(Serial Ports): Improve wording, suggested by RMS.
[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / lispref / files.texi
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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3@c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2001,
6ed161e1 4@c 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
b8d4c8d0 5@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6336d8c3 6@setfilename ../../info/files
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7@node Files, Backups and Auto-Saving, Documentation, Top
8@comment node-name, next, previous, up
9@chapter Files
10
11 In Emacs, you can find, create, view, save, and otherwise work with
12files and file directories. This chapter describes most of the
13file-related functions of Emacs Lisp, but a few others are described in
14@ref{Buffers}, and those related to backups and auto-saving are
15described in @ref{Backups and Auto-Saving}.
16
17 Many of the file functions take one or more arguments that are file
18names. A file name is actually a string. Most of these functions
19expand file name arguments by calling @code{expand-file-name}, so that
20@file{~} is handled correctly, as are relative file names (including
21@samp{../}). These functions don't recognize environment variable
22substitutions such as @samp{$HOME}. @xref{File Name Expansion}.
23
24 When file I/O functions signal Lisp errors, they usually use the
25condition @code{file-error} (@pxref{Handling Errors}). The error
26message is in most cases obtained from the operating system, according
27to locale @code{system-message-locale}, and decoded using coding system
28@code{locale-coding-system} (@pxref{Locales}).
29
30@menu
31* Visiting Files:: Reading files into Emacs buffers for editing.
32* Saving Buffers:: Writing changed buffers back into files.
33* Reading from Files:: Reading files into buffers without visiting.
34* Writing to Files:: Writing new files from parts of buffers.
35* File Locks:: Locking and unlocking files, to prevent
36 simultaneous editing by two people.
37* Information about Files:: Testing existence, accessibility, size of files.
38* Changing Files:: Renaming files, changing protection, etc.
39* File Names:: Decomposing and expanding file names.
40* Contents of Directories:: Getting a list of the files in a directory.
41* Create/Delete Dirs:: Creating and Deleting Directories.
42* Magic File Names:: Defining "magic" special handling
43 for certain file names.
44* Format Conversion:: Conversion to and from various file formats.
45@end menu
46
47@node Visiting Files
48@section Visiting Files
49@cindex finding files
50@cindex visiting files
51
52 Visiting a file means reading a file into a buffer. Once this is
53done, we say that the buffer is @dfn{visiting} that file, and call the
54file ``the visited file'' of the buffer.
55
56 A file and a buffer are two different things. A file is information
57recorded permanently in the computer (unless you delete it). A buffer,
58on the other hand, is information inside of Emacs that will vanish at
59the end of the editing session (or when you kill the buffer). Usually,
60a buffer contains information that you have copied from a file; then we
61say the buffer is visiting that file. The copy in the buffer is what
62you modify with editing commands. Such changes to the buffer do not
63change the file; therefore, to make the changes permanent, you must
64@dfn{save} the buffer, which means copying the altered buffer contents
65back into the file.
66
67 In spite of the distinction between files and buffers, people often
68refer to a file when they mean a buffer and vice-versa. Indeed, we say,
69``I am editing a file,'' rather than, ``I am editing a buffer that I
70will soon save as a file of the same name.'' Humans do not usually need
71to make the distinction explicit. When dealing with a computer program,
72however, it is good to keep the distinction in mind.
73
74@menu
75* Visiting Functions:: The usual interface functions for visiting.
76* Subroutines of Visiting:: Lower-level subroutines that they use.
77@end menu
78
79@node Visiting Functions
80@subsection Functions for Visiting Files
81
82 This section describes the functions normally used to visit files.
83For historical reasons, these functions have names starting with
84@samp{find-} rather than @samp{visit-}. @xref{Buffer File Name}, for
85functions and variables that access the visited file name of a buffer or
86that find an existing buffer by its visited file name.
87
88 In a Lisp program, if you want to look at the contents of a file but
89not alter it, the fastest way is to use @code{insert-file-contents} in a
90temporary buffer. Visiting the file is not necessary and takes longer.
91@xref{Reading from Files}.
92
93@deffn Command find-file filename &optional wildcards
94This command selects a buffer visiting the file @var{filename},
95using an existing buffer if there is one, and otherwise creating a
96new buffer and reading the file into it. It also returns that buffer.
97
98Aside from some technical details, the body of the @code{find-file}
99function is basically equivalent to:
100
101@smallexample
102(switch-to-buffer (find-file-noselect filename nil nil wildcards))
103@end smallexample
104
105@noindent
106(See @code{switch-to-buffer} in @ref{Displaying Buffers}.)
107
108If @var{wildcards} is non-@code{nil}, which is always true in an
109interactive call, then @code{find-file} expands wildcard characters in
110@var{filename} and visits all the matching files.
111
112When @code{find-file} is called interactively, it prompts for
113@var{filename} in the minibuffer.
114@end deffn
115
116@defun find-file-noselect filename &optional nowarn rawfile wildcards
117This function is the guts of all the file-visiting functions. It
118returns a buffer visiting the file @var{filename}. You may make the
119buffer current or display it in a window if you wish, but this
120function does not do so.
121
122The function returns an existing buffer if there is one; otherwise it
123creates a new buffer and reads the file into it. When
124@code{find-file-noselect} uses an existing buffer, it first verifies
125that the file has not changed since it was last visited or saved in
126that buffer. If the file has changed, this function asks the user
127whether to reread the changed file. If the user says @samp{yes}, any
128edits previously made in the buffer are lost.
129
130Reading the file involves decoding the file's contents (@pxref{Coding
131Systems}), including end-of-line conversion, and format conversion
132(@pxref{Format Conversion}). If @var{wildcards} is non-@code{nil},
133then @code{find-file-noselect} expands wildcard characters in
134@var{filename} and visits all the matching files.
135
136This function displays warning or advisory messages in various peculiar
137cases, unless the optional argument @var{nowarn} is non-@code{nil}. For
138example, if it needs to create a buffer, and there is no file named
139@var{filename}, it displays the message @samp{(New file)} in the echo
140area, and leaves the buffer empty.
141
142The @code{find-file-noselect} function normally calls
143@code{after-find-file} after reading the file (@pxref{Subroutines of
144Visiting}). That function sets the buffer major mode, parses local
145variables, warns the user if there exists an auto-save file more recent
146than the file just visited, and finishes by running the functions in
147@code{find-file-hook}.
148
149If the optional argument @var{rawfile} is non-@code{nil}, then
150@code{after-find-file} is not called, and the
151@code{find-file-not-found-functions} are not run in case of failure.
152What's more, a non-@code{nil} @var{rawfile} value suppresses coding
153system conversion and format conversion.
154
155The @code{find-file-noselect} function usually returns the buffer that
156is visiting the file @var{filename}. But, if wildcards are actually
157used and expanded, it returns a list of buffers that are visiting the
158various files.
159
160@example
161@group
162(find-file-noselect "/etc/fstab")
163 @result{} #<buffer fstab>
164@end group
165@end example
166@end defun
167
168@deffn Command find-file-other-window filename &optional wildcards
169This command selects a buffer visiting the file @var{filename}, but
170does so in a window other than the selected window. It may use another
171existing window or split a window; see @ref{Displaying Buffers}.
172
173When this command is called interactively, it prompts for
174@var{filename}.
175@end deffn
176
177@deffn Command find-file-read-only filename &optional wildcards
178This command selects a buffer visiting the file @var{filename}, like
179@code{find-file}, but it marks the buffer as read-only. @xref{Read Only
180Buffers}, for related functions and variables.
181
182When this command is called interactively, it prompts for
183@var{filename}.
184@end deffn
185
186@deffn Command view-file filename
187This command visits @var{filename} using View mode, returning to the
188previous buffer when you exit View mode. View mode is a minor mode that
189provides commands to skim rapidly through the file, but does not let you
190modify the text. Entering View mode runs the normal hook
191@code{view-mode-hook}. @xref{Hooks}.
192
193When @code{view-file} is called interactively, it prompts for
194@var{filename}.
195@end deffn
196
197@defopt find-file-wildcards
198If this variable is non-@code{nil}, then the various @code{find-file}
199commands check for wildcard characters and visit all the files that
200match them (when invoked interactively or when their @var{wildcards}
201argument is non-@code{nil}). If this option is @code{nil}, then
202the @code{find-file} commands ignore their @var{wildcards} argument
203and never treat wildcard characters specially.
204@end defopt
205
206@defvar find-file-hook
207The value of this variable is a list of functions to be called after a
208file is visited. The file's local-variables specification (if any) will
209have been processed before the hooks are run. The buffer visiting the
210file is current when the hook functions are run.
211
212This variable is a normal hook. @xref{Hooks}.
213@end defvar
214
215@defvar find-file-not-found-functions
216The value of this variable is a list of functions to be called when
217@code{find-file} or @code{find-file-noselect} is passed a nonexistent
218file name. @code{find-file-noselect} calls these functions as soon as
219it detects a nonexistent file. It calls them in the order of the list,
220until one of them returns non-@code{nil}. @code{buffer-file-name} is
221already set up.
222
223This is not a normal hook because the values of the functions are
224used, and in many cases only some of the functions are called.
225@end defvar
226
227@node Subroutines of Visiting
228@comment node-name, next, previous, up
229@subsection Subroutines of Visiting
230
231 The @code{find-file-noselect} function uses two important subroutines
232which are sometimes useful in user Lisp code: @code{create-file-buffer}
233and @code{after-find-file}. This section explains how to use them.
234
235@defun create-file-buffer filename
236This function creates a suitably named buffer for visiting
237@var{filename}, and returns it. It uses @var{filename} (sans directory)
238as the name if that name is free; otherwise, it appends a string such as
239@samp{<2>} to get an unused name. See also @ref{Creating Buffers}.
240
241@strong{Please note:} @code{create-file-buffer} does @emph{not}
242associate the new buffer with a file and does not select the buffer.
243It also does not use the default major mode.
244
245@example
246@group
247(create-file-buffer "foo")
248 @result{} #<buffer foo>
249@end group
250@group
251(create-file-buffer "foo")
252 @result{} #<buffer foo<2>>
253@end group
254@group
255(create-file-buffer "foo")
256 @result{} #<buffer foo<3>>
257@end group
258@end example
259
260This function is used by @code{find-file-noselect}.
261It uses @code{generate-new-buffer} (@pxref{Creating Buffers}).
262@end defun
263
264@defun after-find-file &optional error warn noauto after-find-file-from-revert-buffer nomodes
265This function sets the buffer major mode, and parses local variables
266(@pxref{Auto Major Mode}). It is called by @code{find-file-noselect}
267and by the default revert function (@pxref{Reverting}).
268
269@cindex new file message
270@cindex file open error
271If reading the file got an error because the file does not exist, but
272its directory does exist, the caller should pass a non-@code{nil} value
273for @var{error}. In that case, @code{after-find-file} issues a warning:
274@samp{(New file)}. For more serious errors, the caller should usually not
275call @code{after-find-file}.
276
277If @var{warn} is non-@code{nil}, then this function issues a warning
278if an auto-save file exists and is more recent than the visited file.
279
280If @var{noauto} is non-@code{nil}, that says not to enable or disable
281Auto-Save mode. The mode remains enabled if it was enabled before.
282
283If @var{after-find-file-from-revert-buffer} is non-@code{nil}, that
284means this call was from @code{revert-buffer}. This has no direct
285effect, but some mode functions and hook functions check the value
286of this variable.
287
288If @var{nomodes} is non-@code{nil}, that means don't alter the buffer's
289major mode, don't process local variables specifications in the file,
290and don't run @code{find-file-hook}. This feature is used by
291@code{revert-buffer} in some cases.
292
293The last thing @code{after-find-file} does is call all the functions
294in the list @code{find-file-hook}.
295@end defun
296
297@node Saving Buffers
298@section Saving Buffers
299@cindex saving buffers
300
301 When you edit a file in Emacs, you are actually working on a buffer
302that is visiting that file---that is, the contents of the file are
303copied into the buffer and the copy is what you edit. Changes to the
304buffer do not change the file until you @dfn{save} the buffer, which
305means copying the contents of the buffer into the file.
306
307@deffn Command save-buffer &optional backup-option
308This function saves the contents of the current buffer in its visited
309file if the buffer has been modified since it was last visited or saved.
310Otherwise it does nothing.
311
312@code{save-buffer} is responsible for making backup files. Normally,
313@var{backup-option} is @code{nil}, and @code{save-buffer} makes a backup
314file only if this is the first save since visiting the file. Other
315values for @var{backup-option} request the making of backup files in
316other circumstances:
317
318@itemize @bullet
319@item
320With an argument of 4 or 64, reflecting 1 or 3 @kbd{C-u}'s, the
321@code{save-buffer} function marks this version of the file to be
322backed up when the buffer is next saved.
323
324@item
325With an argument of 16 or 64, reflecting 2 or 3 @kbd{C-u}'s, the
326@code{save-buffer} function unconditionally backs up the previous
327version of the file before saving it.
328
329@item
330With an argument of 0, unconditionally do @emph{not} make any backup file.
331@end itemize
332@end deffn
333
334@deffn Command save-some-buffers &optional save-silently-p pred
335@anchor{Definition of save-some-buffers}
336This command saves some modified file-visiting buffers. Normally it
337asks the user about each buffer. But if @var{save-silently-p} is
338non-@code{nil}, it saves all the file-visiting buffers without querying
339the user.
340
341The optional @var{pred} argument controls which buffers to ask about
342(or to save silently if @var{save-silently-p} is non-@code{nil}).
343If it is @code{nil}, that means to ask only about file-visiting buffers.
344If it is @code{t}, that means also offer to save certain other non-file
345buffers---those that have a non-@code{nil} buffer-local value of
346@code{buffer-offer-save} (@pxref{Killing Buffers}). A user who says
347@samp{yes} to saving a non-file buffer is asked to specify the file
348name to use. The @code{save-buffers-kill-emacs} function passes the
349value @code{t} for @var{pred}.
350
351If @var{pred} is neither @code{t} nor @code{nil}, then it should be
352a function of no arguments. It will be called in each buffer to decide
353whether to offer to save that buffer. If it returns a non-@code{nil}
354value in a certain buffer, that means do offer to save that buffer.
355@end deffn
356
357@deffn Command write-file filename &optional confirm
358@anchor{Definition of write-file}
359This function writes the current buffer into file @var{filename}, makes
360the buffer visit that file, and marks it not modified. Then it renames
361the buffer based on @var{filename}, appending a string like @samp{<2>}
362if necessary to make a unique buffer name. It does most of this work by
363calling @code{set-visited-file-name} (@pxref{Buffer File Name}) and
364@code{save-buffer}.
365
366If @var{confirm} is non-@code{nil}, that means to ask for confirmation
367before overwriting an existing file. Interactively, confirmation is
368required, unless the user supplies a prefix argument.
