class Dir

An object of class Dir represents a directory in the underlying file system.

It consists mainly of:

  • A string path, given when the object is created, that specifies a directory in the underlying file system; method path returns the path.

  • A collection of string entry names, each of which is the name of a directory or file in the underlying file system; the entry names may be retrieved in an array-like fashion or in a stream-like fashion.

About the Examples

Some examples on this page use this simple file tree:

example/
├── config.h
├── lib/
│   ├── song/
│   │   └── karaoke.rb
│   └── song.rb
└── main.rb

Others use the file tree for the Ruby project itself.

Dir As Array-Like

A Dir object is in some ways array-like:

Dir As Stream-Like

A Dir object is in some ways stream-like.

The stream is initially open for reading, but may be closed manually (using method close), and will be closed on block exit if created by Dir.open called with a block. The closed stream may not be further manipulated, and may not be reopened.

The stream has a position, which is the index of an entry in the directory:

  • The initial position is zero (before the first entry).

  • Method tell (aliased as pos) returns the position.

  • Method pos= sets the position (but ignores a value outside the stream), and returns the position.

  • Method seek is like pos=, but returns self (convenient for chaining).

  • Method read, if not at end-of-stream, reads the next entry and increments the position; if at end-of-stream, does not increment the position.

  • Method rewind sets the position to zero.

Examples (using the simple file tree):

dir = Dir.new('example') # => #<Dir:example>
dir.pos                  # => 0

dir.read # => "."
dir.read # => ".."
dir.read # => "config.h"
dir.read # => "lib"
dir.read # => "main.rb"
dir.pos  # => 5
dir.read # => nil
dir.pos  # => 5

dir.rewind # => #<Dir:example>
dir.pos    # => 0

dir.pos = 3 # => 3
dir.pos     # => 3

dir.seek(4) # => #<Dir:example>
dir.pos     # => 4

dir.close # => nil
dir.read  # Raises IOError.

What’s Here

First, what’s elsewhere. Class Dir:

Here, class Dir provides methods that are useful for:

Reading

  • close: Closes the directory stream for self.

  • pos=: Sets the position in the directory stream for self.

  • read: Reads and returns the next entry in the directory stream for self.

  • rewind: Sets the position in the directory stream for self to the first entry.

  • seek: Sets the position in the directory stream for self the entry at the given offset.

Setting

  • ::chdir: Changes the working directory of the current process to the given directory.

  • ::chroot: Changes the file-system root for the current process to the given directory.

Querying

  • ::[]: Same as ::glob without the ability to pass flags.

  • ::children: Returns an array of names of the children (both files and directories) of the given directory, but not including . or ...

  • ::empty?: Returns whether the given path is an empty directory.

  • ::entries: Returns an array of names of the children (both files and directories) of the given directory, including . and ...

  • ::exist?: Returns whether the given path is a directory.

  • ::getwd (aliased as pwd): Returns the path to the current working directory.

  • ::glob: Returns an array of file paths matching the given pattern and flags.

  • ::home: Returns the home directory path for a given user or the current user.

  • children: Returns an array of names of the children (both files and directories) of self, but not including . or ...

  • fileno: Returns the integer file descriptor for self.

  • path (aliased as to_path): Returns the path used to create self.

  • tell (aliased as pos): Returns the integer position in the directory stream for self.

Iterating

  • ::each_child: Calls the given block with each entry in the given directory, but not including . or ...

  • ::foreach: Calls the given block with each entry in the given directory, including . and ...

  • each: Calls the given block with each entry in self, including . and ...

  • each_child: Calls the given block with each entry in self, but not including . or ...

Other

  • ::mkdir: Creates a directory at the given path, with optional permissions.

  • ::new: Returns a new Dir for the given path, with optional encoding.

  • ::open: Same as ::new, but if a block is given, yields the Dir to the block, closing it upon block exit.

  • ::unlink (aliased as ::delete and ::rmdir): Removes the given directory.

  • inspect: Returns a string description of self.

Public Class Methods

Dir[*patterns, base: nil, sort: true] → array click to toggle source

Calls Dir.glob with argument patterns and the values of keyword arguments base and sort; returns the array of selected entry names.

# File ruby_3_3_2/dir.rb, line 222
def self.[](*args, base: nil, sort: true)
  Primitive.dir_s_aref(args, base, sort)
end
chdir(new_dirpath) → 0 click to toggle source
chdir → 0
chdir(new_dirpath) {|new_dirpath| ... } → object
chdir {|cur_dirpath| ... } → object

Changes the current working directory.

