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Fast path manipulation and symlink resolution for bash

Sadly, it's hard to find a portable way to get the "real path" of a file, and shell-based emulations of realpath and readlink -f are usually quite slow compared to the real thing, and don't return quite the same results. (Dealing with missing elements, symlink loops, and the like can also be a challenge, even with the "real" readlink or realpath!)

So, this module is a thorough implementation of symlink resolution and path canonicalization (for bash 3.2 and up) using plain, portable readlink with no options. Its symlink resolution is about as fast as readlink -f when there is only one symlink to follow, and enormously faster when the target isn't a symlink. (It's slower on symlink chains, though.)

To avoid the need for subshells, all of this module's functions output a single path result via the bash REPLY variable. All functions return success, always, as they are designed to provide meaningful results even in the presence of missing, looping, or inaccessible files, symlinks, or directories.

Most of this module's functions also return absolute, well-formed paths: that is, paths that begin with / and contain no ., .. or empty components. (The exceptions are realpath.follow, realpath.dirname, and realpath.basename, which can return relative paths.)

(Note: unlike their operating system counterparts, these functions do not accept options, and always return exactly one path as a result. Do not pass -- to them or expect to get multiple results for multiple arguments!)

Contents

Installation, Requirements And Use

Copy and paste the code into your script, or place it on PATH and source realpaths. (if you have basher, you can basher install bashup/realpaths to get it installed on your PATH.) The code is licensed CC0, so you are not required to add any attribution or copyright notices to your project.

The code's only extenal requirement is readlink, which is used only to resolve a single symlink level with no special options, and therefore can be a GNU, BSD, or OS X readlink implementation.

Resolving Symlinks

realpath.location

Sets REPLY to the absolute, well-formed path of a physical directory that contains (or would contain) the supplied path. (Equivalent to the dirname of realpath.resolved "$1".) Always succeeds.

(Pass this function "$BASH_SOURCE" to get the directory of the currently-executing file, or "$0" to get the directory of the current main script.)

realpath.resolved

Sets REPLY to the absolute, well-formed path of $1, with symlinks in the final path portion resolved. (Equivalent to the realpath.absolute of realpath.follow "$1".) Always succeeds. The result is not a symlink unless it is inaccessible or part of a symlink cycle.

realpath.follow

Sets REPLY to the first non-symlink (or last accessible, non-looping symlink) in the symlink chain beginning at $1. Replies with the unchanged $1 if it is not a symlink. Always succeeds. The result is not a symlink unless it is inaccessible or part of a symlink cycle. (Note: the result can be a relative path, if both $1 and all the symlinks in the chain are relative. Use realpath.resolved instead if you want a guaranteed-absolute path.)

Path String Manipulation

realpath.absolute [paths...]

Sets REPLY to the absolute, well-formed combination of the supplied path(s). Always succeeds.

Each path may be absolute or relative. The resulting path is the combination of the last absolute path in the list supplied, combined with any relative paths that follow it. If no absolute paths are given, the relative paths are processed relative to $PWD -- so passing zero arguments simply returns $PWD.

Relative path parts are resolved logically rather than physically. That is to say, .. is processed by removing elements from the path string, rather than by inspecting the filesystem. (So symlinks are not processed in any way, and the existence or accessibility of the files and directories is irrelevant: with the exception of defaulting to $PWD, the result is obtained solely via string manipulation of the supplied paths.)

As per POSIX, bash, Python, and other path handling libraries, absolute paths beginning with exactly two slashes are treated specially. The string returned by realpath.absolute will begin with two slashes if the last absolute path argument began with exactly two slashes; otherwise the result will begin with only one slash, no matter how many slashes the last absolute path argument began with.

realpath.relative path [basedir]

Sets REPLY to the shortest relative path from basedir to path. basedir defaults to $PWD if not supplied. Always succeeds.

The path and basedir are preprocessed with realpath.absolute, so they can be relative paths, or absolute ones containing relative components. (The result is identical to calling Python's os.path.relpath function with the same arguments, but is much faster than even the fork to start Python would be.)

The main use case for this function is portably creating relative symlinks without needing ln --relative or realpath --relative-to. Specifically, if you are doing ln -s somepath somedir/link, you can make it relative using realpath.relative somepath somedir; ln -s "$REPLY" somedir/link.

realpath.dirname

Sets REPLY to the directory name of $1, always returning success. Produces the exact same results as REPLY=$(dirname -- "$1") except much, much faster. Always succeeds.

realpath.basename

Sets REPLY to the basename of $1. Produces the exact same results as REPLY=$(basename -- "$1") except much, much faster. Always succeeds.

Determinining Canonical Paths

realpath.canonical

Sets REPLY to the fully canonicalized form of $1, recursively resolving symlinks in every part of the path where that can be done, roughly equivalent to realpath -m or readlink -m. Always succeeds, but potentially rather slow, depending on how many directories are symlinks.

You don't really need this function unless you are trying to determine whether divergent paths lead to the "same" file. For use cases that don't involve comparing paths, realpath.resolved should be sufficient, or perhaps even realpath.absolute. (Note, too, that using canonical paths can result in user confusion, since users then have to reconcile their inputs with your outputs!)

License

CC0
To the extent possible under law, PJ Eby has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to bashup/realpaths. This work is published from: United States.

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