369
370If @var{filename} is an existing directory, or a symbolic link to one,
371@code{write-file} uses the name of the visited file, in directory
372@var{filename}. If the buffer is not visiting a file, it uses the
373buffer name instead.
374@end deffn
375
376 Saving a buffer runs several hooks. It also performs format
377conversion (@pxref{Format Conversion}).
378
379@defvar write-file-functions
380The value of this variable is a list of functions to be called before
381writing out a buffer to its visited file. If one of them returns
382non-@code{nil}, the file is considered already written and the rest of
383the functions are not called, nor is the usual code for writing the file
384executed.
385
386If a function in @code{write-file-functions} returns non-@code{nil}, it
387is responsible for making a backup file (if that is appropriate).
388To do so, execute the following code:
389
390@example
391(or buffer-backed-up (backup-buffer))
392@end example
393
394You might wish to save the file modes value returned by
395@code{backup-buffer} and use that (if non-@code{nil}) to set the mode
396bits of the file that you write. This is what @code{save-buffer}
397normally does. @xref{Making Backups,, Making Backup Files}.
398
399The hook functions in @code{write-file-functions} are also responsible
400for encoding the data (if desired): they must choose a suitable coding
401system and end-of-line conversion (@pxref{Lisp and Coding Systems}),
402perform the encoding (@pxref{Explicit Encoding}), and set
403@code{last-coding-system-used} to the coding system that was used
404(@pxref{Encoding and I/O}).
405
406If you set this hook locally in a buffer, it is assumed to be
407associated with the file or the way the contents of the buffer were
408obtained. Thus the variable is marked as a permanent local, so that
409changing the major mode does not alter a buffer-local value. On the
410other hand, calling @code{set-visited-file-name} will reset it.
411If this is not what you want, you might like to use
412@code{write-contents-functions} instead.
413
414Even though this is not a normal hook, you can use @code{add-hook} and
415@code{remove-hook} to manipulate the list. @xref{Hooks}.
416@end defvar
417
418@c Emacs 19 feature
419@defvar write-contents-functions
420This works just like @code{write-file-functions}, but it is intended
421for hooks that pertain to the buffer's contents, not to the particular
422visited file or its location. Such hooks are usually set up by major
423modes, as buffer-local bindings for this variable. This variable
424automatically becomes buffer-local whenever it is set; switching to a
425new major mode always resets this variable, but calling
426@code{set-visited-file-name} does not.
427
428If any of the functions in this hook returns non-@code{nil}, the file
429is considered already written and the rest are not called and neither
430are the functions in @code{write-file-functions}.
431@end defvar
432
433@defopt before-save-hook
434This normal hook runs before a buffer is saved in its visited file,
435regardless of whether that is done normally or by one of the hooks
436described above. For instance, the @file{copyright.el} program uses
437this hook to make sure the file you are saving has the current year in
438its copyright notice.
439@end defopt
440
441@c Emacs 19 feature
442@defopt after-save-hook
443This normal hook runs after a buffer has been saved in its visited file.
444One use of this hook is in Fast Lock mode; it uses this hook to save the
445highlighting information in a cache file.
446@end defopt
447
448@defopt file-precious-flag
449If this variable is non-@code{nil}, then @code{save-buffer} protects
450against I/O errors while saving by writing the new file to a temporary
451name instead of the name it is supposed to have, and then renaming it to
452the intended name after it is clear there are no errors. This procedure
453prevents problems such as a lack of disk space from resulting in an
454invalid file.
455
456As a side effect, backups are necessarily made by copying. @xref{Rename
457or Copy}. Yet, at the same time, saving a precious file always breaks
458all hard links between the file you save and other file names.
459
460Some modes give this variable a non-@code{nil} buffer-local value
461in particular buffers.
462@end defopt
463
464@defopt require-final-newline
465This variable determines whether files may be written out that do
466@emph{not} end with a newline. If the value of the variable is
467@code{t}, then @code{save-buffer} silently adds a newline at the end of
468the file whenever the buffer being saved does not already end in one.
469If the value of the variable is non-@code{nil}, but not @code{t}, then
470@code{save-buffer} asks the user whether to add a newline each time the
471case arises.
472
473If the value of the variable is @code{nil}, then @code{save-buffer}
474doesn't add newlines at all. @code{nil} is the default value, but a few
475major modes set it to @code{t} in particular buffers.
476@end defopt
477
478 See also the function @code{set-visited-file-name} (@pxref{Buffer File
479Name}).
480
481@node Reading from Files
482@comment node-name, next, previous, up
483@section Reading from Files
484@cindex reading from files
485
486 You can copy a file from the disk and insert it into a buffer
487using the @code{insert-file-contents} function. Don't use the user-level
488command @code{insert-file} in a Lisp program, as that sets the mark.
489
490@defun insert-file-contents filename &optional visit beg end replace
491This function inserts the contents of file @var{filename} into the
492current buffer after point. It returns a list of the absolute file name
493and the length of the data inserted. An error is signaled if
494@var{filename} is not the name of a file that can be read.
495
496The function @code{insert-file-contents} checks the file contents
497against the defined file formats, and converts the file contents if
498appropriate and also calls the functions in
499the list @code{after-insert-file-functions}. @xref{Format Conversion}.
500Normally, one of the functions in the
501@code{after-insert-file-functions} list determines the coding system
502(@pxref{Coding Systems}) used for decoding the file's contents,
503including end-of-line conversion.
504
505If @var{visit} is non-@code{nil}, this function additionally marks the
506buffer as unmodified and sets up various fields in the buffer so that it
507is visiting the file @var{filename}: these include the buffer's visited
508file name and its last save file modtime. This feature is used by
509@code{find-file-noselect} and you probably should not use it yourself.
510
511If @var{beg} and @var{end} are non-@code{nil}, they should be integers
512specifying the portion of the file to insert. In this case, @var{visit}
513must be @code{nil}. For example,
514
515@example
516(insert-file-contents filename nil 0 500)
517@end example
518
519@noindent
520inserts the first 500 characters of a file.
521
522If the argument @var{replace} is non-@code{nil}, it means to replace the
523contents of the buffer (actually, just the accessible portion) with the
524contents of the file. This is better than simply deleting the buffer
525contents and inserting the whole file, because (1) it preserves some
526marker positions and (2) it puts less data in the undo list.
527
528It is possible to read a special file (such as a FIFO or an I/O device)
529with @code{insert-file-contents}, as long as @var{replace} and
530@var{visit} are @code{nil}.
531@end defun
532
533@defun insert-file-contents-literally filename &optional visit beg end replace
534This function works like @code{insert-file-contents} except that it does
535not do format decoding (@pxref{Format Conversion}), does not do
536character code conversion (@pxref{Coding Systems}), does not run
537@code{find-file-hook}, does not perform automatic uncompression, and so
538on.
539@end defun
540
541If you want to pass a file name to another process so that another
542program can read the file, use the function @code{file-local-copy}; see
543@ref{Magic File Names}.
544
545@node Writing to Files
546@comment node-name, next, previous, up
547@section Writing to Files
548@cindex writing to files
549
550 You can write the contents of a buffer, or part of a buffer, directly
551to a file on disk using the @code{append-to-file} and
552@code{write-region} functions. Don't use these functions to write to
553files that are being visited; that could cause confusion in the
554mechanisms for visiting.
555
556@deffn Command append-to-file start end filename
557This function appends the contents of the region delimited by
558@var{start} and @var{end} in the current buffer to the end of file
559@var{filename}. If that file does not exist, it is created. This
560function returns @code{nil}.
561
562An error is signaled if @var{filename} specifies a nonwritable file,
563or a nonexistent file in a directory where files cannot be created.
564
565When called from Lisp, this function is completely equivalent to:
566
567@example
568(write-region start end filename t)
569@end example
570@end deffn
571
572@deffn Command write-region start end filename &optional append visit lockname mustbenew
573This function writes the region delimited by @var{start} and @var{end}
574in the current buffer into the file specified by @var{filename}.
575
576If @var{start} is @code{nil}, then the command writes the entire buffer
577contents (@emph{not} just the accessible portion) to the file and
578ignores @var{end}.
579
580@c Emacs 19 feature
581If @var{start} is a string, then @code{write-region} writes or appends
582that string, rather than text from the buffer. @var{end} is ignored in
583this case.
584
585If @var{append} is non-@code{nil}, then the specified text is appended
586to the existing file contents (if any). If @var{append} is an
587integer, @code{write-region} seeks to that byte offset from the start
588of the file and writes the data from there.
589
590If @var{mustbenew} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{write-region} asks
591for confirmation if @var{filename} names an existing file. If
592@var{mustbenew} is the symbol @code{excl}, then @code{write-region}
593does not ask for confirmation, but instead it signals an error
594@code{file-already-exists} if the file already exists.
595
596The test for an existing file, when @var{mustbenew} is @code{excl}, uses
597a special system feature. At least for files on a local disk, there is
598no chance that some other program could create a file of the same name
599before Emacs does, without Emacs's noticing.
600
601If @var{visit} is @code{t}, then Emacs establishes an association
602between the buffer and the file: the buffer is then visiting that file.
603It also sets the last file modification time for the current buffer to
604@var{filename}'s modtime, and marks the buffer as not modified. This
605feature is used by @code{save-buffer}, but you probably should not use
606it yourself.
607
608@c Emacs 19 feature
609If @var{visit} is a string, it specifies the file name to visit. This
610way, you can write the data to one file (@var{filename}) while recording
611the buffer as visiting another file (@var{visit}). The argument
612@var{visit} is used in the echo area message and also for file locking;
613@var{visit} is stored in @code{buffer-file-name}. This feature is used
614to implement @code{file-precious-flag}; don't use it yourself unless you
615really know what you're doing.
616
617The optional argument @var{lockname}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies the
618file name to use for purposes of locking and unlocking, overriding
619@var{filename} and @var{visit} for that purpose.
620
621The function @code{write-region} converts the data which it writes to
622the appropriate file formats specified by @code{buffer-file-format}
623and also calls the functions in the list
624@code{write-region-annotate-functions}.
625@xref{Format Conversion}.
626
627Normally, @code{write-region} displays the message @samp{Wrote
628@var{filename}} in the echo area. If @var{visit} is neither @code{t}
629nor @code{nil} nor a string, then this message is inhibited. This
630feature is useful for programs that use files for internal purposes,
631files that the user does not need to know about.
632@end deffn
633
634@defmac with-temp-file file body@dots{}
635@anchor{Definition of with-temp-file}
636The @code{with-temp-file} macro evaluates the @var{body} forms with a
637temporary buffer as the current buffer; then, at the end, it writes the
638buffer contents into file @var{file}. It kills the temporary buffer
639when finished, restoring the buffer that was current before the
640@code{with-temp-file} form. Then it returns the value of the last form
641in @var{body}.
642
643The current buffer is restored even in case of an abnormal exit via
644@code{throw} or error (@pxref{Nonlocal Exits}).
645
646See also @code{with-temp-buffer} in @ref{Definition of
647with-temp-buffer,, The Current Buffer}.
648@end defmac
649
650@node File Locks
651@section File Locks
652@cindex file locks
653@cindex lock file
654
655 When two users edit the same file at the same time, they are likely
656to interfere with each other. Emacs tries to prevent this situation
657from arising by recording a @dfn{file lock} when a file is being
658modified. (File locks are not implemented on Microsoft systems.)
659Emacs can then detect the first attempt to modify a buffer visiting a
660file that is locked by another Emacs job, and ask the user what to do.
661The file lock is really a file, a symbolic link with a special name,
662stored in the same directory as the file you are editing.
663
664 When you access files using NFS, there may be a small probability that
665you and another user will both lock the same file ``simultaneously.''
666If this happens, it is possible for the two users to make changes
667simultaneously, but Emacs will still warn the user who saves second.
668Also, the detection of modification of a buffer visiting a file changed
669on disk catches some cases of simultaneous editing; see
670@ref{Modification Time}.
671
672@defun file-locked-p filename
673This function returns @code{nil} if the file @var{filename} is not
674locked. It returns @code{t} if it is locked by this Emacs process, and
675it returns the name of the user who has locked it if it is locked by
676some other job.
677
678@example
679@group
680(file-locked-p "foo")
681 @result{} nil
682@end group
683@end example
684@end defun
685
686@defun lock-buffer &optional filename
687This function locks the file @var{filename}, if the current buffer is
688modified. The argument @var{filename} defaults to the current buffer's
689visited file. Nothing is done if the current buffer is not visiting a
690file, or is not modified, or if the system does not support locking.
691@end defun
692
693@defun unlock-buffer
694This function unlocks the file being visited in the current buffer,
695if the buffer is modified. If the buffer is not modified, then
696the file should not be locked, so this function does nothing. It also
697does nothing if the current buffer is not visiting a file, or if the
698system does not support locking.
699@end defun
700
701 File locking is not supported on some systems. On systems that do not
702support it, the functions @code{lock-buffer}, @code{unlock-buffer} and
703@code{file-locked-p} do nothing and return @code{nil}.
704
705@defun ask-user-about-lock file other-user
706This function is called when the user tries to modify @var{file}, but it
707is locked by another user named @var{other-user}. The default
708definition of this function asks the user to say what to do. The value
709this function returns determines what Emacs does next:
710
711@itemize @bullet
712@item
713A value of @code{t} says to grab the lock on the file. Then
714this user may edit the file and @var{other-user} loses the lock.
715
716@item
717A value of @code{nil} says to ignore the lock and let this
718user edit the file anyway.
719
720@item
721@kindex file-locked
722This function may instead signal a @code{file-locked} error, in which
723case the change that the user was about to make does not take place.
724
725The error message for this error looks like this:
726
727@example
728@error{} File is locked: @var{file} @var{other-user}
729@end example
730
731@noindent
732where @code{file} is the name of the file and @var{other-user} is the
733name of the user who has locked the file.
734@end itemize
735
736If you wish, you can replace the @code{ask-user-about-lock} function
737with your own version that makes the decision in another way. The code
738for its usual definition is in @file{userlock.el}.
739@end defun
740
741@node Information about Files
742@section Information about Files
743@cindex file, information about
744
745 The functions described in this section all operate on strings that
746designate file names. With a few exceptions, all the functions have
747names that begin with the word @samp{file}. These functions all
748return information about actual files or directories, so their
749arguments must all exist as actual files or directories unless
750otherwise noted.
751
752@menu
753* Testing Accessibility:: Is a given file readable? Writable?
754* Kinds of Files:: Is it a directory? A symbolic link?
755* Truenames:: Eliminating symbolic links from a file name.
756* File Attributes:: How large is it? Any other names? Etc.
757* Locating Files:: How to find a file in standard places.