With argument new_dirpath and no block, changes to the given dirpath:

Dir.pwd         # => "/example"
Dir.chdir('..') # => 0
Dir.pwd         # => "/"

With no argument and no block:

  • Changes to the value of environment variable HOME if defined.

  • Otherwise changes to the value of environment variable LOGDIR if defined.

  • Otherwise makes no change.

With argument new_dirpath and a block, temporarily changes the working directory:

  • Calls the block with the argument.

  • Changes to the given directory.

  • Executes the block (yielding the new path).

  • Restores the previous working directory.

  • Returns the block’s return value.

Example:

Dir.chdir('/var/spool/mail')
Dir.pwd   # => "/var/spool/mail"
Dir.chdir('/tmp') do
  Dir.pwd # => "/tmp"
end
Dir.pwd   # => "/var/spool/mail"

With no argument and a block, calls the block with the current working directory (string) and returns the block’s return value.

Calls to Dir.chdir with blocks may be nested:

Dir.chdir('/var/spool/mail')
Dir.pwd     # => "/var/spool/mail"
Dir.chdir('/tmp') do
  Dir.pwd   # => "/tmp"
  Dir.chdir('/usr') do
    Dir.pwd # => "/usr"
  end
  Dir.pwd   # => "/tmp"
end
Dir.pwd     # => "/var/spool/mail"

In a multi-threaded program an error is raised if a thread attempts to open a chdir block while another thread has one open, or a call to chdir without a block occurs inside a block passed to chdir (even in the same thread).

Raises an exception if the target directory does not exist.

static VALUE
dir_s_chdir(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE obj)
{
    VALUE path = Qnil;

    if (rb_check_arity(argc, 0, 1) == 1) {
        path = rb_str_encode_ospath(rb_get_path(argv[0]));
    }
    else {
        const char *dist = getenv("HOME");
        if (!dist) {
            dist = getenv("LOGDIR");
            if (!dist) rb_raise(rb_eArgError, "HOME/LOGDIR not set");
        }
        path = rb_str_new2(dist);
    }

    return chdir_path(path, true);
}
children(dirpath) → array click to toggle source
children(dirpath, encoding: 'UTF-8') → array

Returns an array of the entry names in the directory at dirpath except for '.' and '..'; sets the given encoding onto each returned entry name:

Dir.children('/example') # => ["config.h", "lib", "main.rb"]
Dir.children('/example').first.encoding
# => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
Dir.children('/example', encoding: 'US-ASCII').first.encoding
# => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>

See String Encoding.

Raises an exception if the directory does not exist.

static VALUE
dir_s_children(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE io)
{
    VALUE dir;

    dir = dir_open_dir(argc, argv);
    return rb_ensure(dir_collect_children, dir, dir_close, dir);
}
chroot(dirpath) → 0 click to toggle source

Changes the root directory of the calling process to that specified in dirpath. The new root directory is used for pathnames beginning with '/'. The root directory is inherited by all children of the calling process.

Only a privileged process may call chroot.

See Linux chroot.

static VALUE
dir_s_chroot(VALUE dir, VALUE path)
{
    path = check_dirname(path);
    if (chroot(RSTRING_PTR(path)) == -1)
        rb_sys_fail_path(path);

    return INT2FIX(0);
}
rmdir(dirpath) → 0 click to toggle source

Removes the directory at dirpath from the underlying file system:

Dir.rmdir('foo') # => 0

Raises an exception if the directory is not empty.

static VALUE
dir_s_rmdir(VALUE obj, VALUE dir)
{
    const char *p;
    int r;

    dir = check_dirname(dir);
    p = RSTRING_PTR(dir);
    r = (int)(VALUE)rb_thread_call_without_gvl(nogvl_rmdir, (void *)p, RUBY_UBF_IO, 0);
    if (r < 0)
        rb_sys_fail_path(dir);

    return INT2FIX(0);
}
each_child(dirpath) {|entry_name| ... } → nil click to toggle source
each_child(dirpath, encoding: 'UTF-8') {|entry_name| ... } → nil

Like Dir.foreach, except that entries '.' and '..' are not included.

static VALUE
dir_s_each_child(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE io)
{
    VALUE dir;

