simple/pathtools/apppath.pl

88 lines
1.7 KiB
Perl
Executable File

#!@@@perl@@@ -w
=head1 NAME
apppath - append directories to path
=head1 SYNOPSIS
apppath [-c] [-v variable] directory...
=head1 DESCRIPTION
apppath appends the directories given as arguments to the PATH and
prints the new path on stdout.
=head1 OPTIONS
=over 4
=item B<-c>
Check whether the directories exist before adding them. Nonexistent
directories are silently ignored.
=item B<-v> I<variable>
Use the environment variable I<variable> instead of PATH.
This is useful for manipulating other PATH-like variables, like
LD_LIBRARY_PATH, PERL5LIB, etc.
=item B<-e>
Print a complete export statement ready to be eval'd by a POSIX shell.
=item B<-p>
Print a complete variable assignment statement ready to be eval'd by a
POSIX shell. Unlike the C<-e> option this does not prepend the export
keyword, so the variable is private unless it is exported elsewhere.
=back
=head1 AUTHOR
Peter J. Holzer <hjp@hjp.at>.
=cut
use strict;
use Getopt::Long;
my $check;
my $debug;
my $var = 'PATH';
my $export;
my $private;
GetOptions("check" => \$check,
"debug" => \$debug,
"var=s" => \$var,
"export" => \$export,
"private" => \$private,
) or do {
require Pod::Usage;
import Pod::Usage;
pod2usage(2);
};
my $path = $ENV{$var} || '';
my @path = split(/:/, $path);
if ($#ARGV == 0 && $ARGV[0] =~ /:/) {
@ARGV = split(/:/, $ARGV[0]);
}
nd: for my $nd (@ARGV) {
for my $od (@path) {
next nd if ($nd eq $od);
}
push @path, $nd if (!$check || -d $nd);
}
if ($export) {
print "export ";
}
if ($export || $private) {
print "$var=";
}
print join(':', @path), "\n";