buffer)); } ### no buffers available? if( !IPC::Cmd->can_capture_buffer and !$buffer ) { $self->_error( $self->_no_buffer_files( $self->archive ) ); } else { $self->files( [split $/, $buffer] ); } } ### now, extract the archive ### { my $cmd = [ $self->bin_unzip, '-qq', '-o', $self->archive ]; my $buffer; unless( scalar run( command => $cmd, verbose => $DEBUG, buffer => \$buffer ) ) { return $self->_error(loc("Unable to unzip '%1': %2", $self->archive, $buffer)); } if( scalar @{$self->files} ) { my $files = $self->files; my $dir = $self->__get_extract_dir( $files ); $self->extract_path( $dir ); } } return 1; } sub _unzip_az { my $self = shift; my $use_list = { 'Archive::Zip' => '0.0' }; unless( can_load( modules => $use_list ) ) { $self->_error(loc("You do not have '%1' installed - Please " . "install it as soon as possible.", 'Archive::Zip')); return METHOD_NA; } my $zip = Archive::Zip->new(); unless( $zip->read( $self->archive ) == &Archive::Zip::AZ_OK ) { return $self->_error(loc("Unable to read '%1'", $self->archive)); } my @files; ### Address: #43278: Explicitly tell Archive::Zip where to put the files: ### "In my BackPAN indexing, Archive::Zip was extracting things ### in my script's directory instead of the current working directory. ### I traced this back through Archive::Zip::_asLocalName which ### eventually calls File::Spec::Win32::rel2abs which on Windows might ### call Cwd::getdcwd. getdcwd returns the wrong directory in my ### case, even though I think I'm on the same drive. ### ### To fix this, I pass the optional second argument to ### extractMember using the cwd from Archive::Extract." --bdfoy ## store cwd() before looping; calls to cwd() can be expensive, and ### it won't change during the loop my $extract_dir = cwd(); ### have to extract every member individually ### for my $member ($zip->members) { push @files, $member->{fileName}; ### file to extact to, to avoid the above problem my $to = File::Spec->catfile( $extract_dir, $member->{fileName} ); unless( $zip->extractMember($member, $to) == &Archive::Zip::AZ_OK ) { return $self->_error(loc("Extraction of '%1' from '%2' failed", $member->{fileName}, $self->archive )); } } my $dir = $self->__get_extract_dir( \@files ); ### set what files where extract, and where they went ### $self->files( \@files ); $self->extract_path( File::Spec->rel2abs($dir) ); return 1; } sub __get_extract_dir { my $self = shift; my $files = shift || []; return unless scalar @$files; my($dir1, $dir2); for my $aref ( [ \$dir1, 0 ], [ \$dir2, -1 ] ) { my($dir,$pos) = @$aref; ### add a catdir(), so that any trailing slashes get ### take care of (removed) ### also, a catdir() normalises './dir/foo' to 'dir/foo'; ### which was the problem in bug #23999 my $res = -d $files->[$pos] ? File::Spec->catdir( $files->[$pos], '' ) : File::Spec->catdir( dirname( $files->[$pos] ) ); $$dir = $res; } ### if the first and last dir don't match, make sure the ### dirname is not set wrongly my $dir; ### dirs are the same, so we know for sure what the extract dir is if( $dir1 eq $dir2 ) { $dir = $dir1; ### dirs are different.. do they share the base dir? ### if so, use that, if not, fall back to '.' } else { my $base1 = [ File::Spec->splitdir( $dir1 ) ]->[0]; my $base2 = [ File::Spec->splitdir( $dir2 ) ]->[0]; $dir = File::Spec->rel2abs( $base1 eq $base2 ? $base1 : '.' ); } return File::Spec->rel2abs( $dir ); } ################################# # # Bunzip2 code # ################################# sub _bunzip2_bin { my $self = shift; ### check for /bin/gzip -- we need it ### unless( $self->bin_bunzip2 ) { $self->_error(loc("No '%1' program found", '/bin/bunzip2')); return METHOD_NA; } my $fh = FileHandle->new('>'. $self->_gunzip_to) or return $self->_error(loc("Could not open '%1' for writing: %2", $self->_gunzip_to, $! )); ### guard against broken bunzip2. See ->have_old_bunzip2() ### for details if( $self->have_old_bunzip2 and $self->archive !~ /\.bz2$/i ) { return $self->_error(loc("Your bunzip2 version is too old and ". "can only extract files ending in '%1'", '.bz2')); } my $cmd = [ $self->bin_bunzip2, '-cd', $self->archive ]; my $buffer; unless( scalar run( command => $cmd, verbose => $DEBUG, buffer => \$buffer ) ) { return $self->_error(loc("Unable to bunzip2 '%1': %2", $self->archive, $buffer)); } ### no buffers available? if( !IPC::Cmd->can_capture_buffer and !