You want to identify if two filenames in a list correspond to the same file on disk (because of hard and soft links, two filenames can refer to a single file). You might do this to make sure that you don't change a file you've already worked with.
Maintain a hash, keyed by the device and inode number of the files you've seen. The values are the names of the files:
%seen = (); sub do_my_thing { my $filename = shift; my ($dev, $ino) = stat $filename; unless ($seen{$dev, $ino}++) { # do something with $filename because we haven't # seen it before } }
A key in
%seen
is made by combining the device number (
$dev
) and inode number (
$ino
) of each file. Files that are the same will have the same device and inode numbers, so they will have the same key.
If you want to maintain a list of all files of the same name, instead of counting the number of times seen, save the name of the file in an anonymous array.
foreach $filename (@files) { ($dev, $ino) = stat $filename; push( @{ $seen{$dev,$ino} }, $filename); } foreach $devino (sort keys %seen) { ($dev, $ino) = split(/$;/o, $devino); if (@{$seen{$devino}} > 1) { # @{$seen{$devino}} is a list of filenames for the same file } }
The
$;
variable contains the separator string using the old
multidimensional associative array emulation syntax,
$hash{$x,$y,$z}
. It's still a one-dimensional hash, but it has composite keys. The key is really
join($;
=>
$x,
$y,
$z)
. The
split
separates them again. Although you'd normally just use a real multilevel hash directly, here there's no need, and it's cheaper not to.
The
$;
variable in
perlvar
(1), and in the
"Special Variables"
section of
Chapter 2
of
Programming Perl
; the
stat
function in
perlfunc
(1) and in
Chapter 3
of
Programming Perl
;
Chapter 5,
Hashes
Copyright © 2001 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.