758@end menu
759
760@node Testing Accessibility
761@comment node-name, next, previous, up
762@subsection Testing Accessibility
763@cindex accessibility of a file
764@cindex file accessibility
765
766 These functions test for permission to access a file in specific
767ways. Unless explicitly stated otherwise, they recursively follow
768symbolic links for their file name arguments, at all levels (at the
769level of the file itself and at all levels of parent directories).
770
771@defun file-exists-p filename
772This function returns @code{t} if a file named @var{filename} appears
773to exist. This does not mean you can necessarily read the file, only
774that you can find out its attributes. (On Unix and GNU/Linux, this is
775true if the file exists and you have execute permission on the
776containing directories, regardless of the protection of the file
777itself.)
778
779If the file does not exist, or if fascist access control policies
780prevent you from finding the attributes of the file, this function
781returns @code{nil}.
782
783Directories are files, so @code{file-exists-p} returns @code{t} when
784given a directory name. However, symbolic links are treated
785specially; @code{file-exists-p} returns @code{t} for a symbolic link
786name only if the target file exists.
787@end defun
788
789@defun file-readable-p filename
790This function returns @code{t} if a file named @var{filename} exists
791and you can read it. It returns @code{nil} otherwise.
792
793@example
794@group
795(file-readable-p "files.texi")
796 @result{} t
797@end group
798@group
799(file-exists-p "/usr/spool/mqueue")
800 @result{} t
801@end group
802@group
803(file-readable-p "/usr/spool/mqueue")
804 @result{} nil
805@end group
806@end example
807@end defun
808
809@c Emacs 19 feature
810@defun file-executable-p filename
811This function returns @code{t} if a file named @var{filename} exists and
812you can execute it. It returns @code{nil} otherwise. On Unix and
813GNU/Linux, if the file is a directory, execute permission means you can
814check the existence and attributes of files inside the directory, and
815open those files if their modes permit.
816@end defun
817
818@defun file-writable-p filename
819This function returns @code{t} if the file @var{filename} can be written
820or created by you, and @code{nil} otherwise. A file is writable if the
821file exists and you can write it. It is creatable if it does not exist,
822but the specified directory does exist and you can write in that
823directory.
824
825In the third example below, @file{foo} is not writable because the
826parent directory does not exist, even though the user could create such
827a directory.
828
829@example
830@group
831(file-writable-p "~/foo")
832 @result{} t
833@end group
834@group
835(file-writable-p "/foo")
836 @result{} nil
837@end group
838@group
839(file-writable-p "~/no-such-dir/foo")
840 @result{} nil
841@end group
842@end example
843@end defun
844
845@c Emacs 19 feature
846@defun file-accessible-directory-p dirname
847This function returns @code{t} if you have permission to open existing
848files in the directory whose name as a file is @var{dirname};
849otherwise (or if there is no such directory), it returns @code{nil}.
850The value of @var{dirname} may be either a directory name (such as
851@file{/foo/}) or the file name of a file which is a directory
852(such as @file{/foo}, without the final slash).
853
854Example: after the following,
855
856@example
857(file-accessible-directory-p "/foo")
858 @result{} nil
859@end example
860
861@noindent
862we can deduce that any attempt to read a file in @file{/foo/} will
863give an error.
864@end defun
865
866@defun access-file filename string
867This function opens file @var{filename} for reading, then closes it and
868returns @code{nil}. However, if the open fails, it signals an error
869using @var{string} as the error message text.
870@end defun
871
872@defun file-ownership-preserved-p filename
873This function returns @code{t} if deleting the file @var{filename} and
874then creating it anew would keep the file's owner unchanged. It also
875returns @code{t} for nonexistent files.
876
877If @var{filename} is a symbolic link, then, unlike the other functions
878discussed here, @code{file-ownership-preserved-p} does @emph{not}
879replace @var{filename} with its target. However, it does recursively
880follow symbolic links at all levels of parent directories.
881@end defun
882
883@defun file-newer-than-file-p filename1 filename2
884@cindex file age
885@cindex file modification time
886This function returns @code{t} if the file @var{filename1} is
887newer than file @var{filename2}. If @var{filename1} does not
888exist, it returns @code{nil}. If @var{filename1} does exist, but
889@var{filename2} does not, it returns @code{t}.
890
891In the following example, assume that the file @file{aug-19} was written
892on the 19th, @file{aug-20} was written on the 20th, and the file
893@file{no-file} doesn't exist at all.
894
895@example
896@group
897(file-newer-than-file-p "aug-19" "aug-20")
898 @result{} nil
899@end group
900@group
901(file-newer-than-file-p "aug-20" "aug-19")
902 @result{} t
903@end group
904@group
905(file-newer-than-file-p "aug-19" "no-file")
906 @result{} t
907@end group
908@group
909(file-newer-than-file-p "no-file" "aug-19")
910 @result{} nil
911@end group
912@end example
913
914You can use @code{file-attributes} to get a file's last modification
915time as a list of two numbers. @xref{File Attributes}.
916@end defun
917
918@node Kinds of Files
919@comment node-name, next, previous, up
920@subsection Distinguishing Kinds of Files
921
922 This section describes how to distinguish various kinds of files, such
923as directories, symbolic links, and ordinary files.
924
925@defun file-symlink-p filename
926@cindex file symbolic links
927If the file @var{filename} is a symbolic link, the
928@code{file-symlink-p} function returns the (non-recursive) link target
929as a string. (Determining the file name that the link points to from
930the target is nontrivial.) First, this function recursively follows
931symbolic links at all levels of parent directories.
932
933If the file @var{filename} is not a symbolic link (or there is no such file),
934@code{file-symlink-p} returns @code{nil}.
935
936@example
937@group
938(file-symlink-p "foo")
939 @result{} nil
940@end group
941@group
942(file-symlink-p "sym-link")
943 @result{} "foo"
944@end group
945@group
946(file-symlink-p "sym-link2")
947 @result{} "sym-link"
948@end group
949@group
950(file-symlink-p "/bin")
951 @result{} "/pub/bin"
952@end group
953@end example
954
955@c !!! file-symlink-p: should show output of ls -l for comparison
956@end defun
957
958The next two functions recursively follow symbolic links at
959all levels for @var{filename}.
960
961@defun file-directory-p filename
962This function returns @code{t} if @var{filename} is the name of an
963existing directory, @code{nil} otherwise.
964
965@example
966@group
967(file-directory-p "~rms")
968 @result{} t
969@end group
970@group
971(file-directory-p "~rms/lewis/files.texi")
972 @result{} nil
973@end group
974@group
975(file-directory-p "~rms/lewis/no-such-file")
976 @result{} nil
977@end group
978@group
979(file-directory-p "$HOME")
980 @result{} nil
981@end group
982@group
983(file-directory-p
984 (substitute-in-file-name "$HOME"))
985 @result{} t
986@end group
987@end example
988@end defun
989
990@defun file-regular-p filename
991This function returns @code{t} if the file @var{filename} exists and is
992a regular file (not a directory, named pipe, terminal, or
993other I/O device).
994@end defun
995
996@node Truenames
997@subsection Truenames
998@cindex truename (of file)
999
1000@c Emacs 19 features
1001 The @dfn{truename} of a file is the name that you get by following
1002symbolic links at all levels until none remain, then simplifying away
1003@samp{.}@: and @samp{..}@: appearing as name components. This results
1004in a sort of canonical name for the file. A file does not always have a
1005unique truename; the number of distinct truenames a file has is equal to
1006the number of hard links to the file. However, truenames are useful
1007because they eliminate symbolic links as a cause of name variation.
1008
1009@defun file-truename filename
1010The function @code{file-truename} returns the truename of the file
1011@var{filename}. The argument must be an absolute file name.
1012
1013This function does not expand environment variables. Only
1014@code{substitute-in-file-name} does that. @xref{Definition of
1015substitute-in-file-name}.
1016
1017If you may need to follow symbolic links preceding @samp{..}@:
1018appearing as a name component, you should make sure to call
1019@code{file-truename} without prior direct or indirect calls to
1020@code{expand-file-name}, as otherwise the file name component
1021immediately preceding @samp{..} will be ``simplified away'' before
1022@code{file-truename} is called. To eliminate the need for a call to
1023@code{expand-file-name}, @code{file-truename} handles @samp{~} in the
1024same way that @code{expand-file-name} does. @xref{File Name
1025Expansion,, Functions that Expand Filenames}.
1026@end defun
1027
1028@defun file-chase-links filename &optional limit
1029This function follows symbolic links, starting with @var{filename},
1030until it finds a file name which is not the name of a symbolic link.
1031Then it returns that file name. This function does @emph{not} follow
1032symbolic links at the level of parent directories.
1033
1034If you specify a number for @var{limit}, then after chasing through
1035that many links, the function just returns what it has even if that is
1036still a symbolic link.
1037@end defun
1038
1039 To illustrate the difference between @code{file-chase-links} and
1040@code{file-truename}, suppose that @file{/usr/foo} is a symbolic link to
1041the directory @file{/home/foo}, and @file{/home/foo/hello} is an
1042ordinary file (or at least, not a symbolic link) or nonexistent. Then
1043we would have:
1044
1045@example
1046(file-chase-links "/usr/foo/hello")
1047 ;; @r{This does not follow the links in the parent directories.}
1048 @result{} "/usr/foo/hello"
1049(file-truename "/usr/foo/hello")
1050 ;; @r{Assuming that @file{/home} is not a symbolic link.}
1051 @result{} "/home/foo/hello"
1052@end example
1053
1054 @xref{Buffer File Name}, for related information.
1055
1056@node File Attributes
1057@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1058@subsection Other Information about Files
1059
1060 This section describes the functions for getting detailed information
1061about a file, other than its contents. This information includes the
1062mode bits that control access permission, the owner and group numbers,
1063the number of names, the inode number, the size, and the times of access
1064and modification.
1065
1066@defun file-modes filename
1067@cindex permission
1068@cindex file attributes
1069This function returns the mode bits of @var{filename}, as an integer.
1070The mode bits are also called the file permissions, and they specify
1071access control in the usual Unix fashion. If the low-order bit is 1,
1072then the file is executable by all users, if the second-lowest-order bit
1073is 1, then the file is writable by all users, etc.
1074
1075The highest value returnable is 4095 (7777 octal), meaning that
1076everyone has read, write, and execute permission, that the @acronym{SUID} bit
1077is set for both others and group, and that the sticky bit is set.
1078
1079If @var{filename} does not exist, @code{file-modes} returns @code{nil}.
1080
1081This function recursively follows symbolic links at all levels.
1082
1083@example
1084@group
1085(file-modes "~/junk/diffs")
1086 @result{} 492 ; @r{Decimal integer.}
1087@end group
1088@group
1089(format "%o" 492)
1090 @result{} "754" ; @r{Convert to octal.}
1091@end group
1092
1093@group
1094(set-file-modes "~/junk/diffs" 438)
1095 @result{} nil
1096@end group
1097
1098@group
1099(format "%o" 438)
1100 @result{} "666" ; @r{Convert to octal.}
1101@end group
1102
1103@group
1104% ls -l diffs
1105 -rw-rw-rw- 1 lewis 0 3063 Oct 30 16:00 diffs
1106@end group
1107@end example
1108@end defun
1109
1110If the @var{filename} argument to the next two functions is a symbolic
1111link, then these function do @emph{not} replace it with its target.
1112However, they both recursively follow symbolic links at all levels of
1113parent directories.
1114
1115@defun file-nlinks filename
1116This functions returns the number of names (i.e., hard links) that
1117file @var{filename} has. If the file does not exist, then this function
1118returns @code{nil}. Note that symbolic links have no effect on this
1119function, because they are not considered to be names of the files they
1120link to.
1121
1122@example
1123@group
1124% ls -l foo*
1125-rw-rw-rw- 2 rms 4 Aug 19 01:27 foo
1126-rw-rw-rw- 2 rms 4 Aug 19 01:27 foo1
1127@end group
1128
1129@group
1130(file-nlinks "foo")
1131 @result{} 2
1132@end group
1133@group
1134(file-nlinks "doesnt-exist")
1135 @result{} nil
1136@end group
1137@end example
1138@end defun
1139
1140@defun file-attributes filename &optional id-format
1141@anchor{Definition of file-attributes}
1142This function returns a list of attributes of file @var{filename}. If
1143the specified file cannot be opened, it returns @code{nil}.
1144The optional parameter @var{id-format} specifies the preferred format
1145of attributes @acronym{UID} and @acronym{GID} (see below)---the
1146valid values are @code{'string} and @code{'integer}. The latter is
1147the default, but we plan to change that, so you should specify a
1148non-@code{nil} value for @var{id-format} if you use the returned
1149@acronym{UID} or @acronym{GID}.
1150
1151The elements of the list, in order, are:
1152
1153@enumerate 0
1154@item
1155@code{t} for a directory, a string for a symbolic link (the name
1156linked to), or @code{nil} for a text file.
1157
1158@c Wordy so as to prevent an overfull hbox. --rjc 15mar92
1159@item
1160The number of names the file has. Alternate names, also known as hard
1161links, can be created by using the @code{add-name-to-file} function
1162(@pxref{Changing Files}).
1163
1164@item
1165The file's @acronym{UID}, normally as a string. However, if it does
1166not correspond to a named user, the value is an integer or a floating
1167point number.
1168
1169@item
1170The file's @acronym{GID}, likewise.
1171
1172@item
1173The time of last access, as a list of two integers.
1174The first integer has the high-order 16 bits of time,
1175the second has the low 16 bits. (This is similar to the
1176value of @code{current-time}; see @ref{Time of Day}.)
1177
1178@item
1179The time of last modification as a list of two integers (as above).
1180@cindex modification time of file
1181
1182@item
1183The time of last status change as a list of two integers (as above).
1184
1185@item
1186The size of the file in bytes. If the size is too large to fit in a
1187Lisp integer, this is a floating point number.
1188
1189@item
1190The file's modes, as a string of ten letters or dashes,
1191as in @samp{ls -l}.
1192
1193@item
1194@code{t} if the file's @acronym{GID} would change if file were
1195deleted and recreated; @code{nil} otherwise.
1196
1197@item
1198The file's inode number. If possible, this is an integer. If the inode
1199number is too large to be represented as an integer in Emacs Lisp, then
1200the value has the form @code{(@var{high} . @var{low})}, where @var{low}
1201holds the low 16 bits.
1202
1203@item
1204The file system number of the file system that the file is in.
1205Depending on the magnitude of the value, this can be either an integer
1206or a cons cell, in the same manner as the inode number. This element
1207and the file's inode number together give enough information to
1208distinguish any two files on the system---no two files can have the same
1209values for both of these numbers.
1210@end enumerate
1211
1212For example, here are the file attributes for @file{files.texi}:
1213
1214@example
1215@group
1216(file-attributes "files.texi" 'string)
1217 @result{} (nil 1 "lh" "users"
1218 (8489 20284)
1219 (8489 20284)
1220 (8489 20285)
1221 14906 "-rw-rw-rw-"
1222 nil 129500 -32252)
1223@end group
1224@end example
1225
1226@noindent
1227and here is how the result is interpreted:
1228
1229@table @code
1230@item nil
1231is neither a directory nor a symbolic link.
