diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'library/std/src/fs.rs')
-rw-r--r-- | library/std/src/fs.rs | 3612 |
1 files changed, 3612 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/library/std/src/fs.rs b/library/std/src/fs.rs new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..4d031cb7a52 --- /dev/null +++ b/library/std/src/fs.rs @@ -0,0 +1,3612 @@ +// ignore-tidy-filelength + +//! Filesystem manipulation operations. +//! +//! This module contains basic methods to manipulate the contents of the local +//! filesystem. All methods in this module represent cross-platform filesystem +//! operations. Extra platform-specific functionality can be found in the +//! extension traits of `std::os::$platform`. + +#![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +#![deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)] + +use crate::ffi::OsString; +use crate::fmt; +use crate::io::{self, Initializer, IoSlice, IoSliceMut, Read, Seek, SeekFrom, Write}; +use crate::path::{Path, PathBuf}; +use crate::sys::fs as fs_imp; +use crate::sys_common::{AsInner, AsInnerMut, FromInner, IntoInner}; +use crate::time::SystemTime; + +/// A reference to an open file on the filesystem. +/// +/// An instance of a `File` can be read and/or written depending on what options +/// it was opened with. Files also implement [`Seek`] to alter the logical cursor +/// that the file contains internally. +/// +/// Files are automatically closed when they go out of scope. Errors detected +/// on closing are ignored by the implementation of `Drop`. Use the method +/// [`sync_all`] if these errors must be manually handled. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// Creates a new file and write bytes to it (you can also use [`write`]): +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs::File; +/// use std::io::prelude::*; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// let mut file = File::create("foo.txt")?; +/// file.write_all(b"Hello, world!")?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +/// +/// Read the contents of a file into a [`String`] (you can also use [`read`]): +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs::File; +/// use std::io::prelude::*; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// let mut file = File::open("foo.txt")?; +/// let mut contents = String::new(); +/// file.read_to_string(&mut contents)?; +/// assert_eq!(contents, "Hello, world!"); +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +/// +/// It can be more efficient to read the contents of a file with a buffered +/// [`Read`]er. This can be accomplished with [`BufReader<R>`]: +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs::File; +/// use std::io::BufReader; +/// use std::io::prelude::*; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// let file = File::open("foo.txt")?; +/// let mut buf_reader = BufReader::new(file); +/// let mut contents = String::new(); +/// buf_reader.read_to_string(&mut contents)?; +/// assert_eq!(contents, "Hello, world!"); +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +/// +/// Note that, although read and write methods require a `&mut File`, because +/// of the interfaces for [`Read`] and [`Write`], the holder of a `&File` can +/// still modify the file, either through methods that take `&File` or by +/// retrieving the underlying OS object and modifying the file that way. +/// Additionally, many operating systems allow concurrent modification of files +/// by different processes. Avoid assuming that holding a `&File` means that the +/// file will not change. +/// +/// [`Seek`]: ../io/trait.Seek.html +/// [`String`]: ../string/struct.String.html +/// [`Read`]: ../io/trait.Read.html +/// [`Write`]: ../io/trait.Write.html +/// [`BufReader<R>`]: ../io/struct.BufReader.html +/// [`sync_all`]: struct.File.html#method.sync_all +/// [`read`]: fn.read.html +/// [`write`]: fn.write.html +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub struct File { + inner: fs_imp::File, +} + +/// Metadata information about a file. +/// +/// This structure is returned from the [`metadata`] or +/// [`symlink_metadata`] function or method and represents known +/// metadata about a file such as its permissions, size, modification +/// times, etc. +/// +/// [`metadata`]: fn.metadata.html +/// [`symlink_metadata`]: fn.symlink_metadata.html +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +#[derive(Clone)] +pub struct Metadata(fs_imp::FileAttr); + +/// Iterator over the entries in a directory. +/// +/// This iterator is returned from the [`read_dir`] function of this module and +/// will yield instances of [`io::Result`]`<`[`DirEntry`]`>`. Through a [`DirEntry`] +/// information like the entry's path and possibly other metadata can be +/// learned. +/// +/// The order in which this iterator returns entries is platform and filesystem +/// dependent. +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This [`io::Result`] will be an [`Err`] if there's some sort of intermittent +/// IO error during iteration. +/// +/// [`read_dir`]: fn.read_dir.html +/// [`DirEntry`]: struct.DirEntry.html +/// [`io::Result`]: ../io/type.Result.html +/// [`Err`]: ../result/enum.Result.html#variant.Err +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +#[derive(Debug)] +pub struct ReadDir(fs_imp::ReadDir); + +/// Entries returned by the [`ReadDir`] iterator. +/// +/// [`ReadDir`]: struct.ReadDir.html +/// +/// An instance of `DirEntry` represents an entry inside of a directory on the +/// filesystem. Each entry can be inspected via methods to learn about the full +/// path or possibly other metadata through per-platform extension traits. +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub struct DirEntry(fs_imp::DirEntry); + +/// Options and flags which can be used to configure how a file is opened. +/// +/// This builder exposes the ability to configure how a [`File`] is opened and +/// what operations are permitted on the open file. The [`File::open`] and +/// [`File::create`] methods are aliases for commonly used options using this +/// builder. +/// +/// [`File`]: struct.File.html +/// [`File::open`]: struct.File.html#method.open +/// [`File::create`]: struct.File.html#method.create +/// +/// Generally speaking, when using `OpenOptions`, you'll first call [`new`], +/// then chain calls to methods to set each option, then call [`open`], +/// passing the path of the file you're trying to open. This will give you a +/// [`io::Result`][result] with a [`File`][file] inside that you can further +/// operate on. +/// +/// [`new`]: struct.OpenOptions.html#method.new +/// [`open`]: struct.OpenOptions.html#method.open +/// [result]: ../io/type.Result.html +/// [file]: struct.File.html +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// Opening a file to read: +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs::OpenOptions; +/// +/// let file = OpenOptions::new().read(true).open("foo.txt"); +/// ``` +/// +/// Opening a file for both reading and writing, as well as creating it if it +/// doesn't exist: +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs::OpenOptions; +/// +/// let file = OpenOptions::new() +/// .read(true) +/// .write(true) +/// .create(true) +/// .open("foo.txt"); +/// ``` +#[derive(Clone, Debug)] +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub struct OpenOptions(fs_imp::OpenOptions); + +/// Representation of the various permissions on a file. +/// +/// This module only currently provides one bit of information, [`readonly`], +/// which is exposed on all currently supported platforms. Unix-specific +/// functionality, such as mode