Library for manipulating RawFilePaths in a cross platform way.
This package provides functionality for manipulating RawFilePath
values. It can be used as a drop in replacement for the filepath library to get the benefits of using ByteStrings. It provides three modules:
System.FilePath.Posix.ByteString
manipulates POSIX/Linux styleRawFilePath
values (with/
as the path separator).System.FilePath.Windows.ByteString
manipulates Windows styleRawFilePath
values (with either\
or/
as the path separator, and deals with drives).System.FilePath.ByteString
is an alias for the module appropriate to your platform.
All three modules provide the same API, and the same documentation (calling out differences in the different variants).
This package is now deprecated, since filepath 1.4.100.0 provides an OsPath type that is based on a bytestring. See https:/hasufell.github.ioposts/2022-06-29-fixing-haskell-filepaths.html
FilePath
The filepath-bytestring
package provides functionality for manipulating RawFilePath
values (ByteString
s). Its interface is equivilant to the filepath
package. It provides three modules:
System.FilePath.Posix.ByteString
manipulates POSIX/Linux styleRawFilePath
values (with/
as the path separator).System.FilePath.Windows.ByteString
manipulates Windows styleRawFilePath
values (with either\
or/
as the path separator, and deals with drives).System.FilePath.ByteString
is an alias for the module appropriate to your platform.
All three modules provide the same API, and the same documentation (calling out differences in the different variants).
Developer notes
This package's version should be the same as the filepath
it's derived from, with an added revision number.
Most of the code is in System/FilePath/Internal.hs
which is #include
'd into both System/FilePath/Posix.hs
and System/FilePath/Windows.hs
with the IS_WINDOWS
CPP define set to either True
or False
. This Internal module is a bit weird in that it isn't really a Haskell module, but is more an include file.
The library has extensive doc tests. Anything starting with -- >
is transformed into a doc test as a predicate that must evaluate to True
. These tests follow a few rules:
- Tests prefixed with
Windows:
orPosix:
are only tested against that specific implementation - otherwise tests are run against both implementations. - Any single letter variable, e.g.
x
, is considered universal quantification, and is checked withQuickCheck
. - If
Valid x =>
appears at the start of a doc test, that means the property will only be tested withx
passing theisValid
predicate.
Also, all exported functions are quickchecked against the ones from filepath
to make sure thay generate equivilant results.
The tests can be generated by Generate.hs
in the root of the repo, and will be placed in tests/TestGen.hs
. The TestGen.hs
file is checked into the repo, and the CI scripts check that TestGen.hs
is in sync with what would be generated a fresh - if you don't regenerate TestGen.hs
the CI will fail.
The .ghci
file is set up to allow you to type ghci
to open the library, then :go
will regenerate the tests and run them.