1232
1233@item 1
1234has only one name (the name @file{files.texi} in the current default
1235directory).
1236
1237@item "lh"
1238is owned by the user with name "lh".
1239
1240@item "users"
1241is in the group with name "users".
1242
1243@item (8489 20284)
1244was last accessed on Aug 19 00:09.
1245
1246@item (8489 20284)
1247was last modified on Aug 19 00:09.
1248
1249@item (8489 20285)
1250last had its inode changed on Aug 19 00:09.
1251
1252@item 14906
1253is 14906 bytes long. (It may not contain 14906 characters, though,
1254if some of the bytes belong to multibyte sequences.)
1255
1256@item "-rw-rw-rw-"
1257has a mode of read and write access for the owner, group, and world.
1258
1259@item nil
1260would retain the same @acronym{GID} if it were recreated.
1261
1262@item 129500
1263has an inode number of 129500.
1264@item -32252
1265is on file system number -32252.
1266@end table
1267@end defun
1268
1269@node Locating Files
1270@subsection How to Locate Files in Standard Places
1271@cindex locate file in path
1272@cindex find file in path
1273
1274 This section explains how to search for a file in a list of
1275directories (a @dfn{path}). One example is when you need to look for
1276a program's executable file, e.g., to find out whether a given program
1277is installed on the user's system. Another example is the search for
1278Lisp libraries (@pxref{Library Search}). Such searches generally need
1279to try various possible file name extensions, in addition to various
1280possible directories. Emacs provides a function for such a
1281generalized search for a file.
1282
1283@defun locate-file filename path &optional suffixes predicate
1284This function searches for a file whose name is @var{filename} in a
1285list of directories given by @var{path}, trying the suffixes in
1286@var{suffixes}. If it finds such a file, it returns the full
1287@dfn{absolute file name} of the file (@pxref{Relative File Names});
1288otherwise it returns @code{nil}.
1289
1290The optional argument @var{suffixes} gives the list of file-name
1291suffixes to append to @var{filename} when searching.
1292@code{locate-file} tries each possible directory with each of these
1293suffixes. If @var{suffixes} is @code{nil}, or @code{("")}, then there
1294are no suffixes, and @var{filename} is used only as-is. Typical
1295values of @var{suffixes} are @code{exec-suffixes} (@pxref{Subprocess
1296Creation, exec-suffixes}), @code{load-suffixes},
1297@code{load-file-rep-suffixes} and the return value of the function
1298@code{get-load-suffixes} (@pxref{Load Suffixes}).
1299
1300Typical values for @var{path} are @code{exec-path} (@pxref{Subprocess
1301Creation, exec-path}) when looking for executable programs or
1302@code{load-path} (@pxref{Library Search, load-path}) when looking for
1303Lisp files. If @var{filename} is absolute, @var{path} has no effect,
1304but the suffixes in @var{suffixes} are still tried.
1305
1306The optional argument @var{predicate}, if non-@code{nil}, specifies
1307the predicate function to use for testing whether a candidate file is
1308suitable. The predicate function is passed the candidate file name as
1309its single argument. If @var{predicate} is @code{nil} or unspecified,
1310@code{locate-file} uses @code{file-readable-p} as the default
1311predicate. Useful non-default predicates include
1312@code{file-executable-p}, @code{file-directory-p}, and other
1313predicates described in @ref{Kinds of Files}.
1314
1315For compatibility, @var{predicate} can also be one of the symbols
1316@code{executable}, @code{readable}, @code{writable}, @code{exists}, or
1317a list of one or more of these symbols.
1318@end defun
1319
1320@defun executable-find program
1321This function searches for the executable file of the named
1322@var{program} and returns the full absolute name of the executable,
1323including its file-name extensions, if any. It returns @code{nil} if
1324the file is not found. The functions searches in all the directories
1325in @code{exec-path} and tries all the file-name extensions in
1326@code{exec-suffixes}.
1327@end defun
1328
1329@node Changing Files
1330@section Changing File Names and Attributes
1331@c @cindex renaming files Duplicates rename-file
1332@cindex copying files
1333@cindex deleting files
1334@cindex linking files
1335@cindex setting modes of files
1336
1337 The functions in this section rename, copy, delete, link, and set the
1338modes of files.
1339
1340 In the functions that have an argument @var{newname}, if a file by the
1341name of @var{newname} already exists, the actions taken depend on the
1342value of the argument @var{ok-if-already-exists}:
1343
1344@itemize @bullet
1345@item
1346Signal a @code{file-already-exists} error if
1347@var{ok-if-already-exists} is @code{nil}.
1348
1349@item
1350Request confirmation if @var{ok-if-already-exists} is a number.
1351
1352@item
1353Replace the old file without confirmation if @var{ok-if-already-exists}
1354is any other value.
1355@end itemize
1356
1357The next four commands all recursively follow symbolic links at all
1358levels of parent directories for their first argument, but, if that
1359argument is itself a symbolic link, then only @code{copy-file}
1360replaces it with its (recursive) target.
1361
1362@deffn Command add-name-to-file oldname newname &optional ok-if-already-exists
1363@cindex file with multiple names
1364@cindex file hard link
1365This function gives the file named @var{oldname} the additional name
1366@var{newname}. This means that @var{newname} becomes a new ``hard
1367link'' to @var{oldname}.
1368
1369In the first part of the following example, we list two files,
1370@file{foo} and @file{foo3}.
1371
1372@example
1373@group
1374% ls -li fo*
137581908 -rw-rw-rw- 1 rms 29 Aug 18 20:32 foo
137684302 -rw-rw-rw- 1 rms 24 Aug 18 20:31 foo3
1377@end group
1378@end example
1379
1380Now we create a hard link, by calling @code{add-name-to-file}, then list
1381the files again. This shows two names for one file, @file{foo} and
1382@file{foo2}.
1383
1384@example
1385@group
1386(add-name-to-file "foo" "foo2")
1387 @result{} nil
1388@end group
1389
1390@group
1391% ls -li fo*
139281908 -rw-rw-rw- 2 rms 29 Aug 18 20:32 foo
139381908 -rw-rw-rw- 2 rms 29 Aug 18 20:32 foo2
139484302 -rw-rw-rw- 1 rms 24 Aug 18 20:31 foo3
1395@end group
1396@end example
1397
1398Finally, we evaluate the following:
1399
1400@example
1401(add-name-to-file "foo" "foo3" t)
1402@end example
1403
1404@noindent
1405and list the files again. Now there are three names
1406for one file: @file{foo}, @file{foo2}, and @file{foo3}. The old
1407contents of @file{foo3} are lost.
1408
1409@example
1410@group
1411(add-name-to-file "foo1" "foo3")
1412 @result{} nil
1413@end group
1414
1415@group
1416% ls -li fo*
141781908 -rw-rw-rw- 3 rms 29 Aug 18 20:32 foo
141881908 -rw-rw-rw- 3 rms 29 Aug 18 20:32 foo2
141981908 -rw-rw-rw- 3 rms 29 Aug 18 20:32 foo3
1420@end group
1421@end example
1422
1423This function is meaningless on operating systems where multiple names
1424for one file are not allowed. Some systems implement multiple names
1425by copying the file instead.
1426
1427See also @code{file-nlinks} in @ref{File Attributes}.
1428@end deffn
1429
1430@deffn Command rename-file filename newname &optional ok-if-already-exists
1431This command renames the file @var{filename} as @var{newname}.
1432
1433If @var{filename} has additional names aside from @var{filename}, it
1434continues to have those names. In fact, adding the name @var{newname}
1435with @code{add-name-to-file} and then deleting @var{filename} has the
1436same effect as renaming, aside from momentary intermediate states.
1437@end deffn
1438
1439@deffn Command copy-file oldname newname &optional ok-if-exists time preserve-uid-gid
1440This command copies the file @var{oldname} to @var{newname}. An
1441error is signaled if @var{oldname} does not exist. If @var{newname}
1442names a directory, it copies @var{oldname} into that directory,
1443preserving its final name component.
1444
1445If @var{time} is non-@code{nil}, then this function gives the new file
1446the same last-modified time that the old one has. (This works on only
1447some operating systems.) If setting the time gets an error,
1448@code{copy-file} signals a @code{file-date-error} error. In an
1449interactive call, a prefix argument specifies a non-@code{nil} value
1450for @var{time}.
1451
1452This function copies the file modes, too.
1453
1454If argument @var{preserve-uid-gid} is @code{nil}, we let the operating
1455system decide the user and group ownership of the new file (this is
1456usually set to the user running Emacs). If @var{preserve-uid-gid} is
1457non-@code{nil}, we attempt to copy the user and group ownership of the
1458file. This works only on some operating systems, and only if you have
1459the correct permissions to do so.
1460@end deffn
1461
1462@deffn Command make-symbolic-link filename newname &optional ok-if-exists
1463@pindex ln
1464@kindex file-already-exists
1465This command makes a symbolic link to @var{filename}, named
1466@var{newname}. This is like the shell command @samp{ln -s
1467@var{filename} @var{newname}}.
1468
1469This function is not available on systems that don't support symbolic
1470links.
1471@end deffn
1472
1473@deffn Command delete-file filename
1474@pindex rm
1475This command deletes the file @var{filename}, like the shell command
1476@samp{rm @var{filename}}. If the file has multiple names, it continues
1477to exist under the other names.
1478
1479A suitable kind of @code{file-error} error is signaled if the file does
1480not exist, or is not deletable. (On Unix and GNU/Linux, a file is
1481deletable if its directory is writable.)
1482
1483If @var{filename} is a symbolic link, @code{delete-file} does not
1484replace it with its target, but it does follow symbolic links at all
1485levels of parent directories.
1486
1487See also @code{delete-directory} in @ref{Create/Delete Dirs}.
1488@end deffn
1489
018a960d 1490@deffn Command set-file-modes filename mode
b8d4c8d0 1491This function sets mode bits of @var{filename} to @var{mode} (which
018a960d
EZ
1492must be an integer when the function is called non-interactively).
1493Only the low 12 bits of @var{mode} are used.
1494
1495Interactively, @var{mode} is read from the minibuffer using
1496@code{read-file-modes}, which accepts mode bits either as a number or
1497as a character string representing the mode bits symbolically. See
1498the description of @code{read-file-modes} below for the supported
1499forms of symbolic notation for mode bits.
1500
b8d4c8d0
GM
1501This function recursively follows symbolic links at all levels for
1502@var{filename}.
018a960d 1503@end deffn
b8d4c8d0
GM
1504
1505@c Emacs 19 feature
1506@defun set-default-file-modes mode
1507@cindex umask
1508This function sets the default file protection for new files created by
1509Emacs and its subprocesses. Every file created with Emacs initially has
1510this protection, or a subset of it (@code{write-region} will not give a
1511file execute permission even if the default file protection allows
1512execute permission). On Unix and GNU/Linux, the default protection is
1513the bitwise complement of the ``umask'' value.
1514
1515The argument @var{mode} must be an integer. On most systems, only the
1516low 9 bits of @var{mode} are meaningful. You can use the Lisp construct
1517for octal character codes to enter @var{mode}; for example,
1518
1519@example
1520(set-default-file-modes ?\644)
1521@end example
1522
1523Saving a modified version of an existing file does not count as creating
1524the file; it preserves the existing file's mode, whatever that is. So
1525the default file protection has no effect.
1526@end defun
1527
1528@defun default-file-modes
1529This function returns the current default protection value.
1530@end defun
1531
018a960d
EZ
1532@defun read-file-modes &optional prompt base-file
1533This function reads file mode bits from the minibuffer. The optional
1534argument @var{prompt} specifies a non-default prompt. Second optional
1535argument @var{base-file} is the name of a file on whose permissions to
1536base the mode bits that this function returns, if what the user types
1537specifies mode bits relative to permissions of an existing file.
1538
1539If user input represents an octal number, this function returns that
1540number. If it is a complete symbolic specification of mode bits, as
1541in @code{"u=rwx"}, the function converts it to the equivalent numeric
1542value using @code{file-modes-symbolic-to-number} and returns the
1543result. If the specification is relative, as in @code{"o+g"}, then
1586be92 1544the permissions on which the specification is based are taken from the
018a960d
EZ
1545mode bits of @var{base-file}. If @var{base-file} is omitted or
1546@code{nil}, the function uses @code{0} as the base mode bits. The
1547complete and relative specifications can be combined, as in
1548@code{"u+r,g+rx,o+r,g-w"}. @xref{File Permissions,,, coreutils, The
1549@sc{gnu} @code{Coreutils} Manual}, for detailed description of
1550symbolic mode bits specifications.
1551@end defun
1552
61331bf3 1553@defun file-modes-symbolic-to-number modes &optional base-modes
018a960d
EZ
1554This subroutine converts a symbolic specification of file mode bits in
1555@var{modes} into the equivalent numeric value. If the symbolic
1556specification is based on an existing file, that file's mode bits are
1557taken from the optional argument @var{base-modes}; if that argument is
4990219b
CY
1558omitted or @code{nil}, it defaults to zero, i.e.@: no access rights at
1559all.
61331bf3 1560@end defun
018a960d 1561
b8d4c8d0
GM
1562@defun set-file-times filename &optional time
1563This function sets the access and modification times of @var{filename}
1564to @var{time}. The return value is @code{t} if the times are successfully
1565set, otherwise it is @code{nil}. @var{time} defaults to the current
1566time and must be in the format returned by @code{current-time}
1567(@pxref{Time of Day}).
1568@end defun
1569
1570@cindex MS-DOS and file modes
1571@cindex file modes and MS-DOS
1572 On MS-DOS, there is no such thing as an ``executable'' file mode bit.
1573So Emacs considers a file executable if its name ends in one of the
1574standard executable extensions, such as @file{.com}, @file{.bat},
1575@file{.exe}, and some others. Files that begin with the Unix-standard
1576@samp{#!} signature, such as shell and Perl scripts, are also considered
1577as executable files. This is reflected in the values returned by
1578@code{file-modes} and @code{file-attributes}. Directories are also
1579reported with executable bit set, for compatibility with Unix.
1580
1581@node File Names
1582@section File Names
1583@cindex file names
1584
1585 Files are generally referred to by their names, in Emacs as elsewhere.
1586File names in Emacs are represented as strings. The functions that
1587operate on a file all expect a file name argument.
1588
1589 In addition to operating on files themselves, Emacs Lisp programs
1590often need to operate on file names; i.e., to take them apart and to use
1591part of a name to construct related file names. This section describes
1592how to manipulate file names.
1593
1594 The functions in this section do not actually access files, so they
1595can operate on file names that do not refer to an existing file or
1596directory.
