PATHCHK(1) |
General Commands Manual |
PATHCHK(1) |
NAME
pathchk — check pathnames
SYNOPSIS
pathchk |
[-p] pathname ... |
DESCRIPTION
The
pathchk utility checks whether each of the specified
pathname arguments is valid or portable.
A diagnostic message is written for each argument that:
-
Is longer than PATH_MAX bytes.
-
Contains any component longer than NAME_MAX bytes. (The value of NAME_MAX depends on the underlying file system.)
-
Contains a directory component that is not searchable.
It is not considered an error if a pathname argument contains a nonexistent component as long as a component by that name could be created.
The options are as follows:
-
-p
-
Perform portability checks on the specified pathname arguments. Diagnostic messages will be written for each argument that:
-
Is longer than _POSIX_PATH_MAX (255) bytes.
-
Contains a component longer than _POSIX_NAME_MAX (14) bytes.
-
Contains any character not in the portable filename character set (that is, alphanumeric characters, ‘
.
', ‘-
' and ‘_
'). No component may start with the hyphen (‘-
') character.
EXAMPLES
Check whether the names of files in the current directory are portable to other POSIX systems:
find . -exec pathchk -p \{\} +
or the more efficient:
find . -print0 | xargs -0 pathchk -p
STANDARDS
The pathchk utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (“POSIX.1”).
HISTORY
A pathchk utility appeared in NetBSD 2.0.