fnmatch(3C) manual page
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fnmatch - match filename or path name
#include <fnmatch.h>
int fnmatch( const char *pattern, const char *string, int flags);
MT-Safe
The fnmatch() function matches patterns as described on the
fnmatch(5)
manual page. It checks the string argument to see if it matches
the pattern argument.
The flags argument modifies the interpretation of
pattern and string. It is the bitwise inclusive OR
of zero or more of the
following flags defined in the header <fnmatch.h>.
- FNM_PATHNAME
- If set, a
slash (/) character in string will be explicitly matched by a slash in
pattern; it will not be matched by either the asterisk (*) or question-mark
(?) special characters, nor by a bracket ([]) expression.
If not set, the
slash character is treated as an ordinary character.
- FNM_NOESCAPE
- If not
set, a backslash character (\) in pattern followed by any other character
will match that second character in string. In particular, ‘\\’ will match a
backslash in string.
If set, a backslash character will be treated as an
ordinary character.
- FNM_PERIOD
- If set, a leading period in string will
match a period in pattern; where the location of ‘‘leading’’ is indicated by
the value of FNM_PATHNAME
:
- If FNM_PATHNAME
is set, a period is ‘‘leading’’
if it is the first character in string or if it immediately follows a slash.
- If FNM_PATHNAME
is not set, a period is ‘‘leading’’ only if it is the first
character of string.
- If not set, no special restrictions are placed on matching
a period.
The following values are returned:
- string matches
the pattern specified by pattern.
- FNM_NOMATCH
- there is no match. FNM_NOMATCH
is defined in the header <fnmatch.h>.
- non-zero
- an error has occurred.
The
fnmatch() function has two major uses. It could be used by an application
or utility that needs to read a directory and apply a pattern against each
entry. The find(1)
utility is an example of this. It can also be used by
the pax utility to process its pattern operands, or by applications that
need to match strings in a similar manner.
The name fnmatch() is intended
to imply filename match, rather than pathname match. The default action
of this function is to match filenames, rather than path names, since it
gives no special significance to the slash character. With the FNM_PATHNAME
flag, fnmatch() does match path names, but without tilde expansion, parameter
expansion, or special treatment for period at the beginning of a filename.
find(1)
, glob(3C)
, wordexp(3C)
, fnmatch(5)
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