1597
1598 On MS-DOS and MS-Windows, these functions (like the function that
1599actually operate on files) accept MS-DOS or MS-Windows file-name syntax,
1600where backslashes separate the components, as well as Unix syntax; but
7c2fb837
DN
1601they always return Unix syntax. This enables Lisp programs to specify
1602file names in Unix syntax and work properly on all systems without
1603change.
b8d4c8d0
GM
1604
1605@menu
1606* File Name Components:: The directory part of a file name, and the rest.
1607* Relative File Names:: Some file names are relative to a current directory.
1608* Directory Names:: A directory's name as a directory
1609 is different from its name as a file.
1610* File Name Expansion:: Converting relative file names to absolute ones.
1611* Unique File Names:: Generating names for temporary files.
1612* File Name Completion:: Finding the completions for a given file name.
1613* Standard File Names:: If your package uses a fixed file name,
1614 how to handle various operating systems simply.
1615@end menu
1616
1617@node File Name Components
1618@subsection File Name Components
1619@cindex directory part (of file name)
1620@cindex nondirectory part (of file name)
1621@cindex version number (in file name)
1622
1623 The operating system groups files into directories. To specify a
1624file, you must specify the directory and the file's name within that
1625directory. Therefore, Emacs considers a file name as having two main
1626parts: the @dfn{directory name} part, and the @dfn{nondirectory} part
1627(or @dfn{file name within the directory}). Either part may be empty.
1628Concatenating these two parts reproduces the original file name.
1629
1630 On most systems, the directory part is everything up to and including
1631the last slash (backslash is also allowed in input on MS-DOS or
7c2fb837 1632MS-Windows); the nondirectory part is the rest.
b8d4c8d0
GM
1633
1634 For some purposes, the nondirectory part is further subdivided into
1635the name proper and the @dfn{version number}. On most systems, only
7c2fb837 1636backup files have version numbers in their names.
b8d4c8d0
GM
1637
1638@defun file-name-directory filename
1639This function returns the directory part of @var{filename}, as a
1640directory name (@pxref{Directory Names}), or @code{nil} if
1641@var{filename} does not include a directory part.
1642
1643On GNU and Unix systems, a string returned by this function always
7c2fb837 1644ends in a slash. On MS-DOS it can also end in a colon.
b8d4c8d0
GM
1645
1646@example
1647@group
1648(file-name-directory "lewis/foo") ; @r{Unix example}
1649 @result{} "lewis/"
1650@end group
1651@group
1652(file-name-directory "foo") ; @r{Unix example}
1653 @result{} nil
1654@end group
b8d4c8d0
GM
1655@end example
1656@end defun
1657
1658@defun file-name-nondirectory filename
1659This function returns the nondirectory part of @var{filename}.
1660
1661@example
1662@group
1663(file-name-nondirectory "lewis/foo")
1664 @result{} "foo"
1665@end group
1666@group
1667(file-name-nondirectory "foo")
1668 @result{} "foo"
1669@end group
1670@group
1671(file-name-nondirectory "lewis/")
1672 @result{} ""
1673@end group
b8d4c8d0
GM
1674@end example
1675@end defun
1676
1677@defun file-name-sans-versions filename &optional keep-backup-version
1678This function returns @var{filename} with any file version numbers,
1679backup version numbers, or trailing tildes discarded.
1680
1681If @var{keep-backup-version} is non-@code{nil}, then true file version
1682numbers understood as such by the file system are discarded from the
1683return value, but backup version numbers are kept.
1684
1685@example
1686@group
1687(file-name-sans-versions "~rms/foo.~1~")
1688 @result{} "~rms/foo"
1689@end group
1690@group
1691(file-name-sans-versions "~rms/foo~")
1692 @result{} "~rms/foo"
1693@end group
1694@group
1695(file-name-sans-versions "~rms/foo")
1696 @result{} "~rms/foo"
1697@end group
b8d4c8d0
GM
1698@end example
1699@end defun
1700
1701@defun file-name-extension filename &optional period
1702This function returns @var{filename}'s final ``extension,'' if any,
1703after applying @code{file-name-sans-versions} to remove any
1704version/backup part. The extension, in a file name, is the part that
4c565c5c
LK
1705follows the last @samp{.} in the last name component (minus any
1706version/backup part).
b8d4c8d0
GM
1707
1708This function returns @code{nil} for extensionless file names such as
1709@file{foo}. It returns @code{""} for null extensions, as in
1710@file{foo.}. If the last component of a file name begins with a
1711@samp{.}, that @samp{.} doesn't count as the beginning of an
1712extension. Thus, @file{.emacs}'s ``extension'' is @code{nil}, not
1713@samp{.emacs}.
1714
1715If @var{period} is non-@code{nil}, then the returned value includes
1716the period that delimits the extension, and if @var{filename} has no
1717extension, the value is @code{""}.
1718@end defun
1719
1720@defun file-name-sans-extension filename
1721This function returns @var{filename} minus its extension, if any. The
1722version/backup part, if present, is only removed if the file has an
1723extension. For example,
1724
1725@example
1726(file-name-sans-extension "foo.lose.c")
1727 @result{} "foo.lose"
1728(file-name-sans-extension "big.hack/foo")
1729 @result{} "big.hack/foo"
1730(file-name-sans-extension "/my/home/.emacs")
1731 @result{} "/my/home/.emacs"
1732(file-name-sans-extension "/my/home/.emacs.el")
1733 @result{} "/my/home/.emacs"
1734(file-name-sans-extension "~/foo.el.~3~")
1735 @result{} "~/foo"
1736(file-name-sans-extension "~/foo.~3~")
1737 @result{} "~/foo.~3~"
1738@end example
1739
1740Note that the @samp{.~3~} in the two last examples is the backup part,
1741not an extension.
1742@end defun
1743
1744@ignore
1745Andrew Innes says that this
1746
1747@c @defvar directory-sep-char
1748This variable holds the character that Emacs normally uses to separate
1749file name components. The default value is @code{?/}, but on MS-Windows
1750you can set it to @code{?\\}; then the functions that transform file names
1751use backslashes in their output.
1752
1753File names using backslashes work as input to Lisp primitives even on
1754MS-DOS and MS-Windows, even if @code{directory-sep-char} has its default
1755value of @code{?/}.
1756@end defvar
1757@end ignore
1758
1759@node Relative File Names
1760@subsection Absolute and Relative File Names
1761@cindex absolute file name
1762@cindex relative file name
1763
1764 All the directories in the file system form a tree starting at the
1765root directory. A file name can specify all the directory names
1766starting from the root of the tree; then it is called an @dfn{absolute}
1767file name. Or it can specify the position of the file in the tree
1768relative to a default directory; then it is called a @dfn{relative} file
1769name. On Unix and GNU/Linux, an absolute file name starts with a slash
1770or a tilde (@samp{~}), and a relative one does not. On MS-DOS and
1771MS-Windows, an absolute file name starts with a slash or a backslash, or
1772with a drive specification @samp{@var{x}:/}, where @var{x} is the
7c2fb837 1773@dfn{drive letter}.
b8d4c8d0
GM
1774
1775@defun file-name-absolute-p filename
1776This function returns @code{t} if file @var{filename} is an absolute
7c2fb837 1777file name, @code{nil} otherwise.
b8d4c8d0
GM
1778
1779@example
1780@group
1781(file-name-absolute-p "~rms/foo")
1782 @result{} t
1783@end group
1784@group
1785(file-name-absolute-p "rms/foo")
1786 @result{} nil
1787@end group
1788@group
1789(file-name-absolute-p "/user/rms/foo")
1790 @result{} t
1791@end group
1792@end example
1793@end defun
1794
1795 Given a possibly relative file name, you can convert it to an
1796absolute name using @code{expand-file-name} (@pxref{File Name
1797Expansion}). This function converts absolute file names to relative
1798names:
1799
1800@defun file-relative-name filename &optional directory
1801This function tries to return a relative name that is equivalent to
1802@var{filename}, assuming the result will be interpreted relative to
1803@var{directory} (an absolute directory name or directory file name).
1804If @var{directory} is omitted or @code{nil}, it defaults to the
1805current buffer's default directory.
1806
1807On some operating systems, an absolute file name begins with a device
1808name. On such systems, @var{filename} has no relative equivalent based
1809on @var{directory} if they start with two different device names. In
1810this case, @code{file-relative-name} returns @var{filename} in absolute
1811form.
1812
1813@example
1814(file-relative-name "/foo/bar" "/foo/")
1815 @result{} "bar"
1816(file-relative-name "/foo/bar" "/hack/")
1817 @result{} "../foo/bar"
1818@end example
1819@end defun
1820
1821@node Directory Names
1822@comment node-name, next, previous, up
1823@subsection Directory Names
1824@cindex directory name
1825@cindex file name of directory
1826
1827 A @dfn{directory name} is the name of a directory. A directory is
1828actually a kind of file, so it has a file name, which is related to
1829the directory name but not identical to it. (This is not quite the
1830same as the usual Unix terminology.) These two different names for
1831the same entity are related by a syntactic transformation. On GNU and
1832Unix systems, this is simple: a directory name ends in a slash,
7c2fb837
DN
1833whereas the directory's name as a file lacks that slash. On MS-DOS
1834the relationship is more complicated.
b8d4c8d0
GM
1835
1836 The difference between a directory name and its name as a file is
1837subtle but crucial. When an Emacs variable or function argument is
1838described as being a directory name, a file name of a directory is not
1839acceptable. When @code{file-name-directory} returns a string, that is
1840always a directory name.
1841
1842 The following two functions convert between directory names and file
1843names. They do nothing special with environment variable substitutions
1844such as @samp{$HOME}, and the constructs @samp{~}, @samp{.} and @samp{..}.
1845
1846@defun file-name-as-directory filename
1847This function returns a string representing @var{filename} in a form
1848that the operating system will interpret as the name of a directory. On
1849most systems, this means appending a slash to the string (if it does not
7c2fb837 1850already end in one).
b8d4c8d0
GM
1851
1852@example
1853@group
1854(file-name-as-directory "~rms/lewis")
1855 @result{} "~rms/lewis/"
1856@end group
1857@end example
1858@end defun
1859
1860@defun directory-file-name dirname
1861This function returns a string representing @var{dirname} in a form that
1862the operating system will interpret as the name of a file. On most
1863systems, this means removing the final slash (or backslash) from the
7c2fb837 1864string.
b8d4c8d0
GM
1865
1866@example
1867@group
1868(directory-file-name "~lewis/")
1869 @result{} "~lewis"
1870@end group
1871@end example
1872@end defun
1873
1874 Given a directory name, you can combine it with a relative file name
1875using @code{concat}:
1876
1877@example
1878(concat @var{dirname} @var{relfile})
1879@end example
1880
1881@noindent
1882Be sure to verify that the file name is relative before doing that.
1883If you use an absolute file name, the results could be syntactically
1884invalid or refer to the wrong file.
1885
1886 If you want to use a directory file name in making such a
1887combination, you must first convert it to a directory name using
1888@code{file-name-as-directory}:
1889
1890@example
1891(concat (file-name-as-directory @var{dirfile}) @var{relfile})
1892@end example
1893
1894@noindent
1895Don't try concatenating a slash by hand, as in
1896
1897@example
1898;;; @r{Wrong!}
1899(concat @var{dirfile} "/" @var{relfile})
1900@end example
1901
1902@noindent
1903because this is not portable. Always use
1904@code{file-name-as-directory}.
1905
1906@cindex directory name abbreviation
1907 Directory name abbreviations are useful for directories that are
1908normally accessed through symbolic links. Sometimes the users recognize
1909primarily the link's name as ``the name'' of the directory, and find it
1910annoying to see the directory's ``real'' name. If you define the link
1911name as an abbreviation for the ``real'' name, Emacs shows users the
1912abbreviation instead.
1913
1914@defvar directory-abbrev-alist
1915The variable @code{directory-abbrev-alist} contains an alist of
1916abbreviations to use for file directories. Each element has the form
1917@code{(@var{from} . @var{to})}, and says to replace @var{from} with
1918@var{to} when it appears in a directory name. The @var{from} string is
1919actually a regular expression; it should always start with @samp{^}.
1920The @var{to} string should be an ordinary absolute directory name. Do
1921not use @samp{~} to stand for a home directory in that string. The
1922function @code{abbreviate-file-name} performs these substitutions.
1923
1924You can set this variable in @file{site-init.el} to describe the
1925abbreviations appropriate for your site.
1926
1927Here's an example, from a system on which file system @file{/home/fsf}
1928and so on are normally accessed through symbolic links named @file{/fsf}
1929and so on.
1930
1931@example
1932(("^/home/fsf" . "/fsf")
1933 ("^/home/gp" . "/gp")
1934 ("^/home/gd" . "/gd"))
1935@end example
1936@end defvar
1937
1938 To convert a directory name to its abbreviation, use this
1939function:
1940
1941@defun abbreviate-file-name filename
1942@anchor{Definition of abbreviate-file-name}
1943This function applies abbreviations from @code{directory-abbrev-alist}
1944to its argument, and substitutes @samp{~} for the user's home
1945directory. You can use it for directory names and for file names,
1946because it recognizes abbreviations even as part of the name.
1947@end defun
1948
1949@node File Name Expansion
1950@subsection Functions that Expand Filenames
1951@cindex expansion of file names
1952
1953 @dfn{Expansion} of a file name means converting a relative file name
1954to an absolute one. Since this is done relative to a default directory,
1955you must specify the default directory name as well as the file name to
1956be expanded. Expansion also simplifies file names by eliminating
1957redundancies such as @file{./} and @file{@var{name}/../}.
1958
1959@defun expand-file-name filename &optional directory
1960This function converts @var{filename} to an absolute file name. If
1961@var{directory} is supplied, it is the default directory to start with
1962if @var{filename} is relative. (The value of @var{directory} should
1963itself be an absolute directory name or directory file name; it may
1964start with @samp{~}.) Otherwise, the current buffer's value of
1965@code{default-directory} is used. For example:
1966
1967@example
1968@group
1969(expand-file-name "foo")
1970 @result{} "/xcssun/users/rms/lewis/foo"
1971@end group
1972@group
1973(expand-file-name "../foo")
1974 @result{} "/xcssun/users/rms/foo"
1975@end group
1976@group
1977(expand-file-name "foo" "/usr/spool/")
1978 @result{} "/usr/spool/foo"
1979@end group
1980@group
1981(expand-file-name "$HOME/foo")
1982 @result{} "/xcssun/users/rms/lewis/$HOME/foo"
1983@end group
1984@end example
1985
1986If the part of the combined file name before the first slash is
1987@samp{~}, it expands to the value of the @env{HOME} environment
1988variable (usually your home directory). If the part before the first
1989slash is @samp{~@var{user}} and if @var{user} is a valid login name,
1990it expands to @var{user}'s home directory.
