#
# Copyright (c) 1995 Graham Barr & Nick Ing-Simmons. All rights reserved.
# under the same terms as Perl itself.
=head1 NAME
FindBin - Locate directory of original perl script
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use FindBin;
use lib "$FindBin::Bin/../lib";
or
use FindBin qw($Bin);
use lib "$Bin/../lib";
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Locates the full path to the script bin directory to allow the use
of paths relative to the bin directory.
This allows a user to setup a directory tree for some software with
directories E<lt>rootE<gt>/bin and E<lt>rootE<gt>/lib and then the above example will allow
the use of modules in the lib directory without knowing where the software
tree is installed.
If perl is invoked using the B<-e> option or the perl script is read from
C<STDIN> then FindBin sets both C<$Bin> and C<$RealBin> to the current
directory.
=head1 EXPORTABLE VARIABLES
$Bin - path to bin directory from where script was invoked
$Script - basename of script from which perl was invoked
$RealBin - $Bin with all links resolved
$RealScript - $Script with all links resolved
=head1 KNOWN ISSUES
If there are two modules using C<FindBin> from different directories
under the same interpreter, this won't work. Since C<FindBin> uses a
C<BEGIN> block, it'll be executed only once, and only the first caller
will get it right. This is a problem under mod_perl and other persistent
Perl environments, where you shouldn't use this module. Which also means
that you should avoid using C<FindBin> in modules that you plan to put
on CPAN. To make sure that C<FindBin> will work is to call the C<again>
function:
use FindBin;
FindBin::again(); # or FindBin->again;
In former versions of FindBin there was no C<again> function. The
workaround was to force the C<BEGIN> block to be executed again:
delete $INC{'FindBin.pm'};
require FindBin;
=head1 KNOWN BUGS
If perl is invoked as
perl filename
and I<filename> does not have executable rights and a program called I<filename>
exists in the users C<$ENV{PATH}> which satisfies both B<-x> and B<-T> then FindBin
assumes that it was invoked via the C<$ENV{PATH}>.
Workaround is to invoke perl as
perl ./filename
=head1 AUTHORS
FindBin is supported as part of the core perl distribution. Please send bug
reports to E<lt>F<perlbug@perl.org>E<gt> using the perlbug program included with perl.
Graham Barr E<lt>F<gbarr@pobox.com>E<gt>
Nick Ing-Simmons E<lt>F<nik@tiuk.ti.com>E<gt>
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1995 Graham Barr & Nick Ing-Simmons. All rights reserved.
under the same terms as Perl itself.
=cut
package FindBin;
use Carp;
require 5.000;
require Exporter;
use Config;
$VERSION = "1.44";
sub init
{
if($0 eq '-e' || $0 eq '-')
{
# perl invoked with -e or script is on C<STDIN>
}
else
{
my $script = $0;
if ($^O eq 'VMS')
{
}
else
{
unless(($script =~ m#/# || ($dosish && $script =~ m#\\#))
&& -f $script)
{
my $dir;
{
{
if (-f $0)
{
# $script has been found via PATH but perl could have
# been invoked as 'perl file'. Do a dumb check to see
# if $script is a perl program, if not then $script = $0
#
# well we actually only check that it is an ASCII file
# we know its executable so it is probably a script
# of some sort.
}
last;
}
}
}
croak("Cannot find current script '$0'") unless(-f $script);
# Ensure $script contains the complete path incase we C<chdir>
# Resolve $script if it is a link
while(1)
{
last unless defined $linktext;
? $linktext
}
# Get absolute paths to directories
}
}
}
BEGIN { init }
1; # Keep require happy