Making safe file names
Dave Angel
davea at davea.name
Tue May 7 20:14:54 EDT 2013
On 05/07/2013 03:58 PM, Andrew Berg wrote:
> Currently, I keep Last.fm artist data caches to avoid unnecessary API calls and have been naming the files using the artist name. However,
> artist names can have characters that are not allowed in file names for most file systems (e.g., C/A/T has forward slashes). Are there any
> recommended strategies for naming such files while avoiding conflicts (I wouldn't want to run into problems for an artist named C-A-T or
> CAT, for example)? I'd like to make the files easily identifiable, and there really are no limits on what characters can be in an artist name.
>
So what you need first is a list of allowable characters for all your
target OS versions. And don't forget that the allowable characters may
vary depending on the particular file system(s) mounted on a given OS.
You also need to decide how to handle Unicode characters, since they're
different for different OS. In Windows on NTFS, filenames are in
Unicode, while on Unix, filenames are bytes. So on one of those, you
will be encoding/decoding if your code is to be mostly portable.
Don't forget that ls and rm may not use the same encoding you're using.
So you may not consider it adequate to make the names legal, but you
may also want they easily typeable in the shell.
--
DaveA
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