An alternative to the @__DIR__
macro. Packages that wish to reference paths
in their project directory run into issues with relocatability when used in
conjunction with PackageCompiler
, and Precompile file relocatability in
Julia 1.11 and above. The @path
macro provided by this
package overcomes this limitation. See here and
here for further details.
The package provides one export, the @path
macro. It can be used to replace
@__DIR__
in the following way:
module MyPackage
using RelocatableFolders
# const ASSETS = joinpath(@__DIR__, "../assets")
const ASSETS = @path joinpath(@__DIR__, "../assets")
end
At runtime the path stored in ASSETS
will get resolved to either the
original path, if it still exists, or to an automatically generated
scratchspace containing the same folder and file structure as the original.
This macro should only be used for reasonably small file or folder sizes. If
there are very large files then it is better to make use of Julia's Artifact
system instead.
Building new paths from, for example, ASSETS
in the above example will return
a String
containing the resolved path rather than a Path
object. Doing this
at the module-level will result in hardcoded paths that will run into
relocatability issues as discussed above. Always create a new @path
for
each resource you wish to reference rather than building them in parts, e.g.
module MyPackage
using RelocatableFolders
const ASSETS = @path joinpath(@__DIR__, "../assets")
const SUBDIR = @path joinpath(ASSETS, "subdir")
const FILE = @path joinpath(ASSETS, "file.txt")
end
At compile-time the @path
macro will read in all the files contained in the
referenced path and store them and their paths. The returned object is a
Path <: AbstractString
. Whenever a Path
is passed to a function
expecting an AbstractString
(such as readdir
) it will be converted to a
String
by looking up the stored path and returning that. When no path exists
(the source tree no longer exists) then the contents of the files that were
read at compile-time are written to a Scratch
scratchspace and that path is
returned instead.
The alternative approach is to use the Artifacts
system to distribute the
required files, which is a reasonably heavyweight solution for a simple
collection of source-controlled files. It is recommended that users look to use
artifacts when that file sizes are reasonably large and only use this package
when the distributed files are small.