    RETURN_ENUMERATOR(io, argc, argv);
    dir = dir_open_dir(argc, argv);
    rb_ensure(dir_each_child, dir, dir_close, dir);
    return Qnil;
}
empty?(dirpath) → true or false click to toggle source

Returns whether dirpath specifies an empty directory:

dirpath = '/tmp/foo'
Dir.mkdir(dirpath)
Dir.empty?(dirpath)            # => true
Dir.empty?('/example')         # => false
Dir.empty?('/example/main.rb') # => false

Raises an exception if dirpath does not specify a directory or file in the underlying file system.

static VALUE
rb_dir_s_empty_p(VALUE obj, VALUE dirname)
{
    VALUE result, orig;
    const char *path;
    enum {false_on_notdir = 1};

    FilePathValue(dirname);
    orig = rb_str_dup_frozen(dirname);
    dirname = rb_str_encode_ospath(dirname);
    dirname = rb_str_dup_frozen(dirname);
    path = RSTRING_PTR(dirname);

#if defined HAVE_GETATTRLIST && defined ATTR_DIR_ENTRYCOUNT
    {
        u_int32_t attrbuf[SIZEUP32(fsobj_tag_t)];
        struct attrlist al = {ATTR_BIT_MAP_COUNT, 0, ATTR_CMN_OBJTAG,};
        if (getattrlist(path, &al, attrbuf, sizeof(attrbuf), 0) != 0)
            rb_sys_fail_path(orig);
        if (*(const fsobj_tag_t *)(attrbuf+1) == VT_HFS) {
            al.commonattr = 0;
            al.dirattr = ATTR_DIR_ENTRYCOUNT;
            if (getattrlist(path, &al, attrbuf, sizeof(attrbuf), 0) == 0) {
                if (attrbuf[0] >= 2 * sizeof(u_int32_t))
                    return RBOOL(attrbuf[1] == 0);
                if (false_on_notdir) return Qfalse;
            }
            rb_sys_fail_path(orig);
        }
    }
#endif

    result = (VALUE)rb_thread_call_without_gvl(nogvl_dir_empty_p, (void *)path,
                                            RUBY_UBF_IO, 0);
    if (FIXNUM_P(result)) {
        rb_syserr_fail_path((int)FIX2LONG(result), orig);
    }
    return result;
}
entries(dirname, encoding: 'UTF-8') → array click to toggle source

Returns an array of the entry names in the directory at dirpath; sets the given encoding onto each returned entry name:

Dir.entries('/example') # => ["config.h", "lib", "main.rb", "..", "."]
Dir.entries('/example').first.encoding
# => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
Dir.entries('/example', encoding: 'US-ASCII').first.encoding
# => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>

See String Encoding.

Raises an exception if the directory does not exist.

static VALUE
dir_entries(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE io)
{
    VALUE dir;

    dir = dir_open_dir(argc, argv);
    return rb_ensure(dir_collect, dir, dir_close, dir);
}
exist?(dirpath) → true or false click to toggle source

Returns whether dirpath is a directory in the underlying file system:

Dir.exist?('/example')         # => true
Dir.exist?('/nosuch')          # => false
Dir.exist?('/example/main.rb') # => false

Same as File.directory?.

VALUE
rb_file_directory_p(void)
{
}
fchdir(fd) → 0 click to toggle source
fchdir(fd) { ... } → object

Changes the current working directory to the directory specified by the integer file descriptor fd.

When passing a file descriptor over a UNIX socket or to a child process, using fchdir instead of chdir avoids the time-of-check to time-of-use vulnerability

With no block, changes to the directory given by fd:

Dir.chdir('/var/spool/mail')
Dir.pwd # => "/var/spool/mail"
dir  = Dir.new('/usr')
fd = dir.fileno
Dir.fchdir(fd)
Dir.pwd # => "/usr"

With a block, temporarily changes the working directory:

  • Calls the block with the argument.

  • Changes to the given directory.

  • Executes the block (yields no args).

  • Restores the previous working directory.

  • Returns the block’s return value.

Example:

Dir.chdir('/var/spool/mail')
Dir.pwd # => "/var/spool/mail"
dir  = Dir.new('/tmp')
fd = dir.fileno
Dir.fchdir(fd) do
  Dir.pwd # => "/tmp"
end
Dir.pwd # => "/var/spool/mail"

This method uses the fchdir() function defined by POSIX 2008; the method is not implemented on non-POSIX platforms (raises NotImplementedError).

