I have a Ruby script with path /foo/bar/gazook/script.rb. I also created a symlink to it in $HOME/bin.
Now, I want my Ruby script to access some other file in directory /foo, and to keep paths relative, I have a variable FOO_DIRECTORY = File.expand_path(File.dirname(__FILE__) + "/../../") in my script.
The problem is that if I run my script from its symlink, this relative directory is wrong (since I guess its expanding from a different location).
How do I fix this? Is there a way besides using an absolute path?
You can use File.readlink to resolve a symlink but you'll want to check File.symlink? first.
path = File.symlink?(__FILE__) ? File.readlink(__FILE__) : __FILE__
Then you can work with path instead of __FILE__. You might want to use $0 instead of __FILE__ as well, __FILE__ is the current filename whereas $0 is the name of the current script.
To get any path relative to the location of your script, always use __dir__.
__dir__ is a concise way of saying File.dirname(File.realpath(__FILE__)). It's available in Ruby >= 2.0. On __dir__.
File.realpath(__FILE__) (or Pathname#realpath) has three advantages compared to File.readlink:
readlink only expands paths that are the last part of the argument.readlink resolves only the first level.path is a symlink at all. Thus you can drop the if File.symlink?.Consequently it would be good to use FOO_DIRECTORY = File.join(__dir__, '..', '..') or FOO_DIRECTORY = File.dirname(File.dirname(__dir__))
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