bits, is available through the +/// [`PermissionsExt`] trait. +/// +/// [`readonly`]: struct.Permissions.html#method.readonly +/// [`PermissionsExt`]: ../os/unix/fs/trait.PermissionsExt.html +#[derive(Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)] +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub struct Permissions(fs_imp::FilePermissions); + +/// A structure representing a type of file with accessors for each file type. +/// It is returned by [`Metadata::file_type`] method. +/// +/// [`Metadata::file_type`]: struct.Metadata.html#method.file_type +#[stable(feature = "file_type", since = "1.1.0")] +#[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash, Debug)] +pub struct FileType(fs_imp::FileType); + +/// A builder used to create directories in various manners. +/// +/// This builder also supports platform-specific options. +#[stable(feature = "dir_builder", since = "1.6.0")] +#[derive(Debug)] +pub struct DirBuilder { + inner: fs_imp::DirBuilder, + recursive: bool, +} + +/// Indicates how large a buffer to pre-allocate before reading the entire file. +fn initial_buffer_size(file: &File) -> usize { + // Allocate one extra byte so the buffer doesn't need to grow before the + // final `read` call at the end of the file. Don't worry about `usize` + // overflow because reading will fail regardless in that case. + file.metadata().map(|m| m.len() as usize + 1).unwrap_or(0) +} + +/// Read the entire contents of a file into a bytes vector. +/// +/// This is a convenience function for using [`File::open`] and [`read_to_end`] +/// with fewer imports and without an intermediate variable. It pre-allocates a +/// buffer based on the file size when available, so it is generally faster than +/// reading into a vector created with `Vec::new()`. +/// +/// [`File::open`]: struct.File.html#method.open +/// [`read_to_end`]: ../io/trait.Read.html#method.read_to_end +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error if `path` does not already exist. +/// Other errors may also be returned according to [`OpenOptions::open`]. +/// +/// [`OpenOptions::open`]: struct.OpenOptions.html#method.open +/// +/// It will also return an error if it encounters while reading an error +/// of a kind other than [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`]. +/// +/// [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`]: ../../std/io/enum.ErrorKind.html#variant.Interrupted +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// use std::net::SocketAddr; +/// +/// fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error + 'static>> { +/// let foo: SocketAddr = String::from_utf8_lossy(&fs::read("address.txt")?).parse()?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "fs_read_write_bytes", since = "1.26.0")] +pub fn read<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<Vec<u8>> { + fn inner(path: &Path) -> io::Result<Vec<u8>> { + let mut file = File::open(path)?; + let mut bytes = Vec::with_capacity(initial_buffer_size(&file)); + file.read_to_end(&mut bytes)?; + Ok(bytes) + } + inner(path.as_ref()) +} + +/// Read the entire contents of a file into a string. +/// +/// This is a convenience function for using [`File::open`] and [`read_to_string`] +/// with fewer imports and without an intermediate variable. It pre-allocates a +/// buffer based on the file size when available, so it is generally faster than +/// reading into a string created with `String::new()`. +/// +/// [`File::open`]: struct.File.html#method.open +/// [`read_to_string`]: ../io/trait.Read.html#method.read_to_string +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error if `path` does not already exist. +/// Other errors may also be returned according to [`OpenOptions::open`]. +/// +/// [`OpenOptions::open`]: struct.OpenOptions.html#method.open +/// +/// It will also return an error if it encounters while reading an error +/// of a kind other than [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`], +/// or if the contents of the file are not valid UTF-8. +/// +/// [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`]: ../../std/io/enum.ErrorKind.html#variant.Interrupted +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// use std::net::SocketAddr; +/// +/// fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error + 'static>> { +/// let foo: SocketAddr = fs::read_to_string("address.txt")?.parse()?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "fs_read_write", since = "1.26.0")] +pub fn read_to_string<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<String> { + fn inner(path: &Path) -> io::Result<String> { + let mut file = File::open(path)?; + let mut string = String::with_capacity(initial_buffer_size(&file)); + file.read_to_string(&mut string)?; + Ok(string) + } + inner(path.as_ref()) +} + +/// Write a slice as the entire contents of a file. +/// +/// This function will create a file if it does not exist, +/// and will entirely replace its contents if it does. +/// +/// This is a convenience function for using [`File::create`] and [`write_all`] +/// with fewer imports. +/// +/// [`File::create`]: struct.File.html#method.create +/// [`write_all`]: ../io/trait.Write.html#method.write_all +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// fs::write("foo.txt", b"Lorem ipsum")?; +/// fs::write("bar.txt", "dolor sit")?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "fs_read_write_bytes", since = "1.26.0")] +pub fn write<P: AsRef<Path>, C: AsRef<[u8]>>(path: P, contents: C) -> io::Result<()> { + fn inner(path: &Path, contents: &[u8]) -> io::Result<()> { + File::create(path)?.write_all(contents) + } + inner(path.as_ref(), contents.as_ref()) +} + +impl File { + /// Attempts to open a file in read-only mode. + /// + /// See the [`OpenOptions::open`] method for more details. + /// + /// # Errors + /// + /// This function will return an error if `path` does not already exist. + /// Other errors may also be returned according to [`OpenOptions::open`]. + /// + /// [`OpenOptions::open`]: struct.OpenOptions.html#method.open + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::File; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn open<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<File> { + OpenOptions::new().read(true).open(path.as_ref()) + } + + /// Opens a file in write-only mode. + /// + /// This function will create a file if it does not exist, + /// and will truncate it if it does. + /// + /// See the [`OpenOptions::open`] function for more details. + /// + /// [`OpenOptions::open`]: struct.OpenOptions.html#method.open + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::File; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let mut f = File::create("foo.txt")?; + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn create<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<File> { + OpenOptions::new().write(true).create(true).truncate(true).open(path.as_ref()) + } + + /// Returns a new OpenOptions object. + /// + /// This function returns a new OpenOptions object that you can use to + /// open or create a file with specific options if `open()` or `create()` + /// are not appropriate. + /// + /// It is equivalent to `OpenOptions::new()` but allows you to write more + /// readable code. Instead of `OpenOptions::new().read(true).open("foo.txt")` + /// you can write `File::with_options().read(true).open("foo.txt")`. This + /// also avoids the need to import `OpenOptions`. + /// + /// See the [`OpenOptions::new`] function for more details. + /// + /// [`OpenOptions::new`]: struct.OpenOptions.html#method.new + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// #![feature(with_options)] + /// use std::fs::File; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let mut f = File::with_options().read(true).open("foo.txt")?; + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[unstable(feature = "with_options", issue = "65439")] + pub fn with_options() -> OpenOptions { + OpenOptions::new() + } + + /// Attempts to sync all OS-internal metadata to disk. + /// + /// This function will attempt to ensure that all in-memory data reaches the + /// filesystem before returning. + /// + /// This can be used to handle errors that would otherwise only be caught + /// when the `File` is closed. Dropping a file will ignore errors in + /// synchronizing this in-memory data. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::File; + /// use std::io::prelude::*; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let mut f = File::create("foo.txt")?; + /// f.write_all(b"Hello, world!")?; + /// + /// f.sync_all()?; + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn sync_all(&self) -> io::Result<()> { + self.inner.fsync() + } + + /// This function is similar to [`sync_all`], except that it may not + /// synchronize file metadata to the filesystem. + /// + /// This is intended for use cases that must synchronize content, but don't + /// need the metadata on disk. The goal of this method is to reduce disk + /// operations. + /// + /// Note that some platforms may simply implement this in terms of + /// [`sync_all`]. + /// + /// [`sync_all`]: struct.File.html#method.sync_all + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::File; + /// use std::io::prelude::*; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let mut f = File::create("foo.txt")?; + /// f.write_all(b"Hello, world!")?; + /// + /// f.sync_data()?; + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn sync_data(&self) -> io::Result<()> { + self.inner.datasync() + } + + /// Truncates or extends the underlying file, updating the size of + /// this file to become `size`. + /// + /// If the `size` is less than the current file's size, then the file will + /// be shrunk. If it is greater than the current file's size, then the file + /// will be extended to `size` and have all of the intermediate data filled + /// in with 0s. + /// + /// The file's cursor isn't changed. In particular, if the cursor was at the + /// end and the file is shrunk using this operation, the cursor will now be + /// past the end. + /// + /// # Errors + /// + /// This function will return an error if the file is not opened for writing. + /// Also, std::io::ErrorKind::InvalidInput will be returned if the desired + /// length would cause an overflow due to the implementation specifics. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::File; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let mut f = File::create("foo.txt")?; + /// f.set_len(10)?; + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + /// + /// Note that this method alters the content of the underlying file, even + /// though it takes `&self` rather than `&mut self`. + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn set_len(&self, size: u64) -> io::Result<()> { + self.inner.truncate(size) + } + + /// Queries metadata about the underlying file. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::File; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; + /// let metadata = f.metadata()?; + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn metadata(&self) -> io::Result<Metadata> { + self.inner.file_attr().map(Metadata) + } + + /// Creates a new `File` instance that shares the same underlying file handle + /// as the existing `File` instance. Reads, writes, and seeks will affect + /// both `File` instances simultaneously. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// Creates two handles for a file named `foo.txt`: + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::File; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let mut file = File::open("foo.txt")?; + /// let file_copy = file.try_clone()?; + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + /// + /// Assuming there’s a file named `foo.txt` with contents `abcdef\n`, create + /// two handles, seek one of them, and read the remaining bytes from the + /// other handle: + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::File; + /// use std::io::SeekFrom; + /// use std::io::prelude::*; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let mut file = File::open("foo.txt")?; + /// let mut file_copy = file.try_clone()?; + /// + /// file.seek(SeekFrom::Start(3))?; + /// + /// let mut contents = vec![]; + /// file_copy.read_to_end(&mut contents)?; + /// assert_eq!(contents, b"def\n"); + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "file_try_clone", since = "1.9.0")] + pub fn try_clone(&self) -> io::Result<File> { + Ok(File { inner: self.inner.duplicate()? }) + } + + /// Changes the permissions on the underlying file. + /// + /// # Platform-specific behavior + /// + /// This function currently corresponds to the `fchmod` function on Unix and + /// the `SetFileInformationByHandle` function on Windows. Note that, this + /// [may change in the future][changes]. + /// + /// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior + /// + /// # Errors + /// + /// This function will return an error if the user lacks permission change + /// attributes on the underlying file. It may also return an error in other + /// os-specific unspecified cases. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// use std::fs::File; + /// + /// let file = File::open("foo.txt")?; + /// let mut perms = file.metadata()?.permissions(); + /// perms.set_readonly(true); + /// file.set_permissions(perms)?; + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + /// + /// Note that this method alters the permissions of the underlying file, + /// even though it takes `&self` rather than `&mut self`. + #[stable(feature = "set_permissions_atomic", since = "1.16.0")] + pub fn set_permissions(&self, perm: Permissions) -> io::Result<()> { + self.inner.set_permissions(perm.0) + } +} + +impl AsInner<fs_imp::File> for File { + fn as_inner(&self) -> &fs_imp::File { + &self.inner + } +} +impl FromInner<fs_imp::File> for File { + fn from_inner(f: fs_imp::File) -> File { + File { inner: f } + } +} +impl IntoInner<fs_imp::File> for File { + fn into_inner(self) -> fs_imp::File { + self.inner + } +} + +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +impl fmt::Debug for File { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + self.inner.fmt(f) + } +} + +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +impl Read for File { + fn read(&mut self, buf: &mut [u8]) -> io::Result<usize> { + self.inner.read(buf) + } + + fn read_vectored(&mut self, bufs: &mut [IoSliceMut<'_>]) -> io::Result<usize> { + self.inner.read_vectored(bufs) + } + + #[inline] + fn is_read_vectored(&self) -> bool { + self.inner.is_read_vectored() + } + + #[inline] + unsafe fn initializer(&self) -> Initializer { + // SAFETY: Read is guaranteed to work on uninitialized memory + unsafe { Initializer::nop() } + } +} +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +impl Write for File { + fn write(&mut self, buf: &[u8]) -> io::Result<usize> { + self.inner.write(buf) + } + + fn write_vectored(&mut self, bufs: &[IoSlice<'_>]) -> io::Result<usize> { + self.inner.write_vectored(bufs) + } + + #[inline] + fn is_write_vectored(&self) -> bool { + self.inner.is_write_vectored() + } + + fn flush(&mut self) -> io::Result<()> { + self.inner.flush() + } +} +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +impl Seek for File { + fn seek(&mut self, pos: SeekFrom) -> io::Result<u64> { + self.inner.seek(pos) + } +} +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +impl Read for &File { + fn read(&mut self, buf: &mut [u8]) -> io::Result<usize> { + self.inner.read(buf) + } + + fn read_vectored(&mut self, bufs: &mut [IoSliceMut<'_>]) -> io::Result<usize> { + self.inner.read_vectored(bufs) + } + + #[inline] + fn is_read_vectored(&self) -> bool { + self.inner.is_read_vectored() + } + + #[inline] + unsafe fn initializer(&self) -> Initializer { + // SAFETY: Read is guaranteed to work on uninitialized memory + unsafe { Initializer::nop() } + } +} +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +impl Write for &File { + fn write(&mut self, buf: &[u8]) -> io::Result<usize> { + self.inner.write(buf) + } + + fn write_vectored(&mut self, bufs: &[IoSlice<'_>]) -> io::Result<usize> { + self.inner.write_vectored(bufs) + } + + #[inline] + fn is_write_vectored(&self) -> bool { + self.inner.is_write_vectored() + } + + fn flush(&mut self) -> io::Result<()> { + self.inner.flush() + } +} +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +impl Seek for &File { + fn seek(&mut self, pos: SeekFrom) -> io::Result<u64> { + self.inner.seek(pos) + } +} + +impl OpenOptions { + /// Creates a blank new set of options ready for configuration. + /// + /// All options are initially set to `false`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::OpenOptions; + /// + /// let mut options = OpenOptions::new(); + /// let file = options.read(true).open("foo.txt"); + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn new() -> Self { + OpenOptions(fs_imp::OpenOptions::new()) + } + + /// Sets the option for read access. + /// + /// This option, when true, will indicate that the file should be + /// `read`-able if opened. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::OpenOptions; + /// + /// let file = OpenOptions::new().read(true).open("foo.txt"); + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn read(&mut self, read: bool) -> &mut Self { + self.0.read(read); + self + } + + /// Sets the option for write access. + /// + /// This option, when true, will indicate that the file should be + /// `write`-able if opened. + /// + /// If the file already exists, any write calls on it will overwrite its + /// contents, without truncating it. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::OpenOptions; + /// + /// let file = OpenOptions::new().write(true).open("foo.txt"); + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn write(&mut self, write: bool) -> &mut Self { + self.0.write(write); + self + } + + /// Sets the option for the append mode. + /// + /// This option, when true, means that writes will append to a file instead + /// of overwriting previous contents. + /// Note that setting `.write(true).append(true)` has the same effect as + /// setting only `.append(true)`. + /// + /// For most filesystems, the operating system guarantees that all writes are + /// atomic: no writes get mangled because another process writes at the same + /// time. + /// + /// One maybe obvious note when using append-mode: make sure that all data + /// that belongs together is written to the file in one operation. This + /// can be done by concatenating strings before passing them to [`write()`], + /// or using a buffered writer (with a buffer of adequate size), + /// and calling [`flush()`] when the message is complete. + /// + /// If a file is opened with both read and append access, beware that after + /// opening, and after every write, the position for reading may be set at the + /// end of the file. So, before writing, save the current position (using + /// [`seek`]`(`[`SeekFrom`]`::`[`Current`]`(0))`), and restore it before the next read. + /// + /// ## Note + /// + /// This function doesn't create the file if it doesn't exist. Use the [`create`] + /// method to do so. + /// + /// [`write()`]: ../../std/fs/struct.File.html#method.write + /// [`flush()`]: ../../std/fs/struct.File.html#method.flush + /// [`seek`]: ../../std/fs/struct.File.html#method.seek + /// [`SeekFrom`]: ../../std/io/enum.SeekFrom.html + /// [`Current`]: ../../std/io/enum.SeekFrom.html#variant.Current + /// [`create`]: #method.create + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::OpenOptions; + /// + /// let file = OpenOptions::new().append(true).open("foo.txt"); + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn append(&mut self, append: bool) -> &mut Self { + self.0.append(append); + self + } + + /// Sets the option for truncating a previous file. + /// + /// If a file is successfully opened with this option set it will truncate + /// the file to 0 length if it already exists. + /// + /// The file must be opened with write access for truncate to work. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::OpenOptions; + /// + /// let file = OpenOptions::new().write(true).truncate(true).open("foo.txt"); + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn truncate(&mut self, truncate: bool) -> &mut Self { + self.0.truncate(truncate); + self + } + + /// Sets the option to create a new file, or open it if it already exists. + /// + /// In order for the file to be created, [`write`] or [`append`] access must + /// be used. + /// + /// [`write`]: #method.write + /// [`append`]: #method.append + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::OpenOptions; + /// + /// let file = OpenOptions::new().write(true).create(true).open("foo.txt"); + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn create(&mut self, create: bool) -> &mut Self { + self.0.create(create); + self + } + + /// Sets the option to create a new file, failing if it already exists. + /// + /// No file is allowed to exist at the target location, also no (dangling) symlink. In this + /// way, if the call succeeds, the file returned is guaranteed to be new. + /// + /// This option is useful because it is atomic. Otherwise between checking + /// whether a file exists and creating a new one, the file may have been + /// created by another process (a TOCTOU race condition / attack). + /// + /// If `.create_new(true)` is set, [`.create()`] and [`.truncate()`] are + /// ignored. + /// + /// The file must be opened with write or append access in order to create + /// a new file. + /// + /// [`.create()`]: #method.create + /// [`.truncate()`]: #method.truncate + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::OpenOptions; + /// + /// let file = OpenOptions::new().write(true) + /// .create_new(true) + /// .open("foo.txt"); + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "expand_open_options2", since = "1.9.0")] + pub fn create_new(&mut self, create_new: bool) -> &mut Self { + self.0.create_new(create_new); + self + } + + /// Opens a file at `path` with the options specified by `self`. + /// + /// # Errors + /// + /// This function will return an error under a number of different + /// circumstances. Some of these error conditions are listed here, together + /// with their [`ErrorKind`]. The mapping to [`ErrorKind`]s is not part of + /// the compatibility contract of the function, especially the `Other` kind + /// might change to more specific kinds in the future. + /// + /// * [`NotFound`]: The specified file does not exist and neither `create` + /// or `create_new` is set. + /// * [`NotFound`]: One of the directory components of the file path does + /// not exist. + /// * [`PermissionDenied`]: The user lacks permission to get the specified + /// access rights for the file. + /// * [`PermissionDenied`]: The user lacks permission to open one of the + /// directory components of the specified path. + /// * [`AlreadyExists`]: `create_new` was specified and the file already + /// exists. + /// * [`InvalidInput`]: Invalid combinations of open options (truncate + /// without write access, no access mode set, etc.). + /// * [`Other`]: One of the directory components of the specified file path + /// was not, in fact, a directory. + /// * [`Other`]: Filesystem-level errors: full disk, write permission + /// requested on a read-only file system, exceeded disk quota, too many + /// open files, too long filename, too many symbolic links in the + /// specified path (Unix-like systems only), etc. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::OpenOptions; + /// + /// let file = OpenOptions::new().read(true).open("foo.txt"); + /// ``` + /// + /// [`ErrorKind`]: ../io/enum.ErrorKind.html + /// [`AlreadyExists`]: ../io/enum.ErrorKind.html#variant.AlreadyExists + /// [`InvalidInput`]: ../io/enum.ErrorKind.html#variant.InvalidInput + /// [`NotFound`]: ../io/enum.ErrorKind.html#variant.NotFound + /// [`Other`]: ../io/enum.ErrorKind.html#variant.Other + /// [`PermissionDenied`]: ../io/enum.ErrorKind.html#variant.PermissionDenied + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn open<P: AsRef<Path>>(&self, path: P) -> io::Result<File> { + self._open(path.as_ref()) + } + + fn _open(&self, path: &Path) -> io::Result<File> { + fs_imp::File::open(path, &self.0).map(|inner| File { inner }) + } +} + +impl AsInner<fs_imp::OpenOptions> for OpenOptions { + fn as_inner(&self) -> &fs_imp::OpenOptions { + &self.0 + } +} + +impl AsInnerMut<fs_imp::OpenOptions> for OpenOptions { + fn as_inner_mut(&mut self) -> &mut fs_imp::OpenOptions { + &mut self.0 + } +} + +impl Metadata { + /// Returns the file type for this metadata. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?; + /// + /// println!("{:?}", metadata.file_type()); + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "file_type", since = "1.1.0")] + pub fn file_type(&self) -> FileType { + FileType(self.0.file_type()) + } + + /// Returns `true` if this metadata is for a directory. The + /// result is mutually exclusive to the result of + /// [`is_file`], and will be false for symlink metadata + /// obtained from [`symlink_metadata`]. + /// + /// [`is_file`]: struct.Metadata.html#method.is_file + /// [`symlink_metadata`]: fn.symlink_metadata.html + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?; + /// + /// assert!(!metadata.is_dir()); + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn is_dir(&self) -> bool { + self.file_type().is_dir() + } + + /// Returns `true` if this metadata is for a regular file. The + /// result is mutually exclusive to the result of + /// [`is_dir`], and will be false for symlink metadata + /// obtained from [`symlink_metadata`]. + /// + /// When the goal is simply to read from (or write to) the source, the most + /// reliable way to test the source can be read (or written to) is to open + /// it. Only using `is_file` can break workflows like `diff <( prog_a )` on + /// a Unix-like system for example. See [`File::open`] or + /// [`OpenOptions::open`] for more information. + /// + /// [`is_dir`]: struct.Metadata.html#method.is_dir + /// [`symlink_metadata`]: fn.symlink_metadata.html + /// [`File::open`]: struct.File.html#method.open + /// [`OpenOptions::open`]: struct.OpenOptions.html#method.open + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?; + /// + /// assert!(metadata.is_file()); + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn is_file(&self) -> bool { + self.file_type().is_file() + } + + /// Returns the size of the file, in bytes, this metadata is for. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?; + /// + /// assert_eq!(0, metadata.len()); + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn len(&self) -> u64 { + self.0.size() + } + + /// Returns the permissions of the file this metadata is for. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?; + /// + /// assert!(!metadata.permissions().readonly()); + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn permissions(&self) -> Permissions { + Permissions(self.0.perm()) + } + + /// Returns the last modification time listed in this metadata. + /// + /// The returned value corresponds to the `mtime` field of `stat` on Unix + /// platforms and the `ftLastWriteTime` field on Windows platforms. + /// + /// # Errors + /// + /// This field may not be available on all platforms, and will return an + /// `Err` on platforms where it is not available. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?; + /// + /// if let Ok(time) = metadata.modified() { + /// println!("{:?}", time); + /// } else { + /// println!("Not supported on this platform"); + /// } + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "fs_time", since = "1.10.0")] + pub fn modified(&self) -> io::Result<SystemTime> { + self.0.modified().map(FromInner::from_inner) + } + + /// Returns the last access time of this metadata. + /// + /// The returned value corresponds to the `atime` field of `stat` on Unix + /// platforms and the `ftLastAccessTime` field on Windows platforms. + /// + /// Note that not all platforms will keep this field update in a file's + /// metadata, for example Windows has an option to disable updating this + /// time when files are accessed and Linux similarly has `noatime`. + /// + /// # Errors + /// + /// This field may not be available on all platforms, and will return an + /// `Err` on platforms where it is not available. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?; + /// + /// if let Ok(time) = metadata.accessed() { + /// println!("{:?}", time); + /// } else { + /// println!("Not supported on this platform"); + /// } + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "fs_time", since = "1.10.0")] + pub fn accessed(&self) -> io::Result<SystemTime> { + self.0.accessed().map(FromInner::from_inner) + } + + /// Returns the creation time listed in this metadata. + /// + /// The returned value corresponds to the `btime` field of `statx` on + /// Linux kernel starting from to 4.11, the `birthtime` field of `stat` on other + /// Unix platforms, and the `ftCreationTime` field on Windows platforms. + /// + /// # Errors + /// + /// This field may not be available on all platforms, and will return an + /// `Err` on platforms or filesystems where it is not available. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?; + /// + /// if let Ok(time) = metadata.created() { + /// println!("{:?}", time); + /// } else { + /// println!("Not supported on this platform or filesystem"); + /// } + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "fs_time", since = "1.10.0")] + pub fn created(&self) -> io::Result<SystemTime> { + self.0.created().map(FromInner::from_inner) + } +} + +#[stable(feature = "std_debug", since = "1.16.0")] +impl fmt::Debug for Metadata { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + f.debug_struct("Metadata") + .field("file_type", &self.file_type()) + .field("is_dir", &self.is_dir()) + .field("is_file", &self.is_file()) + .field("permissions", &self.permissions()) + .field("modified", &self.modified()) + .field("accessed", &self.accessed()) + .field("created", &self.created()) + .finish() + } +} + +impl AsInner<fs_imp::FileAttr> for Metadata { + fn as_inner(&self) -> &fs_imp::FileAttr { + &self.0 + } +} + +impl FromInner<fs_imp::FileAttr> for Metadata { + fn from_inner(attr: fs_imp::FileAttr) -> Metadata { + Metadata(attr) + } +} + +impl Permissions { + /// Returns `true` if these permissions describe a readonly (unwritable) file. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::File; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let mut f = File::create("foo.txt")?; + /// let metadata = f.metadata()?; + /// + /// assert_eq!(false, metadata.permissions().readonly()); + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn readonly(&self) -> bool { + self.0.readonly() + } + + /// Modifies the readonly flag for this set of permissions. If the + /// `readonly` argument is `true`, using the resulting `Permission` will + /// update file permissions to forbid writing. Conversely, if it's `false`, + /// using the resulting `Permission` will update file permissions to allow + /// writing. + /// + /// This operation does **not** modify the filesystem. To modify the + /// filesystem use the [`fs::set_permissions`] function. + /// + /// [`fs::set_permissions`]: fn.set_permissions.html + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::File; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let f = File::create("foo.txt")?; + /// let metadata = f.metadata()?; + /// let mut permissions = metadata.permissions(); + /// + /// permissions.set_readonly(true); + /// + /// // filesystem doesn't change + /// assert_eq!(false, metadata.permissions().readonly()); + /// + /// // just this particular `permissions`. + /// assert_eq!(true, permissions.readonly()); + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn set_readonly(&mut self, readonly: bool) { + self.0.set_readonly(readonly) + } +} + +impl FileType { + /// Tests whether this file type represents a directory. The + /// result is mutually exclusive to the results of + /// [`is_file`] and [`is_symlink`]; only zero or one of these + /// tests may pass. + /// + /// [`is_file`]: struct.FileType.html#method.is_file + /// [`is_symlink`]: struct.FileType.html#method.is_symlink + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?; + /// let file_type = metadata.file_type(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(file_type.is_dir(), false); + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "file_type", since = "1.1.0")] + pub fn is_dir(&self) -> bool { + self.0.is_dir() + } + + /// Tests whether this file type represents a regular file. + /// The result is mutually exclusive to the results of + /// [`is_dir`] and [`is_symlink`]; only zero or one of these + /// tests may pass. + /// + /// When the goal is simply to read from (or write to) the source, the most + /// reliable way to test the source can be read (or written to) is to open + /// it. Only using `is_file` can break workflows like `diff <( prog_a )` on + /// a Unix-like system for example. See [`File::open`] or + /// [`OpenOptions::open`] for more information. + /// + /// [`is_dir`]: struct.FileType.html#method.is_dir + /// [`is_symlink`]: struct.FileType.html#method.is_symlink + /// [`File::open`]: struct.File.html#method.open + /// [`OpenOptions::open`]: struct.OpenOptions.html#method.open + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?; + /// let file_type = metadata.file_type(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(file_type.is_file(), true); + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "file_type", since = "1.1.0")] + pub fn is_file(&self) -> bool { + self.0.is_file() + } + + /// Tests whether this file type represents a symbolic link. + /// The result is mutually exclusive to the results of + /// [`is_dir`] and [`is_file`]; only zero or one of these + /// tests may pass. + /// + /// The underlying [`Metadata`] struct needs to be retrieved + /// with the [`fs::symlink_metadata`] function and not the + /// [`fs::metadata`] function. The [`fs::metadata`] function + /// follows symbolic links, so [`is_symlink`] would always + /// return `false` for the target file. + /// + /// [`Metadata`]: struct.Metadata.html + /// [`fs::metadata`]: fn.metadata.html + /// [`fs::symlink_metadata`]: fn.symlink_metadata.html + /// [`is_dir`]: struct.FileType.html#method.is_dir + /// [`is_file`]: struct.FileType.html#method.is_file + /// [`is_symlink`]: struct.FileType.html#method.is_symlink + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// let metadata = fs::symlink_metadata("foo.txt")?; + /// let file_type = metadata.file_type(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(file_type.is_symlink(), false); + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "file_type", since = "1.1.0")] + pub fn is_symlink(&self) -> bool { + self.0.is_symlink() + } +} + +impl AsInner<fs_imp::FileType> for FileType { + fn as_inner(&self) -> &fs_imp::FileType { + &self.0 + } +} + +impl FromInner<fs_imp::FilePermissions> for Permissions { + fn from_inner(f: fs_imp::FilePermissions) -> Permissions { + Permissions(f) + } +} + +impl AsInner<fs_imp::FilePermissions> for Permissions { + fn as_inner(&self) -> &fs_imp::FilePermissions { + &self.0 + } +} + +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +impl Iterator for ReadDir { + type Item = io::Result<DirEntry>; + + fn next(&mut self) -> Option<io::Result<DirEntry>> { + self.0.next().map(|entry| entry.map(DirEntry)) + } +} + +impl DirEntry { + /// Returns the full path to the file that this entry represents. + /// + /// The full path is created by joining the original path to `read_dir` + /// with the filename of this entry. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { + /// for entry in fs::read_dir(".")? { + /// let dir = entry?; + /// println!("{:?}", dir.path()); + /// } + /// Ok(()) + /// } + /// ``` + /// + /// This prints output like: + /// + /// ```text + /// "./whatever.txt" + /// "./foo.html" + /// "./hello_world.rs" + /// ``` + /// + /// The exact text, of course, depends on what files you have in `.`. + #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] + pub fn path(&self) -> PathBuf { + self.0.path() + } + + /// Returns the metadata for the file that this entry points at. + /// + /// This function will not traverse symlinks if this entry points at a + /// symlink. To traverse symlinks use [`fs::metadata`] or [`fs::File::metadata`]. + /// + /// [`fs::metadata`]: fn.metadata.html + /// [`fs::File::metadata`]: struct.File.html#method.metadata + /// + /// # Platform-specific behavior + /// + /// On Windows this function is cheap to call (no extra system calls + /// needed), but on Unix platforms this function is the equivalent of + /// calling `symlink_metadata` on the path. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// if let Ok(entries) = fs::read_dir(".") { + /// for entry in entries { + /// if let Ok(entry) = entry { + /// // Here, `entry` is a `DirEntry`. + /// if let Ok(metadata) = entry.metadata() { + /// // Now let's show our entry's permissions! + /// println!("{:?}: {:?}", entry.path(), metadata.permissions()); + /// } else { + /// println!("Couldn't get metadata for {:?}", entry.path()); + /// } + /// } + /// } + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "dir_entry_ext", since = "1.1.0")] + pub fn metadata(&self) -> io::Result<Metadata> { + self.0.metadata().map(Metadata) + } + + /// Returns the file type for the file that this entry points at. + /// + /// This function will not traverse symlinks if this entry points at a + /// symlink. + /// + /// # Platform-specific behavior + /// + /// On Windows and most Unix platforms this function is free (no extra + /// system calls needed), but some Unix platforms may require the equivalent + /// call to `symlink_metadata` to learn about the target file type. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// if let Ok(entries) = fs::read_dir(".") { + /// for entry in entries { + /// if let Ok(entry) = entry { + /// // Here, `entry` is a `DirEntry`. + /// if let Ok(file_type) = entry.file_type() { + /// // Now let's show our entry's file type! + /// println!