1991
1992Filenames containing @samp{.} or @samp{..} are simplified to their
1993canonical form:
1994
1995@example
1996@group
1997(expand-file-name "bar/../foo")
1998 @result{} "/xcssun/users/rms/lewis/foo"
1999@end group
2000@end example
2001
2002In some cases, a leading @samp{..} component can remain in the output:
2003
2004@example
2005@group
2006(expand-file-name "../home" "/")
2007 @result{} "/../home"
2008@end group
2009@end example
2010
2011@noindent
2012This is for the sake of filesystems that have the concept of a
2013``superroot'' above the root directory @file{/}. On other filesystems,
2014@file{/../} is interpreted exactly the same as @file{/}.
2015
2016Note that @code{expand-file-name} does @emph{not} expand environment
2017variables; only @code{substitute-in-file-name} does that.
2018
2019Note also that @code{expand-file-name} does not follow symbolic links
2020at any level. This results in a difference between the way
2021@code{file-truename} and @code{expand-file-name} treat @samp{..}.
2022Assuming that @samp{/tmp/bar} is a symbolic link to the directory
2023@samp{/tmp/foo/bar} we get:
2024
2025@example
2026@group
2027(file-truename "/tmp/bar/../myfile")
2028 @result{} "/tmp/foo/myfile"
2029@end group
2030@group
2031(expand-file-name "/tmp/bar/../myfile")
2032 @result{} "/tmp/myfile"
2033@end group
2034@end example
2035
2036If you may need to follow symbolic links preceding @samp{..}, you
2037should make sure to call @code{file-truename} without prior direct or
2038indirect calls to @code{expand-file-name}. @xref{Truenames}.
2039@end defun
2040
2041@defvar default-directory
2042The value of this buffer-local variable is the default directory for the
2043current buffer. It should be an absolute directory name; it may start
2044with @samp{~}. This variable is buffer-local in every buffer.
2045
2046@code{expand-file-name} uses the default directory when its second
2047argument is @code{nil}.
2048
7c2fb837 2049The value is always a string ending with a slash.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2050
2051@example
2052@group
2053default-directory
2054 @result{} "/user/lewis/manual/"
2055@end group
2056@end example
2057@end defvar
2058
2059@defun substitute-in-file-name filename
2060@anchor{Definition of substitute-in-file-name}
2061This function replaces environment variable references in
2062@var{filename} with the environment variable values. Following
2063standard Unix shell syntax, @samp{$} is the prefix to substitute an
2064environment variable value. If the input contains @samp{$$}, that is
2065converted to @samp{$}; this gives the user a way to ``quote'' a
2066@samp{$}.
2067
2068The environment variable name is the series of alphanumeric characters
2069(including underscores) that follow the @samp{$}. If the character following
2070the @samp{$} is a @samp{@{}, then the variable name is everything up to the
2071matching @samp{@}}.
2072
2073Calling @code{substitute-in-file-name} on output produced by
2074@code{substitute-in-file-name} tends to give incorrect results. For
2075instance, use of @samp{$$} to quote a single @samp{$} won't work
2076properly, and @samp{$} in an environment variable's value could lead
2077to repeated substitution. Therefore, programs that call this function
2078and put the output where it will be passed to this function need to
2079double all @samp{$} characters to prevent subsequent incorrect
2080results.
2081
2082@c Wordy to avoid overfull hbox. --rjc 15mar92
2083Here we assume that the environment variable @code{HOME}, which holds
2084the user's home directory name, has value @samp{/xcssun/users/rms}.
2085
2086@example
2087@group
2088(substitute-in-file-name "$HOME/foo")
2089 @result{} "/xcssun/users/rms/foo"
2090@end group
2091@end example
2092
2093After substitution, if a @samp{~} or a @samp{/} appears immediately
2094after another @samp{/}, the function discards everything before it (up
2095through the immediately preceding @samp{/}).
2096
2097@example
2098@group
2099(substitute-in-file-name "bar/~/foo")
2100 @result{} "~/foo"
2101@end group
2102@group
2103(substitute-in-file-name "/usr/local/$HOME/foo")
2104 @result{} "/xcssun/users/rms/foo"
2105 ;; @r{@file{/usr/local/} has been discarded.}
2106@end group
2107@end example
2108
b8d4c8d0
GM
2109@end defun
2110
2111@node Unique File Names
2112@subsection Generating Unique File Names
2113
2114 Some programs need to write temporary files. Here is the usual way to
2115construct a name for such a file:
2116
2117@example
2118(make-temp-file @var{name-of-application})
2119@end example
2120
2121@noindent
2122The job of @code{make-temp-file} is to prevent two different users or
2123two different jobs from trying to use the exact same file name.
2124
2125@defun make-temp-file prefix &optional dir-flag suffix
2126This function creates a temporary file and returns its name. Emacs
2127creates the temporary file's name by adding to @var{prefix} some
2128random characters that are different in each Emacs job. The result is
2129guaranteed to be a newly created empty file. On MS-DOS, this function
2130can truncate the @var{string} prefix to fit into the 8+3 file-name
2131limits. If @var{prefix} is a relative file name, it is expanded
2132against @code{temporary-file-directory}.
2133
2134@example
2135@group
2136(make-temp-file "foo")
2137 @result{} "/tmp/foo232J6v"
2138@end group
2139@end example
2140
2141When @code{make-temp-file} returns, the file has been created and is
2142empty. At that point, you should write the intended contents into the
2143file.
2144
2145If @var{dir-flag} is non-@code{nil}, @code{make-temp-file} creates an
2146empty directory instead of an empty file. It returns the file name,
2147not the directory name, of that directory. @xref{Directory Names}.
2148
2149If @var{suffix} is non-@code{nil}, @code{make-temp-file} adds it at
2150the end of the file name.
2151
2152To prevent conflicts among different libraries running in the same
2153Emacs, each Lisp program that uses @code{make-temp-file} should have its
2154own @var{prefix}. The number added to the end of @var{prefix}
2155distinguishes between the same application running in different Emacs
2156jobs. Additional added characters permit a large number of distinct
2157names even in one Emacs job.
2158@end defun
2159
2160 The default directory for temporary files is controlled by the
2161variable @code{temporary-file-directory}. This variable gives the user
2162a uniform way to specify the directory for all temporary files. Some
2163programs use @code{small-temporary-file-directory} instead, if that is
2164non-@code{nil}. To use it, you should expand the prefix against
2165the proper directory before calling @code{make-temp-file}.
2166
2167 In older Emacs versions where @code{make-temp-file} does not exist,
2168you should use @code{make-temp-name} instead:
2169
2170@example
2171(make-temp-name
2172 (expand-file-name @var{name-of-application}
2173 temporary-file-directory))
2174@end example
2175
2176@defun make-temp-name string
2177This function generates a string that can be used as a unique file
2178name. The name starts with @var{string}, and has several random
2179characters appended to it, which are different in each Emacs job. It
2180is like @code{make-temp-file} except that it just constructs a name,
2181and does not create a file. Another difference is that @var{string}
2182should be an absolute file name. On MS-DOS, this function can
2183truncate the @var{string} prefix to fit into the 8+3 file-name limits.
2184@end defun
2185
2186@defvar temporary-file-directory
2187@cindex @code{TMPDIR} environment variable
2188@cindex @code{TMP} environment variable
2189@cindex @code{TEMP} environment variable
2190This variable specifies the directory name for creating temporary files.
2191Its value should be a directory name (@pxref{Directory Names}), but it
2192is good for Lisp programs to cope if the value is a directory's file
2193name instead. Using the value as the second argument to
2194@code{expand-file-name} is a good way to achieve that.
2195
2196The default value is determined in a reasonable way for your operating
2197system; it is based on the @code{TMPDIR}, @code{TMP} and @code{TEMP}
2198environment variables, with a fall-back to a system-dependent name if
2199none of these variables is defined.
2200
2201Even if you do not use @code{make-temp-file} to create the temporary
2202file, you should still use this variable to decide which directory to
2203put the file in. However, if you expect the file to be small, you
2204should use @code{small-temporary-file-directory} first if that is
2205non-@code{nil}.
2206@end defvar
2207
2208@defvar small-temporary-file-directory
2209This variable specifies the directory name for
2210creating certain temporary files, which are likely to be small.
2211
2212If you want to write a temporary file which is likely to be small, you
2213should compute the directory like this:
2214
2215@example
2216(make-temp-file
2217 (expand-file-name @var{prefix}
2218 (or small-temporary-file-directory
2219 temporary-file-directory)))
2220@end example
2221@end defvar
2222
2223@node File Name Completion
2224@subsection File Name Completion
2225@cindex file name completion subroutines
2226@cindex completion, file name
2227
2228 This section describes low-level subroutines for completing a file
2229name. For higher level functions, see @ref{Reading File Names}.
2230
2231@defun file-name-all-completions partial-filename directory
2232This function returns a list of all possible completions for a file
2233whose name starts with @var{partial-filename} in directory
2234@var{directory}. The order of the completions is the order of the files
2235in the directory, which is unpredictable and conveys no useful
2236information.
2237
2238The argument @var{partial-filename} must be a file name containing no
2239directory part and no slash (or backslash on some systems). The current
2240buffer's default directory is prepended to @var{directory}, if
2241@var{directory} is not absolute.
2242
2243In the following example, suppose that @file{~rms/lewis} is the current
2244default directory, and has five files whose names begin with @samp{f}:
2245@file{foo}, @file{file~}, @file{file.c}, @file{file.c.~1~}, and
2246@file{file.c.~2~}.@refill
2247
2248@example
2249@group
2250(file-name-all-completions "f" "")
2251 @result{} ("foo" "file~" "file.c.~2~"
2252 "file.c.~1~" "file.c")
2253@end group
2254
2255@group
2256(file-name-all-completions "fo" "")
2257 @result{} ("foo")
2258@end group
2259@end example
2260@end defun
2261
2262@defun file-name-completion filename directory &optional predicate
2263This function completes the file name @var{filename} in directory
2264@var{directory}. It returns the longest prefix common to all file names
2265in directory @var{directory} that start with @var{filename}. If
2266@var{predicate} is non-@code{nil} then it ignores possible completions
2267that don't satisfy @var{predicate}, after calling that function
2268with one argument, the expanded absolute file name.
2269
2270If only one match exists and @var{filename} matches it exactly, the
2271function returns @code{t}. The function returns @code{nil} if directory
2272@var{directory} contains no name starting with @var{filename}.
2273
2274In the following example, suppose that the current default directory
2275has five files whose names begin with @samp{f}: @file{foo},
2276@file{file~}, @file{file.c}, @file{file.c.~1~}, and
2277@file{file.c.~2~}.@refill
2278
2279@example
2280@group
2281(file-name-completion "fi" "")
2282 @result{} "file"
2283@end group
2284
2285@group
2286(file-name-completion "file.c.~1" "")
2287 @result{} "file.c.~1~"
2288@end group
2289
2290@group
2291(file-name-completion "file.c.~1~" "")
2292 @result{} t
2293@end group
2294
2295@group
2296(file-name-completion "file.c.~3" "")
2297 @result{} nil
2298@end group
2299@end example
2300@end defun
2301
2302@defopt completion-ignored-extensions
2303@code{file-name-completion} usually ignores file names that end in any
2304string in this list. It does not ignore them when all the possible
2305completions end in one of these suffixes. This variable has no effect
2306on @code{file-name-all-completions}.@refill
2307
2308A typical value might look like this:
2309
2310@example
2311@group
2312completion-ignored-extensions
2313 @result{} (".o" ".elc" "~" ".dvi")
2314@end group
2315@end example
2316
2317If an element of @code{completion-ignored-extensions} ends in a slash
2318@samp{/}, it signals a directory. The elements which do @emph{not} end
2319in a slash will never match a directory; thus, the above value will not
2320filter out a directory named @file{foo.elc}.
2321@end defopt
2322
2323@node Standard File Names
2324@subsection Standard File Names
2325
2326 Most of the file names used in Lisp programs are entered by the user.
2327But occasionally a Lisp program needs to specify a standard file name
2328for a particular use---typically, to hold customization information
2329about each user. For example, abbrev definitions are stored (by
2330default) in the file @file{~/.abbrev_defs}; the @code{completion}
2331package stores completions in the file @file{~/.completions}. These are
2332two of the many standard file names used by parts of Emacs for certain
2333purposes.
2334
2335 Various operating systems have their own conventions for valid file
2336names and for which file names to use for user profile data. A Lisp
2337program which reads a file using a standard file name ought to use, on
2338each type of system, a file name suitable for that system. The function
2339@code{convert-standard-filename} makes this easy to do.
2340
2341@defun convert-standard-filename filename
2342This function alters the file name @var{filename} to fit the conventions
2343of the operating system in use, and returns the result as a new string.
2344@end defun
2345
2346 The recommended way to specify a standard file name in a Lisp program
2347is to choose a name which fits the conventions of GNU and Unix systems,
2348usually with a nondirectory part that starts with a period, and pass it
2349to @code{convert-standard-filename} instead of using it directly. Here
2350is an example from the @code{completion} package:
2351
2352@example
2353(defvar save-completions-file-name
2354 (convert-standard-filename "~/.completions")
2355 "*The file name to save completions to.")
2356@end example
2357
2358 On GNU and Unix systems, and on some other systems as well,
2359@code{convert-standard-filename} returns its argument unchanged. On
2360some other systems, it alters the name to fit the system's conventions.
2361
2362 For example, on MS-DOS the alterations made by this function include
2363converting a leading @samp{.} to @samp{_}, converting a @samp{_} in the
2364middle of the name to @samp{.} if there is no other @samp{.}, inserting
2365a @samp{.} after eight characters if there is none, and truncating to
2366three characters after the @samp{.}. (It makes other changes as well.)
2367Thus, @file{.abbrev_defs} becomes @file{_abbrev.def}, and
2368@file{.completions} becomes @file{_complet.ion}.
2369
2370@node Contents of Directories
2371@section Contents of Directories
2372@cindex directory-oriented functions
2373@cindex file names in directory
2374
2375 A directory is a kind of file that contains other files entered under
2376various names. Directories are a feature of the file system.
2377
2378 Emacs can list the names of the files in a directory as a Lisp list,
2379or display the names in a buffer using the @code{ls} shell command. In
2380the latter case, it can optionally display information about each file,
2381depending on the options passed to the @code{ls} command.
2382
2383@defun directory-files directory &optional full-name match-regexp nosort
2384This function returns a list of the names of the files in the directory
2385@var{directory}. By default, the list is in alphabetical order.
2386
2387If @var{full-name} is non-@code{nil}, the function returns the files'
2388absolute file names. Otherwise, it returns the names relative to
2389the specified directory.
