Failed to save the file to the "xx" directory.

Failed to save the file to the "ll" directory.

Failed to save the file to the "mm" directory.

Failed to save the file to the "wp" directory.

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Current File : /proc/self/root/usr/share/perl5/vendor_perl/File/HomeDir/Darwin/Carbon.pm
package File::HomeDir::Darwin::Carbon;

# Basic implementation for the Dawin family of operating systems.
# This includes (most prominently) Mac OS X.

use 5.00503;
use strict;
use Cwd                   ();
use Carp                  ();
use File::HomeDir::Darwin ();

use vars qw{$VERSION @ISA};
BEGIN {
	$VERSION = '1.002';

	# This is only a child class of the pure Perl darwin
	# class so that we can do homedir detection of all three
	# drivers at one via ->isa.
	@ISA = 'File::HomeDir::Darwin';

	# Load early if in a forking environment and we have
	# prefork, or at run-time if not.
	local $@;
	eval "use prefork 'Mac::Files'";
}





#####################################################################
# Current User Methods

sub my_home {
	my $class = shift;

	# A lot of unix people and unix-derived tools rely on
	# the ability to overload HOME. We will support it too
	# so that they can replace raw HOME calls with File::HomeDir.
	if ( exists $ENV{HOME} and defined $ENV{HOME} ) {
		return $ENV{HOME};
	}

	require Mac::Files;
	$class->_find_folder(
		Mac::Files::kCurrentUserFolderType(),
	);
}

sub my_desktop {
	my $class = shift;

	require Mac::Files;
	$class->_find_folder(
		Mac::Files::kDesktopFolderType(),
	);
}

sub my_documents {
	my $class = shift;

	require Mac::Files;
	$class->_find_folder(
		Mac::Files::kDocumentsFolderType(),
	);
}

sub my_data {
	my $class = shift;

	require Mac::Files;
	$class->_find_folder(
		Mac::Files::kApplicationSupportFolderType(),
	);
}

sub my_music {
	my $class = shift;

	require Mac::Files;
	$class->_find_folder(
		Mac::Files::kMusicDocumentsFolderType(),
	);
}

sub my_pictures {
	my $class = shift;

	require Mac::Files;
	$class->_find_folder(
		Mac::Files::kPictureDocumentsFolderType(),
	);
}

sub my_videos {
	my $class = shift;

	require Mac::Files;
	$class->_find_folder(
		Mac::Files::kMovieDocumentsFolderType(),
	);
}

sub _find_folder {
	my $class = shift;
	my $name  = shift;

	require Mac::Files;
	my $folder = Mac::Files::FindFolder(
		Mac::Files::kUserDomain(),
		$name,
	);
	return undef unless defined $folder;

	unless ( -d $folder ) {
		# Make sure that symlinks resolve to directories.
		return undef unless -l $folder;
		my $dir = readlink $folder or return;
		return undef unless -d $dir;
	}

	return Cwd::abs_path($folder);
}





#####################################################################
# Arbitrary User Methods

sub users_home {
	my $class = shift;
	my $home  = $class->SUPER::users_home(@_);
	return defined $home ? Cwd::abs_path($home) : undef;
}

# in theory this can be done, but for now, let's cheat, since the
# rest is Hard
sub users_desktop {
	my ($class, $name) = @_;
	return undef if $name eq 'root';
	$class->_to_user( $class->my_desktop, $name );
}

sub users_documents {
	my ($class, $name) = @_;
	return undef if $name eq 'root';
	$class->_to_user( $class->my_documents, $name );
}

sub users_data {
	my ($class, $name) = @_;
	$class->_to_user( $class->my_data, $name )
	||
	$class->users_home($name);
}

# cheap hack ... not entirely reliable, perhaps, but ... c'est la vie, since
# there's really no other good way to do it at this time, that i know of -- pudge
sub _to_user {
	my ($class, $path, $name) = @_;
	my $my_home    = $class->my_home;
	my $users_home = $class->users_home($name);
	defined $users_home or return undef;
	$path =~ s/^\Q$my_home/$users_home/;
	return $path;
}

1;

=pod

=head1 NAME

File::HomeDir::Darwin - Find your home and other directories on Darwin (OS X)

=head1 DESCRIPTION

This module provides Darwin-specific implementations for determining
common user directories.  In normal usage this module will always be
used via L<File::HomeDir>.

Note -- since this module requires Mac::Carbon and Mac::Carbon does
not work with 64-bit perls, on such systems, File::HomeDir will try
L<File::HomeDir::Darwin::Cocoa> and then fall back to the (pure Perl)
L<File::HomeDir::Darwin>.

=head1 SYNOPSIS

  use File::HomeDir;

  # Find directories for the current user
  $home    = File::HomeDir->my_home;      # /Users/mylogin
  $desktop = File::HomeDir->my_desktop;   # /Users/mylogin/Desktop
  $docs    = File::HomeDir->my_documents; # /Users/mylogin/Documents
  $music   = File::HomeDir->my_music;     # /Users/mylogin/Music
  $pics    = File::HomeDir->my_pictures;  # /Users/mylogin/Pictures
  $videos  = File::HomeDir->my_videos;    # /Users/mylogin/Movies
  $data    = File::HomeDir->my_data;      # /Users/mylogin/Library/Application Support

=head1 TODO

=over 4

=item * Test with Mac OS (versions 7, 8, 9)

=item * Some better way for users_* ?

=back

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