("{:?}: {:?}", entry.path(), file_type); + /// } else { + /// println!("Couldn't get file type for {:?}", entry.path()); + /// } + /// } + /// } + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "dir_entry_ext", since = "1.1.0")] + pub fn file_type(&self) -> io::Result<FileType> { + self.0.file_type().map(FileType) + } + + /// Returns the bare file name of this directory entry without any other + /// leading path component. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use std::fs; + /// + /// if let Ok(entries) = fs::read_dir(".") { + /// for entry in entries { + /// if let Ok(entry) = entry { + /// // Here, `entry` is a `DirEntry`. + /// println!("{:?}", entry.file_name()); + /// } + /// } + /// } + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "dir_entry_ext", since = "1.1.0")] + pub fn file_name(&self) -> OsString { + self.0.file_name() + } +} + +#[stable(feature = "dir_entry_debug", since = "1.13.0")] +impl fmt::Debug for DirEntry { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + f.debug_tuple("DirEntry").field(&self.path()).finish() + } +} + +impl AsInner<fs_imp::DirEntry> for DirEntry { + fn as_inner(&self) -> &fs_imp::DirEntry { + &self.0 + } +} + +/// Removes a file from the filesystem. +/// +/// Note that there is no +/// guarantee that the file is immediately deleted (e.g., depending on +/// platform, other open file descriptors may prevent immediate removal). +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `unlink` function on Unix +/// and the `DeleteFile` function on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * `path` points to a directory. +/// * The user lacks permissions to remove the file. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// fs::remove_file("a.txt")?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub fn remove_file<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<()> { + fs_imp::unlink(path.as_ref()) +} + +/// Given a path, query the file system to get information about a file, +/// directory, etc. +/// +/// This function will traverse symbolic links to query information about the +/// destination file. +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `stat` function on Unix +/// and the `GetFileAttributesEx` function on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * The user lacks permissions to perform `metadata` call on `path`. +/// * `path` does not exist. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```rust,no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// let attr = fs::metadata("/some/file/path.txt")?; +/// // inspect attr ... +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub fn metadata<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<Metadata> { + fs_imp::stat(path.as_ref()).map(Metadata) +} + +/// Query the metadata about a file without following symlinks. +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `lstat` function on Unix +/// and the `GetFileAttributesEx` function on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * The user lacks permissions to perform `metadata` call on `path`. +/// * `path` does not exist. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```rust,no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// let attr = fs::symlink_metadata("/some/file/path.txt")?; +/// // inspect attr ... +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "symlink_metadata", since = "1.1.0")] +pub fn symlink_metadata<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<Metadata> { + fs_imp::lstat(path.as_ref()).map(Metadata) +} + +/// Rename a file or directory to a new name, replacing the original file if +/// `to` already exists. +/// +/// This will not work if the new name is on a different mount point. +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `rename` function on Unix +/// and the `MoveFileEx` function with the `MOVEFILE_REPLACE_EXISTING` flag on Windows. +/// +/// Because of this, the behavior when both `from` and `to` exist differs. On +/// Unix, if `from` is a directory, `to` must also be an (empty) directory. If +/// `from` is not a directory, `to` must also be not a directory. In contrast, +/// on Windows, `from` can be anything, but `to` must *not* be a directory. +/// +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * `from` does not exist. +/// * The user lacks permissions to view contents. +/// * `from` and `to` are on separate filesystems. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// fs::rename("a.txt", "b.txt")?; // Rename a.txt to b.txt +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub fn rename<P: AsRef<Path>, Q: AsRef<Path>>(from: P, to: Q) -> io::Result<()> { + fs_imp::rename(from.as_ref(), to.as_ref()) +} + +/// Copies the contents of one file to another. This function will also +/// copy the permission bits of the original file to the destination file. +/// +/// This function will **overwrite** the contents of `to`. +/// +/// Note that if `from` and `to` both point to the same file, then the file +/// will likely get truncated by this operation. +/// +/// On success, the total number of bytes copied is returned and it is equal to +/// the length of the `to` file as reported by `metadata`. +/// +/// If you’re wanting to copy the contents of one file to another and you’re +/// working with [`File`]s, see the [`io::copy`] function. +/// +/// [`io::copy`]: ../io/fn.copy.html +/// [`File`]: ./struct.File.html +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `open` function in Unix +/// with `O_RDONLY` for `from` and `O_WRONLY`, `O_CREAT`, and `O_TRUNC` for `to`. +/// `O_CLOEXEC` is set for returned file descriptors. +/// On Windows, this function currently corresponds to `CopyFileEx`. Alternate +/// NTFS streams are copied but only the size of the main stream is returned by +/// this function. On MacOS, this function corresponds to `fclonefileat` and +/// `fcopyfile`. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * The `from` path is not a file. +/// * The `from` file does not exist. +/// * The current process does not have the permission rights to access +/// `from` or write `to`. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// fs::copy("foo.txt", "bar.txt")?; // Copy foo.txt to bar.txt +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub fn copy<P: AsRef<Path>, Q: AsRef<Path>>(from: P, to: Q) -> io::Result<u64> { + fs_imp::copy(from.as_ref(), to.as_ref()) +} + +/// Creates a new hard link on the filesystem. +/// +/// The `dst` path will be a link pointing to the `src` path. Note that systems +/// often require these two paths to both be located on the same filesystem. +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `link` function on Unix +/// and the `CreateHardLink` function on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * The `src` path is not a file or doesn't exist. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// fs::hard_link("a.txt", "b.txt")?; // Hard link a.txt to b.txt +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub fn hard_link<P: AsRef<Path>, Q: AsRef<Path>>(src: P, dst: Q) -> io::Result<()> { + fs_imp::link(src.as_ref(), dst.as_ref()) +} + +/// Creates a new symbolic link on the filesystem. +/// +/// The `dst` path will be a symbolic link pointing to the `src` path. +/// On Windows, this will be a file symlink, not a directory symlink; +/// for this reason, the platform-specific [`std::os::unix::fs::symlink`] +/// and [`std::os::windows::fs::symlink_file`] or [`symlink_dir`] should be +/// used instead to make the intent explicit. +/// +/// [`std::os::unix::fs::symlink`]: ../os/unix/fs/fn.symlink.html +/// [`std::os::windows::fs::symlink_file`]: ../os/windows/fs/fn.symlink_file.html +/// [`symlink_dir`]: ../os/windows/fs/fn.symlink_dir.html +/// +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// fs::soft_link("a.txt", "b.txt")?