2390
2391If @var{match-regexp} is non-@code{nil}, this function returns only
2392those file names that contain a match for that regular expression---the
2393other file names are excluded from the list. On case-insensitive
2394filesystems, the regular expression matching is case-insensitive.
2395
2396@c Emacs 19 feature
2397If @var{nosort} is non-@code{nil}, @code{directory-files} does not sort
2398the list, so you get the file names in no particular order. Use this if
2399you want the utmost possible speed and don't care what order the files
2400are processed in. If the order of processing is visible to the user,
2401then the user will probably be happier if you do sort the names.
2402
2403@example
2404@group
2405(directory-files "~lewis")
2406 @result{} ("#foo#" "#foo.el#" "." ".."
2407 "dired-mods.el" "files.texi"
2408 "files.texi.~1~")
2409@end group
2410@end example
2411
2412An error is signaled if @var{directory} is not the name of a directory
2413that can be read.
2414@end defun
2415
2416@defun directory-files-and-attributes directory &optional full-name match-regexp nosort id-format
2417This is similar to @code{directory-files} in deciding which files
2418to report on and how to report their names. However, instead
2419of returning a list of file names, it returns for each file a
2420list @code{(@var{filename} . @var{attributes})}, where @var{attributes}
2421is what @code{file-attributes} would return for that file.
2422The optional argument @var{id-format} has the same meaning as the
2423corresponding argument to @code{file-attributes} (@pxref{Definition
2424of file-attributes}).
2425@end defun
2426
b8d4c8d0
GM
2427@defun file-expand-wildcards pattern &optional full
2428This function expands the wildcard pattern @var{pattern}, returning
2429a list of file names that match it.
2430
2431If @var{pattern} is written as an absolute file name,
2432the values are absolute also.
2433
2434If @var{pattern} is written as a relative file name, it is interpreted
2435relative to the current default directory. The file names returned are
2436normally also relative to the current default directory. However, if
2437@var{full} is non-@code{nil}, they are absolute.
2438@end defun
2439
2440@defun insert-directory file switches &optional wildcard full-directory-p
2441This function inserts (in the current buffer) a directory listing for
2442directory @var{file}, formatted with @code{ls} according to
2443@var{switches}. It leaves point after the inserted text.
2444@var{switches} may be a string of options, or a list of strings
2445representing individual options.
2446
2447The argument @var{file} may be either a directory name or a file
2448specification including wildcard characters. If @var{wildcard} is
2449non-@code{nil}, that means treat @var{file} as a file specification with
2450wildcards.
2451
2452If @var{full-directory-p} is non-@code{nil}, that means the directory
2453listing is expected to show the full contents of a directory. You
2454should specify @code{t} when @var{file} is a directory and switches do
2455not contain @samp{-d}. (The @samp{-d} option to @code{ls} says to
2456describe a directory itself as a file, rather than showing its
2457contents.)
2458
2459On most systems, this function works by running a directory listing
2460program whose name is in the variable @code{insert-directory-program}.
2461If @var{wildcard} is non-@code{nil}, it also runs the shell specified by
2462@code{shell-file-name}, to expand the wildcards.
2463
2464MS-DOS and MS-Windows systems usually lack the standard Unix program
2465@code{ls}, so this function emulates the standard Unix program @code{ls}
2466with Lisp code.
2467
2468As a technical detail, when @var{switches} contains the long
2469@samp{--dired} option, @code{insert-directory} treats it specially,
2470for the sake of dired. However, the normally equivalent short
2471@samp{-D} option is just passed on to @code{insert-directory-program},
2472as any other option.
2473@end defun
2474
2475@defvar insert-directory-program
2476This variable's value is the program to run to generate a directory listing
2477for the function @code{insert-directory}. It is ignored on systems
2478which generate the listing with Lisp code.
2479@end defvar
2480
2481@node Create/Delete Dirs
2482@section Creating and Deleting Directories
2483@cindex creating and deleting directories
2484@c Emacs 19 features
2485
2486 Most Emacs Lisp file-manipulation functions get errors when used on
2487files that are directories. For example, you cannot delete a directory
2488with @code{delete-file}. These special functions exist to create and
2489delete directories.
2490
2491@defun make-directory dirname &optional parents
2492This function creates a directory named @var{dirname}.
2493If @var{parents} is non-@code{nil}, as is always the case in an
2494interactive call, that means to create the parent directories first,
2495if they don't already exist.
2496@end defun
2497
2498@defun delete-directory dirname
2499This function deletes the directory named @var{dirname}. The function
2500@code{delete-file} does not work for files that are directories; you
2501must use @code{delete-directory} for them. If the directory contains
2502any files, @code{delete-directory} signals an error.
2503
2504This function only follows symbolic links at the level of parent
2505directories.
2506@end defun
2507
2508@node Magic File Names
2509@section Making Certain File Names ``Magic''
2510@cindex magic file names
2511
2512@c Emacs 19 feature
2513 You can implement special handling for certain file names. This is
2514called making those names @dfn{magic}. The principal use for this
2515feature is in implementing remote file names (@pxref{Remote Files,,
2516Remote Files, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
2517
2518 To define a kind of magic file name, you must supply a regular
2519expression to define the class of names (all those that match the
2520regular expression), plus a handler that implements all the primitive
2521Emacs file operations for file names that do match.
2522
2523 The variable @code{file-name-handler-alist} holds a list of handlers,
2524together with regular expressions that determine when to apply each
2525handler. Each element has this form:
2526
2527@example
2528(@var{regexp} . @var{handler})
2529@end example
2530
2531@noindent
2532All the Emacs primitives for file access and file name transformation
2533check the given file name against @code{file-name-handler-alist}. If
2534the file name matches @var{regexp}, the primitives handle that file by
2535calling @var{handler}.
2536
2537 The first argument given to @var{handler} is the name of the
2538primitive, as a symbol; the remaining arguments are the arguments that
2539were passed to that primitive. (The first of these arguments is most
2540often the file name itself.) For example, if you do this:
2541
2542@example
2543(file-exists-p @var{filename})
2544@end example
2545
2546@noindent
2547and @var{filename} has handler @var{handler}, then @var{handler} is
2548called like this:
2549
2550@example
2551(funcall @var{handler} 'file-exists-p @var{filename})
2552@end example
2553
2554 When a function takes two or more arguments that must be file names,
2555it checks each of those names for a handler. For example, if you do
2556this:
2557
2558@example
2559(expand-file-name @var{filename} @var{dirname})
2560@end example
2561
2562@noindent
2563then it checks for a handler for @var{filename} and then for a handler
2564for @var{dirname}. In either case, the @var{handler} is called like
2565this:
2566
2567@example
2568(funcall @var{handler} 'expand-file-name @var{filename} @var{dirname})
2569@end example
2570
2571@noindent
2572The @var{handler} then needs to figure out whether to handle
2573@var{filename} or @var{dirname}.
2574
2575 If the specified file name matches more than one handler, the one
2576whose match starts last in the file name gets precedence. This rule
2577is chosen so that handlers for jobs such as uncompression are handled
2578first, before handlers for jobs such as remote file access.
2579
2580 Here are the operations that a magic file name handler gets to handle:
2581
2582@ifnottex
2583@noindent
2584@code{access-file}, @code{add-name-to-file},
2585@code{byte-compiler-base-file-name},@*
2586@code{copy-file}, @code{delete-directory},
2587@code{delete-file},
2588@code{diff-latest-backup-file},
2589@code{directory-file-name},
2590@code{directory-files},
2591@code{directory-files-and-attributes},
2592@code{dired-compress-file}, @code{dired-uncache},@*
2593@code{expand-file-name},
2594@code{file-accessible-directory-p},
2595@code{file-attributes},
2596@code{file-directory-p},
2597@code{file-executable-p}, @code{file-exists-p},
2598@code{file-local-copy}, @code{file-remote-p},
2599@code{file-modes}, @code{file-name-all-completions},
2600@code{file-name-as-directory},
2601@code{file-name-completion},
2602@code{file-name-directory},
2603@code{file-name-nondirectory},
2604@code{file-name-sans-versions}, @code{file-newer-than-file-p},
2605@code{file-ownership-preserved-p},
2606@code{file-readable-p}, @code{file-regular-p}, @code{file-symlink-p},
2607@code{file-truename}, @code{file-writable-p},
2608@code{find-backup-file-name},
4e47bf1f 2609@c Not sure why it was here: @code{find-file-noselect},@*
b8d4c8d0
GM
2610@code{get-file-buffer},
2611@code{insert-directory},
2612@code{insert-file-contents},@*
2613@code{load},
2614@code{make-auto-save-file-name},
2615@code{make-directory},
2616@code{make-directory-internal},
2617@code{make-symbolic-link},@*
2618@code{process-file},
2619@code{rename-file}, @code{set-file-modes}, @code{set-file-times},
2620@code{set-visited-file-modtime}, @code{shell-command},
2621@code{start-file-process},
2622@code{substitute-in-file-name},@*
2623@code{unhandled-file-name-directory},
2624@code{vc-registered},
2625@code{verify-visited-file-modtime},@*
2626@code{write-region}.
2627@end ifnottex
2628@iftex
2629@noindent
2630@flushleft
2631@code{access-file}, @code{add-name-to-file},
2632@code{byte-com@discretionary{}{}{}piler-base-file-name},
2633@code{copy-file}, @code{delete-directory},
2634@code{delete-file},
2635@code{diff-latest-backup-file},
2636@code{directory-file-name},
2637@code{directory-files},
2638@code{directory-files-and-at@discretionary{}{}{}tributes},
2639@code{dired-compress-file}, @code{dired-uncache},
2640@code{expand-file-name},
2641@code{file-accessible-direc@discretionary{}{}{}tory-p},
2642@code{file-attributes},
2643@code{file-direct@discretionary{}{}{}ory-p},
2644@code{file-executable-p}, @code{file-exists-p},
2645@code{file-local-copy}, @code{file-remote-p},
2646@code{file-modes}, @code{file-name-all-completions},
2647@code{file-name-as-directory},
2648@code{file-name-completion},
2649@code{file-name-directory},
2650@code{file-name-nondirec@discretionary{}{}{}tory},
2651@code{file-name-sans-versions}, @code{file-newer-than-file-p},
2652@code{file-ownership-pre@discretionary{}{}{}served-p},
2653@code{file-readable-p}, @code{file-regular-p}, @code{file-symlink-p},
2654@code{file-truename}, @code{file-writable-p},
2655@code{find-backup-file-name},
4e47bf1f 2656@c Not sure why it was here: @code{find-file-noselect},
b8d4c8d0
GM
2657@code{get-file-buffer},
2658@code{insert-directory},
2659@code{insert-file-contents},
2660@code{load}, @code{make-direc@discretionary{}{}{}tory},
2661@code{make-direc@discretionary{}{}{}tory-internal},
2662@code{make-symbolic-link},
2663@code{process-file},
2664@code{rename-file}, @code{set-file-modes},
2665@code{set-visited-file-modtime}, @code{shell-command},
2666@code{start-file-process},
2667@code{substitute-in-file-name},
2668@code{unhandled-file-name-directory},
2669@code{vc-regis@discretionary{}{}{}tered},
2670@code{verify-visited-file-modtime},
2671@code{write-region}.
2672@end flushleft
2673@end iftex
2674
2675 Handlers for @code{insert-file-contents} typically need to clear the
2676buffer's modified flag, with @code{(set-buffer-modified-p nil)}, if the
2677@var{visit} argument is non-@code{nil}. This also has the effect of
2678unlocking the buffer if it is locked.
2679
2680 The handler function must handle all of the above operations, and
2681possibly others to be added in the future. It need not implement all
2682these operations itself---when it has nothing special to do for a
2683certain operation, it can reinvoke the primitive, to handle the
2684operation ``in the usual way.'' It should always reinvoke the primitive
2685for an operation it does not recognize. Here's one way to do this:
2686
2687@smallexample
2688(defun my-file-handler (operation &rest args)
2689 ;; @r{First check for the specific operations}
2690 ;; @r{that we have special handling for.}
2691 (cond ((eq operation 'insert-file-contents) @dots{})
2692 ((eq operation 'write-region) @dots{})
2693 @dots{}
2694 ;; @r{Handle any operation we don't know about.}
2695 (t (let ((inhibit-file-name-handlers
2696 (cons 'my-file-handler
2697 (and (eq inhibit-file-name-operation operation)
2698 inhibit-file-name-handlers)))
2699 (inhibit-file-name-operation operation))
2700 (apply operation args)))))
2701@end smallexample
2702
2703 When a handler function decides to call the ordinary Emacs primitive for
2704the operation at hand, it needs to prevent the primitive from calling
2705the same handler once again, thus leading to an infinite recursion. The
2706example above shows how to do this, with the variables
2707@code{inhibit-file-name-handlers} and
2708@code{inhibit-file-name-operation}. Be careful to use them exactly as
2709shown above; the details are crucial for proper behavior in the case of
2710multiple handlers, and for operations that have two file names that may
2711each have handlers.
2712
2713@kindex safe-magic (@r{property})
2714 Handlers that don't really do anything special for actual access to the
2715file---such as the ones that implement completion of host names for
2716remote file names---should have a non-@code{nil} @code{safe-magic}
2717property. For instance, Emacs normally ``protects'' directory names
2718it finds in @code{PATH} from becoming magic, if they look like magic
2719file names, by prefixing them with @samp{/:}. But if the handler that
2720would be used for them has a non-@code{nil} @code{safe-magic}
2721property, the @samp{/:} is not added.
2722
2723@kindex operations (@r{property})
2724 A file name handler can have an @code{operations} property to
2725declare which operations it handles in a nontrivial way. If this
2726property has a non-@code{nil} value, it should be a list of
2727operations; then only those operations will call the handler. This
2728avoids inefficiency, but its main purpose is for autoloaded handler
2729functions, so that they won't be loaded except when they have real
2730work to do.
2731
2732 Simply deferring all operations to the usual primitives does not
2733work. For instance, if the file name handler applies to
2734@code{file-exists-p}, then it must handle @code{load} itself, because
2735the usual @code{load} code won't work properly in that case. However,
2736if the handler uses the @code{operations} property to say it doesn't
2737handle @code{file-exists-p}, then it need not handle @code{load}
2738nontrivially.
2739
2740@defvar inhibit-file-name-handlers
2741This variable holds a list of handlers whose use is presently inhibited
2742for a certain operation.
2743@end defvar
2744
2745@defvar inhibit-file-name-operation
2746The operation for which certain handlers are presently inhibited.
2747@end defvar
2748
2749@defun find-file-name-handler file operation
2750This function returns the handler function for file name @var{file},
2751or @code{nil} if there is none. The argument @var{operation} should
2752be the operation to be performed on the file---the value you will pass
2753to the handler as its first argument when you call it. If
2754@var{operation} equals @code{inhibit-file-name-operation}, or if it is
2755not found in the @code{operations} property of the handler, this
2756function returns @code{nil}.