Raises an exception if the file descriptor is not valid.

In a multi-threaded program an error is raised if a thread attempts to open a chdir block while another thread has one open, or a call to chdir without a block occurs inside a block passed to chdir (even in the same thread).

static VALUE
dir_s_fchdir(VALUE klass, VALUE fd_value)
{
    int fd = RB_NUM2INT(fd_value);

    if (chdir_blocking > 0) {
        if (rb_thread_current() != chdir_thread)
            rb_raise(rb_eRuntimeError, "conflicting chdir during another chdir block");
        if (!rb_block_given_p())
            rb_warn("conflicting chdir during another chdir block");
    }

    if (rb_block_given_p()) {
        struct fchdir_data args;
        args.old_dir = dir_s_alloc(klass);
        dir_initialize(NULL, args.old_dir, rb_fstring_cstr("."), Qnil);
        args.fd = fd;
        args.done = FALSE;
        return rb_ensure(fchdir_yield, (VALUE)&args, fchdir_restore, (VALUE)&args);
    }
    else {
        int r = (int)(VALUE)rb_thread_call_without_gvl(nogvl_fchdir, &fd,
                                                       RUBY_UBF_IO, 0);
        if (r < 0)
            rb_sys_fail("fchdir");
    }

    return INT2FIX(0);
}
for_fd(fd) → dir click to toggle source

Returns a new Dir object representing the directory specified by the given integer directory file descriptor fd:

d0 = Dir.new('..')
d1 = Dir.for_fd(d0.fileno)

Note that the returned d1 does not have an associated path:

d0.path # => '..'
d1.path # => nil

This method uses the fdopendir() function defined by POSIX 2008; the method is not implemented on non-POSIX platforms (raises NotImplementedError).

static VALUE
dir_s_for_fd(VALUE klass, VALUE fd)
{
    struct dir_data *dp;
    VALUE dir = TypedData_Make_Struct(klass, struct dir_data, &dir_data_type, dp);

    if (!(dp->dir = fdopendir(NUM2INT(fd)))) {
        rb_sys_fail("fdopendir");
        UNREACHABLE_RETURN(Qnil);
    }

    RB_OBJ_WRITE(dir, &dp->path, Qnil);
    return dir;
}
foreach(dirpath, encoding: 'UTF-8') {|entry_name| ... } → nil click to toggle source

Calls the block with each entry name in the directory at dirpath; sets the given encoding onto each passed entry_name:

Dir.foreach('/example') {|entry_name| p entry_name }

Output:

"config.h"
"lib"
"main.rb"
".."
"."

Encoding:

Dir.foreach('/example') {|entry_name| p entry_name.encoding; break }
Dir.foreach('/example', encoding: 'US-ASCII') {|entry_name| p entry_name.encoding; break }

Output:

#<Encoding:UTF-8>
#<Encoding:US-ASCII>

See String Encoding.

Returns an enumerator if no block is given.

static VALUE
dir_foreach(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE io)
{
    VALUE dir;

    RETURN_ENUMERATOR(io, argc, argv);
    dir = dir_open_dir(argc, argv);
    rb_ensure(dir_each, dir, dir_close, dir);
    return Qnil;
}
pwd → string click to toggle source

Returns the path to the current working directory:

Dir.chdir("/tmp") # => 0
Dir.pwd           # => "/tmp"
static VALUE
dir_s_getwd(VALUE dir)
{
    return rb_dir_getwd();
}
glob(*patterns, flags: 0, base: nil, sort: true) → array click to toggle source
glob(*patterns, flags: 0, base: nil, sort: true) {|entry_name| ... } → nil

Forms an array entry_names of the entry names selected by the arguments.

Argument patterns is a string pattern or an array of string patterns; note that these are not regexps; see below.

Notes for the following examples:

  • '*' is the pattern that matches any entry name except those that begin with '.'.

  • We use method Array#take to shorten returned arrays that otherwise would be very large.

With no block, returns array entry_names; example (using the simple file tree):

Dir.glob('*') # => ["config.h", "lib", "main.rb"]

With a block, calls the block with each of the entry_names and returns nil:

Dir.glob('*') {|entry_name| puts entry_name } # => nil

Output:

config.h
lib
main.rb

If optional keyword argument flags is given, the value modifies the matching; see below.

If optional keyword argument base is given, its value specifies the base directory. Each pattern string specifies entries relative to the base directory; the default is '.'. The base directory is not prepended to the entry names in the result:

Dir.glob(pattern, base: 'lib').take(5)
# => ["abbrev.gemspec", "abbrev.rb", "base64.gemspec", "base64.rb", "benchmark.gemspec"]
Dir.glob(pattern, base: 'lib/irb').take(5)
# => ["cmd", "color.rb", "color_printer.rb", "completion.rb", "context.rb"]

If optional keyword sort is given, its value specifies whether the array is to be sorted; the default is true. Passing value false with that keyword disables sorting (though the underlying file system may already have sorted the array).

Patterns

Each pattern string is expanded according to certain metacharacters; examples below use the Ruby file tree:

  • '*': Matches any substring in an entry name, similar in meaning to regexp /.*/mx; may be restricted by other values in the pattern strings:

    • '*' matches all entry names:

      Dir.glob('*').take(3)  # => ["BSDL", "CONTRIBUTING.md", "COPYING"]
      
    • 'c*' matches entry names beginning with 'c':

      Dir.glob('c*').take(3) # => ["CONTRIBUTING.md", "COPYING", "COPYING.ja"]
      
    • '*c' matches entry names ending with 'c':

      Dir.glob('*c').take(3) # => ["addr2line.c", "array.c", "ast.c"]
      
    • '*c*' matches entry names that contain 'c', even at the beginning or end:

      Dir.glob('*c*').take(3) # => ["CONTRIBUTING.md", "COPYING", "COPYING.ja"]
      

    Does not match Unix-like hidden entry names (“dot files”). To include those in the matched entry names, use flag IO::FNM_DOTMATCH or something like '{*,.*}'.

  • '**': Matches entry names recursively if followed by the slash character '/':

    Dir.glob('**/').take(3) # => ["basictest/", "benchmark/", "benchmark/gc/"]
    

    If the string pattern contains other characters or is not followed by a slash character, it is equivalent to '*'.

  • '?' Matches any single character; similar in meaning to regexp /./:

    Dir.glob('io.?') # => ["io.c"]
    
  • '[set]': Matches any one character in the string set; behaves like a Regexp character class, including set negation ('[^a-z]'):

    Dir.glob('*.[a-z][a-z]').take(3)
    # => ["CONTRIBUTING.md", "COPYING.ja", "KNOWNBUGS.rb"]
    
  • '{abc,xyz}': Matches either string abc or string xyz; behaves like {Regexp alternation}[rdoc-ref:Regexp@Alternation]:

    Dir.glob('{LEGAL,BSDL}') # => ["LEGAL", "BSDL"]
    

    More than two alternatives may be given.

  • \: Escapes the following metacharacter.

    Note that on Windows, the backslash character may not be used in a string pattern: Dir['c:\foo*'] will not work, use Dir['c:/foo*'] instead.

More examples (using the simple file tree):

# We're in the example directory.
File.basename(Dir.pwd) # => "example"
Dir.glob('config.?')              # => ["config.h"]
Dir.glob('*.[a-z][a-z]')          # => ["main.rb"]
Dir.glob('*.[^r]*')               # => ["config.h"]
Dir.glob('*.{rb,h}')              # => ["main.rb", "config.h"]
Dir.glob('*')                     # => ["config.h", "lib", "main.rb"]
Dir.glob('*', File::FNM_DOTMATCH) # => [".", "config.h", "lib", "main.rb"]
Dir.glob(["*.rb", "*.h"])         # => ["main.rb", "config.h"]

Dir.glob('**/*.rb')
=> ["lib/song/karaoke.rb", "lib/song.rb", "main.rb"]

Dir.glob('**/*.rb', base: 'lib')  #   => ["song/karaoke.rb", "song.rb"]

Dir.glob('**/lib')                # => ["lib"]

Dir.glob('**/lib/**/*.rb')        # => ["lib/song/karaoke.rb", "lib/song.rb"]

Dir.glob('**/lib/*.rb')           # => ["lib/song.rb"]

Flags

If optional keyword argument flags is given (the default is zero – no flags), its value should be the bitwise OR of one or more of the constants defined in module File::Constants.

Example:

flags = File::FNM_EXTGLOB | File::FNM_DOTMATCH

Specifying flags can extend, restrict, or otherwise modify the matching.

