Crate globset[−][src]
The globset crate provides cross platform single glob and glob set matching.
Glob set matching is the process of matching one or more glob patterns against a single candidate path simultaneously, and returning all of the globs that matched. For example, given this set of globs:
*.rs src/lib.rs src/**/foo.rs
and a path src/bar/baz/foo.rs, then the set would report the first and third
globs as matching.
Example: one glob
This example shows how to match a single glob against a single file path.
use globset::Glob; let glob = Glob::new("*.rs")?.compile_matcher(); assert!(glob.is_match("foo.rs")); assert!(glob.is_match("foo/bar.rs")); assert!(!glob.is_match("Cargo.toml"));
Example: configuring a glob matcher
This example shows how to use a GlobBuilder to configure aspects of match
semantics. In this example, we prevent wildcards from matching path separators.
use globset::GlobBuilder; let glob = GlobBuilder::new("*.rs") .literal_separator(true).build()?.compile_matcher(); assert!(glob.is_match("foo.rs")); assert!(!glob.is_match("foo/bar.rs")); // no longer matches assert!(!glob.is_match("Cargo.toml"));
Example: match multiple globs at once
This example shows how to match multiple glob patterns at once.
use globset::{Glob, GlobSetBuilder}; let mut builder = GlobSetBuilder::new(); // A GlobBuilder can be used to configure each glob's match semantics // independently. builder.add(Glob::new("*.rs")?); builder.add(Glob::new("src/lib.rs")?); builder.add(Glob::new("src/**/foo.rs")?); let set = builder.build()?; assert_eq!(set.matches("src/bar/baz/foo.rs"), vec![0, 2]);
Syntax
Standard Unix-style glob syntax is supported:
?matches any single character. (If theliteral_separatoroption is enabled, then?can never match a path separator.)*matches zero or more characters. (If theliteral_separatoroption is enabled, then*can never match a path separator.)**recursively matches directories but are only legal in three situations. First, if the glob starts with**/, then it matches all directories. For example,**/foomatchesfooandbar/foobut notfoo/bar. Secondly, if the glob ends with/**, then it matches all sub-entries. For example,foo/**matchesfoo/aandfoo/a/b, but notfoo. Thirdly, if the glob contains/**/anywhere within the pattern, then it matches zero or more directories. Using**anywhere else is illegal (N.B. the glob**is allowed and means “match everything”).{a,b}matchesaorbwhereaandbare arbitrary glob patterns. (N.B. Nesting{...}is not currently allowed.)[ab]matchesaorbwhereaandbare characters. Use[!ab]to match any character except foraandb.- Metacharacters such as
*and?can be escaped with character class notation. e.g.,[*]matches*. - When backslash escapes are enabled, a backslash (
\) will escape all meta characters in a glob. If it precedes a non-meta character, then the slash is ignored. A\\will match a literal\\. Note that this mode is only enabled on Unix platforms by default, but can be enabled on any platform via thebackslash_escapesetting onGlob.
A GlobBuilder can be used to prevent wildcards from matching path separators,
or to enable case insensitive matching.
Structs
| Candidate | A candidate path for matching. |
| Error | Represents an error that can occur when parsing a glob pattern. |
| Glob | Glob represents a successfully parsed shell glob pattern. |
| GlobBuilder | A builder for a pattern. |
| GlobMatcher | A matcher for a single pattern. |
| GlobSet | GlobSet represents a group of globs that can be matched together in a single pass. |
| GlobSetBuilder | GlobSetBuilder builds a group of patterns that can be used to simultaneously match a file path. |
Enums
| ErrorKind | The kind of error that can occur when parsing a glob pattern. |