2757@end defun
2758
2759@defun file-local-copy filename
2760This function copies file @var{filename} to an ordinary non-magic file
2761on the local machine, if it isn't on the local machine already. Magic
2762file names should handle the @code{file-local-copy} operation if they
2763refer to files on other machines. A magic file name that is used for
2764other purposes than remote file access should not handle
2765@code{file-local-copy}; then this function will treat the file as
2766local.
2767
2768If @var{filename} is local, whether magic or not, this function does
2769nothing and returns @code{nil}. Otherwise it returns the file name
2770of the local copy file.
2771@end defun
2772
2773@defun file-remote-p filename &optional identification connected
2774This function tests whether @var{filename} is a remote file. If
2775@var{filename} is local (not remote), the return value is @code{nil}.
2776If @var{filename} is indeed remote, the return value is a string that
2777identifies the remote system.
2778
2779This identifier string can include a host name and a user name, as
2780well as characters designating the method used to access the remote
2781system. For example, the remote identifier string for the filename
2782@code{/sudo::/some/file} is @code{/sudo:root@@localhost:}.
2783
2784If @code{file-remote-p} returns the same identifier for two different
2785filenames, that means they are stored on the same file system and can
2786be accessed locally with respect to each other. This means, for
2787example, that it is possible to start a remote process accessing both
2788files at the same time. Implementors of file handlers need to ensure
2789this principle is valid.
2790
2791@var{identification} specifies which part of the identifier shall be
2792returned as string. @var{identification} can be the symbol
2793@code{method}, @code{user} or @code{host}; any other value is handled
2794like @code{nil} and means to return the complete identifier string.
2795In the example above, the remote @code{user} identifier string would
2796be @code{root}.
2797
2798If @var{connected} is non-@code{nil}, this function returns @code{nil}
2799even if @var{filename} is remote, if Emacs has no network connection
2800to its host. This is useful when you want to avoid the delay of
2801making connections when they don't exist.
2802@end defun
2803
2804@defun unhandled-file-name-directory filename
4990219b
CY
2805This function returns the name of a directory that is not magic. It
2806uses the directory part of @var{filename} if that is not magic. For a
2807magic file name, it invokes the file name handler, which therefore
2808decides what value to return. If @var{filename} is not accessible
2809from a local process, then the file name handler should indicate it by
2810returning @code{nil}.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2811
2812This is useful for running a subprocess; every subprocess must have a
2813non-magic directory to serve as its current directory, and this function
2814is a good way to come up with one.
2815@end defun
2816
2817@node Format Conversion
2818@section File Format Conversion
2819
2820@cindex file format conversion
2821@cindex encoding file formats
2822@cindex decoding file formats
2823@cindex text properties in files
2824@cindex saving text properties
2825 Emacs performs several steps to convert the data in a buffer (text,
2826text properties, and possibly other information) to and from a
2827representation suitable for storing into a file. This section describes
2828the fundamental functions that perform this @dfn{format conversion},
2829namely @code{insert-file-contents} for reading a file into a buffer,
2830and @code{write-region} for writing a buffer into a file.
2831
2832@menu
2833* Overview: Format Conversion Overview. @code{insert-file-contents} and @code{write-region}
2834* Round-Trip: Format Conversion Round-Trip. Using @code{format-alist}.
2835* Piecemeal: Format Conversion Piecemeal. Specifying non-paired conversion.
2836@end menu
2837
2838@node Format Conversion Overview
2839@subsection Overview
2840@noindent
2841The function @code{insert-file-contents}:
2842
2843@itemize
2844@item initially, inserts bytes from the file into the buffer;
2845@item decodes bytes to characters as appropriate;
2846@item processes formats as defined by entries in @code{format-alist}; and
2847@item calls functions in @code{after-insert-file-functions}.
2848@end itemize
2849
2850@noindent
2851The function @code{write-region}:
2852
2853@itemize
2854@item initially, calls functions in @code{write-region-annotate-functions};
2855@item processes formats as defined by entries in @code{format-alist};
2856@item encodes characters to bytes as appropriate; and
2857@item modifies the file with the bytes.
2858@end itemize
2859
2860 This shows the symmetry of the lowest-level operations; reading and
2861writing handle things in opposite order. The rest of this section
2862describes the two facilities surrounding the three variables named
2863above, as well as some related functions. @ref{Coding Systems}, for
2864details on character encoding and decoding.
2865
2866@node Format Conversion Round-Trip
2867@subsection Round-Trip Specification
2868
2869 The most general of the two facilities is controlled by the variable
2870@code{format-alist}, a list of @dfn{file format} specifications, which
2871describe textual representations used in files for the data in an Emacs
2872buffer. The descriptions for reading and writing are paired, which is
2873why we call this ``round-trip'' specification
2874(@pxref{Format Conversion Piecemeal}, for non-paired specification).
2875
2876@defvar format-alist
2877This list contains one format definition for each defined file format.
2878Each format definition is a list of this form:
2879
2880@example
c249fa9c 2881(@var{name} @var{doc-string} @var{regexp} @var{from-fn} @var{to-fn} @var{modify} @var{mode-fn} @var{preserve})
b8d4c8d0
GM
2882@end example
2883@end defvar
2884
2885@cindex format definition
2886@noindent
2887Here is what the elements in a format definition mean:
2888
2889@table @var
2890@item name
2891The name of this format.
2892
2893@item doc-string
2894A documentation string for the format.
2895
2896@item regexp
2897A regular expression which is used to recognize files represented in
2898this format.
2899
2900@item from-fn
2901A shell command or function to decode data in this format (to convert
2902file data into the usual Emacs data representation).
2903
2904A shell command is represented as a string; Emacs runs the command as a
2905filter to perform the conversion.
2906
2907If @var{from-fn} is a function, it is called with two arguments, @var{begin}
2908and @var{end}, which specify the part of the buffer it should convert.
2909It should convert the text by editing it in place. Since this can
2910change the length of the text, @var{from-fn} should return the modified
2911end position.
2912
2913One responsibility of @var{from-fn} is to make sure that the beginning
2914of the file no longer matches @var{regexp}. Otherwise it is likely to
2915get called again.
2916
2917@item to-fn
2918A shell command or function to encode data in this format---that is, to
2919convert the usual Emacs data representation into this format.
2920
2921If @var{to-fn} is a string, it is a shell command; Emacs runs the
2922command as a filter to perform the conversion.
2923
2924If @var{to-fn} is a function, it is called with three arguments:
2925@var{begin} and @var{end}, which specify the part of the buffer it
2926should convert, and @var{buffer}, which specifies which buffer. There
2927are two ways it can do the conversion:
2928
2929@itemize @bullet
2930@item
2931By editing the buffer in place. In this case, @var{to-fn} should
2932return the end-position of the range of text, as modified.
2933
2934@item
2935By returning a list of annotations. This is a list of elements of the
2936form @code{(@var{position} . @var{string})}, where @var{position} is an
2937integer specifying the relative position in the text to be written, and
2938@var{string} is the annotation to add there. The list must be sorted in
2939order of position when @var{to-fn} returns it.
2940
2941When @code{write-region} actually writes the text from the buffer to the
2942file, it intermixes the specified annotations at the corresponding
2943positions. All this takes place without modifying the buffer.
2944@end itemize
2945
2946@item modify
2947A flag, @code{t} if the encoding function modifies the buffer, and
2948@code{nil} if it works by returning a list of annotations.
2949
2950@item mode-fn
2951A minor-mode function to call after visiting a file converted from this
2952format. The function is called with one argument, the integer 1;
2953that tells a minor-mode function to enable the mode.
c249fa9c
GM
2954
2955@item preserve
2956A flag, @code{t} if @code{format-write-file} should not remove this format
2957from @code{buffer-file-format}.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2958@end table
2959
2960The function @code{insert-file-contents} automatically recognizes file
2961formats when it reads the specified file. It checks the text of the
2962beginning of the file against the regular expressions of the format
2963definitions, and if it finds a match, it calls the decoding function for
2964that format. Then it checks all the known formats over again.
2965It keeps checking them until none of them is applicable.
2966
2967Visiting a file, with @code{find-file-noselect} or the commands that use
2968it, performs conversion likewise (because it calls
2969@code{insert-file-contents}); it also calls the mode function for each
2970format that it decodes. It stores a list of the format names in the
2971buffer-local variable @code{buffer-file-format}.
2972
2973@defvar buffer-file-format
2974This variable states the format of the visited file. More precisely,
2975this is a list of the file format names that were decoded in the course
2976of visiting the current buffer's file. It is always buffer-local in all
2977buffers.
2978@end defvar
2979
2980When @code{write-region} writes data into a file, it first calls the
2981encoding functions for the formats listed in @code{buffer-file-format},
2982in the order of appearance in the list.
2983
2984@deffn Command format-write-file file format &optional confirm
fa047ae7
GM
2985This command writes the current buffer contents into the file @var{file}
2986in a format based on @var{format}, which is a list of format names. It
2987constructs the actual format starting from @var{format}, then appending
2988any elements from the value of @code{buffer-file-format} with a non-nil
2989@var{preserve} flag (see above), if they are not already present in
2990@var{format}. It then updates @code{buffer-file-format} with this
2991format, making it the default for future saves. Except for the
2992@var{format} argument, this command is similar to @code{write-file}. In
2993particular, @var{confirm} has the same meaning and interactive treatment
2994as the corresponding argument to @code{write-file}. @xref{Definition of
2995write-file}.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2996@end deffn
2997
2998@deffn Command format-find-file file format
2999This command finds the file @var{file}, converting it according to
3000format @var{format}. It also makes @var{format} the default if the
3001buffer is saved later.
3002
3003The argument @var{format} is a list of format names. If @var{format} is
3004@code{nil}, no conversion takes place. Interactively, typing just
3005@key{RET} for @var{format} specifies @code{nil}.
3006@end deffn
3007
3008@deffn Command format-insert-file file format &optional beg end
3009This command inserts the contents of file @var{file}, converting it
3010according to format @var{format}. If @var{beg} and @var{end} are
3011non-@code{nil}, they specify which part of the file to read, as in
3012@code{insert-file-contents} (@pxref{Reading from Files}).
3013
3014The return value is like what @code{insert-file-contents} returns: a
3015list of the absolute file name and the length of the data inserted
3016(after conversion).
3017
3018The argument @var{format} is a list of format names. If @var{format} is
3019@code{nil}, no conversion takes place. Interactively, typing just
3020@key{RET} for @var{format} specifies @code{nil}.
3021@end deffn
3022
3023@defvar buffer-auto-save-file-format
3024This variable specifies the format to use for auto-saving. Its value is
3025a list of format names, just like the value of
3026@code{buffer-file-format}; however, it is used instead of
3027@code{buffer-file-format} for writing auto-save files. If the value
3028is @code{t}, the default, auto-saving uses the same format as a
3029regular save in the same buffer. This variable is always buffer-local
3030in all buffers.
3031@end defvar
3032
3033@node Format Conversion Piecemeal
3034@subsection Piecemeal Specification
3035
3036 In contrast to the round-trip specification described in the previous
3037subsection (@pxref{Format Conversion Round-Trip}), you can use the variables
3038@code{after-insert-file-functions} and @code{write-region-annotate-functions}
3039to separately control the respective reading and writing conversions.
3040
3041 Conversion starts with one representation and produces another
3042representation. When there is only one conversion to do, there is no
3043conflict about what to start with. However, when there are multiple
3044conversions involved, conflict may arise when two conversions need to
3045start with the same data.
3046
3047 This situation is best understood in the context of converting text
3048properties during @code{write-region}. For example, the character at
3049position 42 in a buffer is @samp{X} with a text property @code{foo}. If
3050the conversion for @code{foo} is done by inserting into the buffer, say,
3051@samp{FOO:}, then that changes the character at position 42 from
3052@samp{X} to @samp{F}. The next conversion will start with the wrong
3053data straight away.
3054
3055 To avoid conflict, cooperative conversions do not modify the buffer,
3056but instead specify @dfn{annotations}, a list of elements of the form
3057@code{(@var{position} . @var{string})}, sorted in order of increasing
3058@var{position}.
3059
3060 If there is more than one conversion, @code{write-region} merges their
3061annotations destructively into one sorted list. Later, when the text
3062from the buffer is actually written to the file, it intermixes the
3063specified annotations at the corresponding positions. All this takes
3064place without modifying the buffer.
3065
3066@c ??? What about ``overriding'' conversions like those allowed
3067@c ??? for `write-region-annotate-functions', below? --ttn
3068
3069 In contrast, when reading, the annotations intermixed with the text
3070are handled immediately. @code{insert-file-contents} sets point to the
3071beginning of some text to be converted, then calls the conversion
3072functions with the length of that text. These functions should always
3073return with point at the beginning of the inserted text. This approach
3074makes sense for reading because annotations removed by the first
3075converter can't be mistakenly processed by a later converter.
3076
3077 Each conversion function should scan for the annotations it
3078recognizes, remove the annotation, modify the buffer text (to set a text
3079property, for example), and return the updated length of the text, as it
3080stands after those changes. The value returned by one function becomes
3081the argument to the next function.
3082
3083@defvar write-region-annotate-functions
3084A list of functions for @code{write-region} to call. Each function in
3085the list is called with two arguments: the start and end of the region
3086to be written. These functions should not alter the contents of the
3087buffer. Instead, they should return annotations.
3088
3089@c ??? Following adapted from comment in `build_annotations' (fileio.c).
3090@c ??? Perhaps this is intended for internal use only?
3091@c ??? Someone who understands this, please reword it. --ttn
3092As a special case, if a function returns with a different buffer
3093current, Emacs takes it to mean the current buffer contains altered text
3094to be output, and discards all previous annotations because they should
3095have been dealt with by this function.
3096@end defvar
3097
3098@defvar after-insert-file-functions
3099Each function in this list is called by @code{insert-file-contents}
3100with one argument, the number of characters inserted, and with point
3101at the beginning of the inserted text. Each function should leave
3102point unchanged, and return the new character count describing the
3103inserted text as modified by the function.
3104@c ??? The docstring mentions a handler from `file-name-handler-alist'
3105@c "intercepting" `insert-file-contents'. Hmmm. --ttn
3106@end defvar
3107
3108 We invite users to write Lisp programs to store and retrieve text
3109properties in files, using these hooks, and thus to experiment with
3110various data formats and find good ones. Eventually we hope users
3111will produce good, general extensions we can install in Emacs.
3112
3113 We suggest not trying to handle arbitrary Lisp objects as text property
3114names or values---because a program that general is probably difficult
3115to write, and slow. Instead, choose a set of possible data types that
3116are reasonably flexible, and not too hard to encode.
3117
3118@ignore
3119 arch-tag: 141f74ce-6ae3-40dc-a6c4-ef83fc4ec35c
3120@end ignore