$buffer ) { $self->_error( $self->_no_buffer_content( $self->archive ) ); } $self->_print($fh, $buffer) if defined $buffer; close $fh; ### set what files where extract, and where they went ### $self->files( [$self->_gunzip_to] ); $self->extract_path( File::Spec->rel2abs(cwd()) ); return 1; } ### using cz2, the compact versions... this we use mainly in archive::tar ### extractor.. # sub _bunzip2_cz1 { # my $self = shift; # # my $use_list = { 'IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2' => '0.0' }; # unless( can_load( modules => $use_list ) ) { # return $self->_error(loc("You do not have '%1' installed - Please " . # "install it as soon as possible.", # 'IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2')); # } # # my $bz = IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2->new( $self->archive ) or # return $self->_error(loc("Unable to open '%1': %2", # $self->archive, # $IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2::Bunzip2Error)); # # my $fh = FileHandle->new('>'. $self->_gunzip_to) or # return $self->_error(loc("Could not open '%1' for writing: %2", # $self->_gunzip_to, $! )); # # my $buffer; # $fh->print($buffer) while $bz->read($buffer) > 0; # $fh->close; # # ### set what files where extract, and where they went ### # $self->files( [$self->_gunzip_to] ); # $self->extract_path( File::Spec->rel2abs(cwd()) ); # # return 1; # } sub _bunzip2_bz2 { my $self = shift; my $use_list = { 'IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2' => '0.0' }; unless( can_load( modules => $use_list ) ) { $self->_error(loc("You do not have '%1' installed - Please " . "install it as soon as possible.", 'IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2')); return METHOD_NA; } IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2::bunzip2($self->archive => $self->_gunzip_to) or return $self->_error(loc("Unable to uncompress '%1': %2", $self->archive, $IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2::Bunzip2Error)); ### set what files where extract, and where they went ### $self->files( [$self->_gunzip_to] ); $self->extract_path( File::Spec->rel2abs(cwd()) ); return 1; } ################################# # # unlzma code # ################################# sub _unlzma_bin { my $self = shift; ### check for /bin/unlzma -- we need it ### unless( $self->bin_unlzma ) { $self->_error(loc("No '%1' program found", '/bin/unlzma')); return METHOD_NA; } my $fh = FileHandle->new('>'. $self->_gunzip_to) or return $self->_error(loc("Could not open '%1' for writing: %2", $self->_gunzip_to, $! )); my $cmd = [ $self->bin_unlzma, '-c', $self->archive ]; my $buffer; unless( scalar run( command => $cmd, verbose => $DEBUG, buffer => \$buffer ) ) { return $self->_error(loc("Unable to unlzma '%1': %2", $self->archive, $buffer)); } ### no buffers available? if( !IPC::Cmd->can_capture_buffer and !$buffer ) { $self->_error( $self->_no_buffer_content( $self->archive ) ); } $self->_print($fh, $buffer) if defined $buffer; close $fh; ### set what files where extract, and where they went ### $self->files( [$self->_gunzip_to] ); $self->extract_path( File::Spec->rel2abs(cwd()) ); return 1; } sub _unlzma_cz { my $self = shift; my $use_list = { 'Compress::unLZMA' => '0.0' }; unless( can_load( modules => $use_list ) ) { $self->_error(loc("You do not have '%1' installed - Please " . "install it as soon as possible.", 'Compress::unLZMA')); return METHOD_NA; } my $fh = FileHandle->new('>'. $self->_gunzip_to) or return $self->_error(loc("Could not open '%1' for writing: %2", $self->_gunzip_to, $! )); my $buffer; $buffer = Compress::unLZMA::uncompressfile( $self->archive ); unless ( defined $buffer ) { return $self->_error(loc("Could not unlzma '%1': %2", $self->archive, $@)); } $self->_print($fh, $buffer) if defined $buffer; close $fh; ### set what files where extract, and where they went ### $self->files( [$self->_gunzip_to] ); $self->extract_path( File::Spec->rel2abs(cwd()) ); return 1; } ################################# # # Error code # ################################# # For printing binaries that avoids interfering globals sub _print { my $self = shift; my $fh = shift; local( $\, $", $, ) = ( undef, ' ', '' ); return print $fh @_; } sub _error { my $self = shift; my $error = shift; my $lerror = Carp::longmess($error); push @{$self->_error_msg}, $error; push @{$self->_error_msg_long}, $lerror; ### set $Archive::Extract::WARN to 0 to disable printing ### of errors if( $WARN ) { carp $DEBUG ? $lerror : $error; } return; } sub error { my $self = shift; ### make sure we have a fallback aref my $aref = do { shift() ? $self->_error_msg_long : $self->_error_msg } || []; return join $/, @$aref; } sub _no_buffer_files { my $self = shift; my $file = shift or return; return loc("No buffer captured, unable to tell ". "extracted files or extraction dir for '%1'", $file); } sub _no_buffer_content { my $self = shift; my $file = shift or return; return loc("No buffer captured, unable to get content for '%1'", $file); } 1; =pod =head1 HOW IT WORKS C<Archive::Extract> tries first to determine what type of archive you are passing it, by inspecting its suffix. It does not do this by using Mime magic, or something related. See C<CAVEATS> below. Once it has determined the file type, it knows which extraction methods it can use on the archive. It will try a perl solution first, then fall back to a commandline tool if that fails. If that also fails, it will return false, indicating it was unable to extract the archive. See the section on C<GLOBAL VARIABLES> to see how to alter this order. =head1 CAVEATS =head2 File Extensions C<Archive::Extract> trusts on the extension of the archive to determine what type it is, and what extractor methods therefore can be used. If your archives do not have any of the extensions as described in the C<new()> method, you will have to specify the type explicitly, or C<Archive::Extract> will not be able to extract the archive for you. =head2 Supporting Very Large Files C<Archive::Extract> can use either pure perl modules or command line programs under the hood. Some of the pure perl modules (like C<Archive::Tar> and Compress::unLZMA) take the entire contents of the archive into memory, which may not be feasible on your system. Consider setting the global variable C<$Archive::Extract::PREFER_BIN> to C<1>, which will prefer the use of command line programs and won't consume so much memory. See the C<GLOBAL VARIABLES> section below for details. =head2 Bunzip2 support of arbitrary extensions. Older versions of C</bin/bunzip2> do not support arbitrary file extensions and insist on a C<.bz2> suffix. Although we do our best to guard against this, if you experience a bunzip2 error, it may be related to this. For details, please see the C<have_old_bunzip2> method. =head1 GLOBAL VARIABLES =head2 $Archive::Extract::DEBUG Set this variable to C<true> to have all calls to command line tools be printed out, including all their output. This also enables C<Carp::longmess> errors, instead of the regular C<carp> errors. Good for tracking down why things don't work with your particular setup. Defaults to C<false>. =head2 $Archive::Extract::WARN This variable controls whether errors encountered internally by C<Archive::Extract> should be C<carp>'d or not. Set to false to silence warnings. Inspect the output of the C<error()> method manually to see what went wrong. Defaults to C<true>. =head2 $Archive::Extract::PREFER_BIN This variables controls whether C<Archive::Extract> should prefer the use of perl modules, or commandline tools to extract archives. Set to C<true> to have C<Archive::Extract> prefer commandline tools. Defaults to C<false>. =head1 TODO / CAVEATS =over 4 =item Mime magic support Maybe this module should use something like C<File::Type> to determine the type, rather than blindly trust the suffix. =item Thread safety Currently, C<Archive::Extract> does a C<chdir> to the extraction dir before extraction, and a C<chdir> back again after. This is not necessarily thread safe. See C<rt.cpan.org> bug C<#45671> for details. =back =head1 BUG REPORTS Please report bugs or other issues to E<lt>bug-archive-extract@rt.cpan.org<gt>. =head1 AUTHOR This module by Jos Boumans E<lt>kane@cpan.orgE<gt>. =head1 COPYRIGHT This library is free software; you may redistribute and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut # Local variables: # c-indentation-style: bsd # c-basic-offset: 4 # indent-tabs-mode: nil # End: # vim: expandtab shiftwidth=4: