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Bug #11205

closed

Problem with __dir__ or it's description

Added by gam3 (Allen Morris) almost 9 years ago. Updated over 4 years ago.

Status:
Closed
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
[ruby-core:69431]

Description

Kernel#__dir__

Returns the canonicalized absolute path of the directory of the file from which this method is called. It means symlinks in the path is resolved. If __FILE__ is nil, it returns nil. The return value equals to File.dirname(File.realpath(__FILE__)).

Here is a script that shows the problem.

def mytest(&block)
  ret = block.binding.eval( '[ __FILE__, __dir__ ]' )
  assert_equal("bill", __dir__)
end
dir = __dir__
eval(%q(
  ret = mytest { }
  ret[0] == '/bill/bill'
  ret[1] == dir          # where it shoudl == '/bill'
  # 
), nil, '/bill/bill', 1)

Even without the binding problem it is clear from the current ruby tests that
__dir__ is not equal to File.realpath(__FILE__).

  def test___dir__
    assert_instance_of String, __dir__
    assert_equal(File.dirname(File.realpath(__FILE__)), __dir__)
    bug8436 = '[ruby-core:55123] [Bug #8436]'
    assert_equal(__dir__, eval("__dir__", binding), bug8436)
    bug8662 = '[ruby-core:56099] [Bug #8662]'
    assert_equal("arbitrary", eval("__dir__", binding, "arbitrary/file.rb"), bug8662)
    assert_equal("arbitrary", Object.new.instance_eval("__dir__", "arbitrary/file.rb"), bug8662)
  end

possible solution:
Fix eval so that it never affects Kernel#__dir__ and add a Kernel#__file__ method and rewrite the description as:

Kernel#__dir__

Returns the canonicalized absolute path of the directory of the file from which this method is called. It means symlinks in the path is resolved. The return value equals to File.dirname(File.realpath(__file__)).

And a definition for __file__

Kernel#__file__

Returns the canonicalized absolute path of the directory of the file from which this method is called. It means symlinks in the path is resolved. The return value equals to File.dirname(File.realpath(__file__)).
Note: __file__ is equal to __FILE__ except inside of #eval and #eval_instance.

This assumes that the purpose of __dir__ is to find files in the current filesystem, and not for the purpose of debugging.


Files

patch (900 Bytes) patch test_method patch gam3 (Allen Morris), 06/01/2015 02:48 PM
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