Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
 
 

xdg_directories

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

parent directory

..
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

xdg_directories

A Dart package for reading XDG directory configuration information on Linux.

Getting Started

On Linux, xdg is a system developed by freedesktop.org, a project to work on interoperability and shared base technology for free software desktop environments for Linux.

This Dart package can be used to determine the directory configuration information defined by xdg, such as where the Documents or Desktop directories are. These are called "user directories" and are defined in configuration file in the user's home directory.

See this wiki for more details of the XDG Base Directory implementation.

To use this package, the basic XDG values for the following are available via a Dart API:

  • dataHome - The single base directory relative to which user-specific data files should be written. (Corresponds to $XDG_DATA_HOME).

  • configHome - The a single base directory relative to which user-specific configuration files should be written. (Corresponds to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME).

  • dataDirs - The list of preference-ordered base directories relative to which data files should be searched. (Corresponds to $XDG_DATA_DIRS).

  • configDirs - The list of preference-ordered base directories relative to which configuration files should be searched. (Corresponds to $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS).

  • cacheHome - The base directory relative to which user-specific non-essential (cached) data should be written. (Corresponds to $XDG_CACHE_HOME).

  • runtimeDir - The base directory relative to which user-specific runtime files and other file objects should be placed. (Corresponds to $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR).

  • getUserDirectoryNames() - Returns a set of the names of user directories defined in the xdg configuration files.

  • getUserDirectory(String dirName) - Gets the value of the user dir with the given name. Requesting a user dir that doesn't exist returns null. The dirName argument is case-insensitive. See this wiki for more details and what values of dirName might be available.