Always check return values of system calls!
When you make any call to OS services, you should always check the return value. For example, the Perl documentation for chdir is (with added emphasis)
chdir EXPR
chdir FILEHANDLE
chdir DIRHANDLE
chdir
Changes the working directory to EXPR, if possible. If EXPR is omitted, changes to the directory specified by $ENV{HOME}, if set; if not, changes to the directory specified by $ENV{LOGDIR}. (Under VMS, the variable $ENV{SYS$LOGIN} is also checked, and used if it is set.) If neither is set, chdir does nothing. It returns true on success, false otherwise. See the example under die.
On systems that support fchdir(2), you may pass a filehandle or directory handle as the argument. On systems that don't support fchdir(2), passing handles raises an exception.
As written in your question, your code discards important information: whether system calls chdir and rename succeeded or failed.
Providing useful error messages
An example of a common idiom for checking return values in Perl is
chdir $path or die "$0: chdir $path: $!";
The error message contains three important bits of information:
- the program emitting the error,
$0
- what it was trying to do,
chdir in this case
- why it failed,
$!
Also note that die also the name of the file and line number where program control was if your error message does not end with newline. When the chdir fails, the standard error will resemble
./myprogram: chdir: No such file or directory at ./myprogram line 3.
Logical or is true when at least one of its arguments is true. The “do something or die” idiom works because if chdir above fails, it returns a false value and requires or to evaluate the right-hand side and terminates execution with die. In the happy case where chdir succeeds and returns a true value, there is no need to evaluate the right-hand side because we already have one true argument to logical or.
Suggested improvements to your code
For what you’re doing, I recommend using readdir to avoid problems in case one of the filenames contains whitespace. Note the defined test in the code below that’s there to stop a file named 0 (i.e., a single zero character) terminating your loop.
#! /usr/bin/env perl
chdir "directory path" or die "$0: chdir: $!";
opendir $dh, "." or die "$0: opendir: $!";
while (defined($oldname = readdir $dh)) {
next unless ($newname = $oldname) =~ s/mw//;
$newname =~ s/^(.{1,8})/\U$1/;
rename $oldname, $newname or die "$0: rename $oldname, $newname: $!";
}
For the rename to have any hope, you have to preserve the value of $oldname, so right away, the code above copies it to $newname and starts changing the copy rather than the original. You will see
($new = $old) =~ s/.../.../; # or /.../
in Perl code, so it is also an important idiom to understand.
The perlop documentation defines handy escape sequences for use in strings and regex substitutions:
\l lowercase next character only
\u titlecase (not uppercase!) next character only
\L lowercase all characters till \E seen
\U uppercase all characters till \E seen
\Q quote non-word characters till \E
\E end either case modification or quoted section (whichever was last seen)
The code above grabs the first eight characters (or fewer if $newname is shorter in length) and replaces them with their upcased counterparts.
Example output
See the code in action:
$ ls directory\ path/
defmwghijk mwabc nochange qrstuvwxyzmw
$ ./prog
$ ls directory\ path/
ABC DEFGHIJK QRSTUVWXyz nochange