The flags for this method (other constants in File::Constants do not apply):

  • File::FNM_DOTMATCH: specifies that entry names beginning with '.' should be considered for matching:

    Dir.glob('*').take(5)
    # => ["BSDL", "CONTRIBUTING.md", "COPYING", "COPYING.ja", "GPL"]
    Dir.glob('*', flags: File::FNM_DOTMATCH).take(5)
    # => [".", ".appveyor.yml", ".cirrus.yml", ".dir-locals.el", ".document"]
    
  • File::FNM_EXTGLOB: enables the pattern extension '{a,b}', which matches pattern a and pattern b; behaves like a {regexp union}[rdoc-ref:Regexp.union] (e.g., '(?:a|b)'):

    pattern = '{LEGAL,BSDL}'
    Dir.glob(pattern)      # => ["LEGAL", "BSDL"]
    
  • File::FNM_NOESCAPE: specifies that escaping with the backslash character '\' is disabled; the character is not an escape character.

  • File::FNM_PATHNAME: specifies that metacharacters '*' and '?' do not match directory separators.

  • File::FNM_SHORTNAME: specifies that patterns may match short names if they exist; Windows only.

# File ruby_3_3_2/dir.rb, line 410
def self.glob(pattern, _flags = 0, flags: _flags, base: nil, sort: true)
  Primitive.dir_s_glob(pattern, flags, base, sort)
end
home(user_name = nil) → dirpath click to toggle source

Retruns the home directory path of the user specified with user_name if it is not nil, or the current login user:

Dir.home         # => "/home/me"
Dir.home('root') # => "/root"

Raises ArgumentError if user_name is not a user name.

static VALUE
dir_s_home(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE obj)
{
    VALUE user;
    const char *u = 0;

    rb_check_arity(argc, 0, 1);
    user = (argc > 0) ? argv[0] : Qnil;
    if (!NIL_P(user)) {
        SafeStringValue(user);
        rb_must_asciicompat(user);
        u = StringValueCStr(user);
        if (*u) {
            return rb_home_dir_of(user, rb_str_new(0, 0));
        }
    }
    return rb_default_home_dir(rb_str_new(0, 0));

}
mkdir(dirpath, permissions = 0775) → 0 click to toggle source

Creates a directory in the underlying file system at dirpath with the given permissions; returns zero:

Dir.mkdir('foo')
File.stat(Dir.new('foo')).mode.to_s(8)[1..4] # => "0755"
Dir.mkdir('bar', 0644)
File.stat(Dir.new('bar')).mode.to_s(8)[1..4] # => "0644"

See File Permissions. Note that argument permissions is ignored on Windows.

static VALUE
dir_s_mkdir(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE obj)
{
    struct mkdir_arg m;
    VALUE path, vmode;
    int r;

    if (rb_scan_args(argc, argv, "11", &path, &vmode) == 2) {
        m.mode = NUM2MODET(vmode);
    }
    else {
        m.mode = 0777;
    }

    path = check_dirname(path);
    m.path = RSTRING_PTR(path);
    r = (int)(VALUE)rb_thread_call_without_gvl(nogvl_mkdir, &m, RUBY_UBF_IO, 0);
    if (r < 0)
        rb_sys_fail_path(path);

    return INT2FIX(0);
}
new(dirpath) → dir click to toggle source
new(dirpath, encoding: nil) → dir

Returns a new Dir object for the directory at dirpath:

Dir.new('.') # => #<Dir:.>

The value given with optional keyword argument encoding specifies the encoding for the directory entry names; if nil (the default), the file system’s encoding is used:

Dir.new('.').read.encoding                       # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
Dir.new('.', encoding: 'US-ASCII').read.encoding # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
# File ruby_3_3_2/dir.rb, line 211
def initialize(name, encoding: nil)
  Primitive.dir_initialize(name, encoding)
end
open(dirpath) → dir click to toggle source
open(dirpath, encoding: nil) → dir
open(dirpath) {|dir| ... } → object
open(dirpath, encoding: nil) {|dir| ... } → object

Creates a new Dir object dir for the directory at dirpath.

