I have Perl script and need to determine the full path and filename of the script during execution. I discovered that depending on how you call the script $0 varies and sometimes contains the fullpath+filename and sometimes just filename. Because the working directory can vary as well I can't think of a way to reliably get the fullpath+filename of the script.

Anyone got a solution?

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13 Answers

up vote 45 down vote accepted

$0 is typically the name of your program, so how about this?

use Cwd 'abs_path';
print abs_path($0);

Seems to me that this should work as abs_path knows if you are using a relative or absolute path.

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Small comment, on activestate perl on windows $0 typically contains backslashes and abs_path returned forward slashes, so a quick "tr /\//\\/;" was needed to fix it. – Chris Madden Sep 17 '08 at 17:03
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There are a few ways:

  • $0 is the currently executing script as provided by POSIX, relative to the current working directory if the script is at or below the CWD
  • Additionally, cwd(), getcwd() and abs_path() are provided by the Cwd module and tell you where the script is being run from
  • The module FindBin provides the $Bin & $RealBin variables that usually are the path to the executing script; this module also provides $Script & $RealScript that are the name of the script
  • __FILE__ is the actual file that the Perl interpreter deals with during compilation, including its full path.

I've seen the first three ($0, the Cwd module and the FindBin module) fail under mod_perl spectacularly, producing worthless output such as '.' or an empty string. In such environments, I use __FILE__ and get the path from that using the File::Basename module:

use File::Basename;
my $dirname = dirname(__FILE__);
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This is really the best solution, especially if you already have a modified $0 – Caterham Jan 8 at 1:04
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Use File::Spec; File::Spec->rel2abs( __FILE__ );

http://perldoc.perl.org/File/Spec/Unix.html

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I think the module you're looking for is FindBin:

#!/usr/bin/perl
use FindBin;

$0 = "stealth";
print "The actual path to this is: $FindBin::Bin/$FindBin::Script\n";
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Have you tried:

$ENV{'SCRIPT_NAME'}

or

use FindBin '$Bin';
print "The script is located in $Bin.\n";

It really depends on how it's being called and if it's CGI or being run from a normal shell, etc.

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Getting the absolute path to $0 or __FILE__ is what you want. The only trouble is if someone did a chdir() and the $0 was relative -- then you need to get the absolute path in a BEGIN{} to prevent any surprises.

FindBin tries to go one better and grovel around in the $PATH for something matching the basename($0), but there are times when that does far-too-surprising things (specifically: when the file is "right in front of you" in the cwd.)

File::Fu has File::Fu->program_name and File::Fu->program_dir for this.

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Is it really likely that anyone would be so foolish as to (permanently) chdir() at compile time? – SamB Feb 12 at 21:23
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You could use FindBin, Cwd, File::Basename, or a combination of them. They're all in the base distribution of Perl IIRC.

I used Cwd in the past:

Cwd:

use Cwd qw(abs_path);
my $path = abs_path($0);
print "$path\n";
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This is incorrect as $0 can be changed when a script runs. – bmdhacks Sep 19 '08 at 17:44
this is great, the Cwd works for me – Gordon Jan 5 '11 at 20:11
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Although I haven't personally experienced it, it seems that FindBin is broken and though rel2abs( $0 ) can fail, it will at least fail reliably.

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Some short background:

Unfortunately the Unix API doesn't provide a running program with the full path to the executable. In fact, the program executing yours can provide whatever it wants in the field that normally tells your program what it is. There are, as all the answers point out, various heuristics for finding likely candidates. But nothing short of searching the entire filesystem will always work, and even that will fail if the executable is moved or removed.

But you don't want the Perl executable, which is what's actually running, but the script it is executing. And Perl needs to know where the script is to find it. It stores this in __FILE__, while $0 is from the Unix API. This can still be a relative path, so take Mark's suggestion and canonize it with File::Spec->rel2abs( __FILE__ );

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perlfaq8 answers a very similar question with using the rel2abs() function on $0. That function can be found in File::Spec.

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Are you looking for this:

my $thisfile = $1 if $0 =~ /\([^\])$|\/([^\/])$/;

print "You are running $thisfile now.\n";

the output will look like this:

You are running MyFileName.pl now.

It works on both of windows and unix.

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use strict ; use warnings ; use Cwd 'abs_path';
    sub ResolveMyProductBaseDir { 

        # Start - Resolve the ProductBaseDir
        #resolve the run dir where this scripts is placed
        my $ScriptAbsolutPath = abs_path($0) ; 
        #debug print "\$ScriptAbsolutPath is $ScriptAbsolutPath \n" ;
        $ScriptAbsolutPath =~ m/^(.*)(\\|\/)(.*)\.([a-z]*)/; 
        $RunDir = $1 ; 
        #debug print "\$1 is $1 \n" ;
        #change the \'s to /'s if we are on Windows
        $RunDir =~s/\\/\//gi ; 
        my @DirParts = split ('/' , $RunDir) ; 
        for (my $count=0; $count < 4; $count++) {   pop @DirParts ;     }
        my $ProductBaseDir = join ( '/' , @DirParts ) ; 
        # Stop - Resolve the ProductBaseDir
        #debug print "ResolveMyProductBaseDir $ProductBaseDir is $ProductBaseDir \n" ; 
        return $ProductBaseDir ; 
    } #eof sub 
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On *nix, you likely have the "whereis" command, which searches your $PATH looking for a binary with a given name. If $0 doesn't contain the full path name, running whereis $scriptname and saving the result into a variable should tell you where the script is located.

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That will not work, as $0 could also return a relative path to the file: ../perl/test.pl – Lathan Aug 30 '11 at 13:20
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