With no block, the method equivalent to Dir.new(dirpath, encoding):

Dir.open('.') # => #<Dir:.>

With a block given, the block is called with the created dir; on block exit dir is closed and the block’s value is returned:

Dir.open('.') {|dir| dir.inspect } # => "#<Dir:.>"

The value given with optional keyword argument encoding specifies the encoding for the directory entry names; if nil (the default), the file system’s encoding is used:

Dir.open('.').read.encoding                       # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
Dir.open('.', encoding: 'US-ASCII').read.encoding # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
# File ruby_3_3_2/dir.rb, line 183
def self.open(name, encoding: nil, &block)
  dir = Primitive.dir_s_open(name, encoding)
  if block
    begin
      yield dir
    ensure
      Primitive.dir_s_close(dir)
    end
  else
    dir
  end
end
pwd → string click to toggle source

Returns the path to the current working directory:

Dir.chdir("/tmp") # => 0
Dir.pwd           # => "/tmp"
static VALUE
dir_s_getwd(VALUE dir)
{
    return rb_dir_getwd();
}
rmdir(dirpath) → 0 click to toggle source

Removes the directory at dirpath from the underlying file system:

Dir.rmdir('foo') # => 0

Raises an exception if the directory is not empty.

static VALUE
dir_s_rmdir(VALUE obj, VALUE dir)
{
    const char *p;
    int r;

    dir = check_dirname(dir);
    p = RSTRING_PTR(dir);
    r = (int)(VALUE)rb_thread_call_without_gvl(nogvl_rmdir, (void *)p, RUBY_UBF_IO, 0);
    if (r < 0)
        rb_sys_fail_path(dir);

    return INT2FIX(0);
}

Public Instance Methods

chdir → 0 click to toggle source
chdir { ... } → object

Changes the current working directory to self:

Dir.pwd # => "/"
dir = Dir.new('example')
dir.chdir
Dir.pwd # => "/example"

With a block, temporarily changes the working directory:

  • Calls the block.

  • Changes to the given directory.

  • Executes the block (yields no args).

  • Restores the previous working directory.

  • Returns the block’s return value.

Uses Dir.fchdir if available, and Dir.chdir if not, see those methods for caveats.

static VALUE
dir_chdir(VALUE dir)
{
#if defined(HAVE_FCHDIR) && defined(HAVE_DIRFD) && HAVE_FCHDIR && HAVE_DIRFD
    return dir_s_fchdir(rb_cDir, dir_fileno(dir));
#else
    return chdir_path(dir_get(dir)->path, false);
#endif
}
children → array click to toggle source

Returns an array of the entry names in self except for '.' and '..':

dir = Dir.new('/example')
dir.children # => ["config.h", "lib", "main.rb"]
static VALUE
dir_collect_children(VALUE dir)
{
    VALUE ary = rb_ary_new();
    dir_each_entry(dir, rb_ary_push, ary, TRUE);
    return ary;
}
close → nil click to toggle source

Closes the stream in self, if it is open, and returns nil; ignored if self is already closed:

dir = Dir.new('example')
dir.read     # => "."
dir.close     # => nil
dir.close     # => nil
dir.read # Raises IOError.
static VALUE
dir_close(VALUE dir)
{
    struct dir_data *dirp;

    dirp = dir_get(dir);
    if (!dirp->dir) return Qnil;
    closedir(dirp->dir);
    dirp->dir = NULL;

    return Qnil;
}
each {|entry_name| ... } → self click to toggle source

Calls the block with each entry name in self:

Dir.new('example').each {|entry_name| p entry_name }

Output:

"."
".."
"config.h"
"lib"
"main.rb"

With no block given, returns an Enumerator.

static VALUE
dir_each(VALUE dir)
{
    RETURN_ENUMERATOR(dir, 0, 0);
    return dir_each_entry(dir, dir_yield, Qnil, FALSE);
}
each_child {|entry_name| ... } → self click to toggle source

Calls the block with each entry name in self except '.' and '..':

dir = Dir.new('/example')
dir.each_child {|entry_name| p entry_name }

Output:

"config.h"
"lib"
"main.rb"

If no block is given, returns an enumerator.

static VALUE
dir_each_child_m(VALUE dir)
{
    RETURN_ENUMERATOR(dir, 0, 0);
    return dir_each_entry(dir, dir_yield, Qnil, TRUE);
}
fileno → integer click to toggle source

Returns the file descriptor used in dir.

d = Dir.new('..')
d.fileno # => 8

This method uses the dirfd() function defined by POSIX 2008; the method is not implemented on non-POSIX platforms (raises NotImplementedError).

static VALUE
dir_fileno(VALUE dir)
{
    struct dir_data *dirp;
    int fd;

    GetDIR(dir, dirp);
    fd = dirfd(dirp->dir);
    if (fd == -1)
        rb_sys_fail("dirfd");
    return INT2NUM(fd);
}
inspect → string click to toggle source

Returns a string description of self:

Dir.new('example').inspect # => "#<Dir:example>"
static VALUE
dir_inspect(VALUE dir)
{
    struct dir_data *dirp;

    TypedData_Get_Struct(dir, struct dir_data, &dir_data_type, dirp);
    if (!NIL_P(dirp->path)) {
        VALUE str = rb_str_new_cstr("#<");
        rb_str_append(str, rb_class_name(CLASS_OF(dir)));
        rb_str_cat2(str, ":");
        rb_str_append(str, dirp->path);
        rb_str_cat2(str, ">");
        return str;
    }
    return rb_funcallv(dir, idTo_s, 0, 0);
}
path → string or nil click to toggle source

Returns the dirpath string that was used to create self (or nil if created by method Dir.for_fd):

Dir.new('example').path # => "example"
static VALUE
dir_path(VALUE dir)
{
    struct dir_data *dirp;

    TypedData_Get_Struct(dir, struct dir_data, &dir_data_type, dirp);
    if (NIL_P(dirp->path)) return Qnil;
    return rb_str_dup(dirp->path);
}
Also aliased as: to_path
pos()

Returns the current position of self; see Dir As Stream-Like:

dir = Dir.new('example')
dir.tell  # => 0
dir.read  # => "."
dir.tell  # => 1
Alias for: tell
pos = position → integer click to toggle source

Sets the position in self and returns position. The value of position should have been returned from an earlier call to tell; if not, the return values from subsequent calls to read are unspecified.

See Dir As Stream-Like.

Examples:

dir = Dir.new('example')
dir.pos      # => 0
dir.pos = 3  # => 3
dir.pos      # => 3
dir.pos = 30 # => 30
dir.pos      # => 5
static VALUE
dir_set_pos(VALUE dir, VALUE pos)
{
    dir_seek(dir, pos);
    return pos;
}
read → string or nil click to toggle source

Reads and returns the next entry name from self; returns nil if at end-of-stream; see Dir As Stream-Like:

dir = Dir.new('example')
dir.read # => "."
dir.read # => ".."
dir.read # => "config.h"
static VALUE
dir_read(VALUE dir)
{
    struct dir_data *dirp;
    struct dirent *dp;

    GetDIR(dir, dirp);
    rb_errno_set(0);
    if ((dp = READDIR(dirp->dir, dirp->enc)) != NULL) {
        return rb_external_str_new_with_enc(dp->d_name, NAMLEN(dp), dirp->enc);
    }
    else {
        int e = errno;
        if (e != 0) rb_syserr_fail(e, 0);
        return Qnil;            /* end of stream */
    }
}
rewind → self click to toggle source

Sets the position in self to zero; see Dir As Stream-Like:

dir = Dir.new('example')
dir.read    # => "."
dir.read    # => ".."
dir.pos     # => 2
dir.rewind  # => #<Dir:example>
dir.pos     # => 0
static VALUE
dir_rewind(VALUE dir)
{
    struct dir_data *dirp;

    GetDIR(dir, dirp);
    rewinddir(dirp->dir);
    return dir;
}
seek(position) → self click to toggle source

Sets the position in self and returns self. The value of position should have been returned from an earlier call to tell; if not, the return values from subsequent calls to read are unspecified.

See Dir As Stream-Like.

Examples:

dir = Dir.new('example')
dir.pos      # => 0
dir.seek(3)  # => #<Dir:example>
dir.pos      # => 3
dir.seek(30) # => #<Dir:example>
dir.pos      # => 5
static VALUE
dir_seek(VALUE dir, VALUE pos)
{
    struct dir_data *dirp;
    long p = NUM2LONG(pos);

    GetDIR(dir, dirp);
    seekdir(dirp->dir, p);
    return dir;
}
tell → integer click to toggle source

Returns the current position of self; see Dir As Stream-Like:

dir = Dir.new('example')
dir.tell  # => 0
dir.read  # => "."
dir.tell  # => 1
static VALUE
dir_tell(VALUE dir)
{
    struct dir_data *dirp;
    long pos;

    GetDIR(dir, dirp);
    pos = telldir(dirp->dir);
    return rb_int2inum(pos);
}
Also aliased as: pos
to_path()

Returns the dirpath string that was used to create self (or nil if created by method Dir.for_fd):

Dir.new('example').path # => "example"
Alias for: path