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +#[rustc_deprecated( + since = "1.1.0", + reason = "replaced with std::os::unix::fs::symlink and \ + std::os::windows::fs::{symlink_file, symlink_dir}" +)] +pub fn soft_link<P: AsRef<Path>, Q: AsRef<Path>>(src: P, dst: Q) -> io::Result<()> { + fs_imp::symlink(src.as_ref(), dst.as_ref()) +} + +/// Reads a symbolic link, returning the file that the link points to. +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `readlink` function on Unix +/// and the `CreateFile` function with `FILE_FLAG_OPEN_REPARSE_POINT` and +/// `FILE_FLAG_BACKUP_SEMANTICS` flags on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * `path` is not a symbolic link. +/// * `path` does not exist. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// let path = fs::read_link("a.txt")?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub fn read_link<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<PathBuf> { + fs_imp::readlink(path.as_ref()) +} + +/// Returns the canonical, absolute form of a path with all intermediate +/// components normalized and symbolic links resolved. +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `realpath` function on Unix +/// and the `CreateFile` and `GetFinalPathNameByHandle` functions on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// On Windows, this converts the path to use [extended length path][path] +/// syntax, which allows your program to use longer path names, but means you +/// can only join backslash-delimited paths to it, and it may be incompatible +/// with other applications (if passed to the application on the command-line, +/// or written to a file another application may read). +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// [path]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/fileio/naming-a-file +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * `path` does not exist. +/// * A non-final component in path is not a directory. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// let path = fs::canonicalize("../a/../foo.txt")?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "fs_canonicalize", since = "1.5.0")] +pub fn canonicalize<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<PathBuf> { + fs_imp::canonicalize(path.as_ref()) +} + +/// Creates a new, empty directory at the provided path +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `mkdir` function on Unix +/// and the `CreateDirectory` function on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// **NOTE**: If a parent of the given path doesn't exist, this function will +/// return an error. To create a directory and all its missing parents at the +/// same time, use the [`create_dir_all`] function. +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * User lacks permissions to create directory at `path`. +/// * A parent of the given path doesn't exist. (To create a directory and all +/// its missing parents at the same time, use the [`create_dir_all`] +/// function.) +/// * `path` already exists. +/// +/// [`create_dir_all`]: fn.create_dir_all.html +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// fs::create_dir("/some/dir")?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub fn create_dir<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<()> { + DirBuilder::new().create(path.as_ref()) +} + +/// Recursively create a directory and all of its parent components if they +/// are missing. +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `mkdir` function on Unix +/// and the `CreateDirectory` function on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * If any directory in the path specified by `path` +/// does not already exist and it could not be created otherwise. The specific +/// error conditions for when a directory is being created (after it is +/// determined to not exist) are outlined by [`fs::create_dir`]. +/// +/// Notable exception is made for situations where any of the directories +/// specified in the `path` could not be created as it was being created concurrently. +/// Such cases are considered to be successful. That is, calling `create_dir_all` +/// concurrently from multiple threads or processes is guaranteed not to fail +/// due to a race condition with itself. +/// +/// [`fs::create_dir`]: fn.create_dir.html +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// fs::create_dir_all("/some/dir")?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub fn create_dir_all<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<()> { + DirBuilder::new().recursive(true).create(path.as_ref()) +} + +/// Removes an existing, empty directory. +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `rmdir` function on Unix +/// and the `RemoveDirectory` function on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * The user lacks permissions to remove the directory at the provided `path`. +/// * The directory isn't empty. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// fs::remove_dir("/some/dir")?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub fn remove_dir<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<()> { + fs_imp::rmdir(path.as_ref()) +} + +/// Removes a directory at this path, after removing all its contents. Use +/// carefully! +/// +/// This function does **not** follow symbolic links and it will simply remove the +/// symbolic link itself. +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to `opendir`, `lstat`, `rm` and `rmdir` functions on Unix +/// and the `FindFirstFile`, `GetFileAttributesEx`, `DeleteFile`, and `RemoveDirectory` functions +/// on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// See [`fs::remove_file`] and [`fs::remove_dir`]. +/// +/// [`fs::remove_file`]: fn.remove_file.html +/// [`fs::remove_dir`]: fn.remove_dir.html +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// fs::remove_dir_all("/some/dir")?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub fn remove_dir_all<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<()> { + fs_imp::remove_dir_all(path.as_ref()) +} + +/// Returns an iterator over the entries within a directory. +/// +/// The iterator will yield instances of [`io::Result`]`<`[`DirEntry`]`>`. +/// New errors may be encountered after an iterator is initially constructed. +/// +/// [`io::Result`]: ../io/type.Result.html +/// [`DirEntry`]: struct.DirEntry.html +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `opendir` function on Unix +/// and the `FindFirstFile` function on Windows. Advancing the iterator +/// currently corresponds to `readdir` on Unix and `FindNextFile` on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// The order in which this iterator returns entries is platform and filesystem +/// dependent. +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * The provided `path` doesn't exist. +/// * The process lacks permissions to view the contents. +/// * The `path` points at a non-directory file. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ``` +/// use std::io; +/// use std::fs::{self, DirEntry}; +/// use std::path::Path; +/// +/// // one possible implementation of walking a directory only visiting files +/// fn visit_dirs(dir: &Path, cb: &dyn Fn(&DirEntry)) -> io::Result<()> { +/// if dir.is_dir() { +/// for entry in fs::read_dir(dir)? { +/// let entry = entry?; +/// let path = entry.path(); +/// if path.is_dir() { +/// visit_dirs(&path, cb)?; +/// } else { +/// cb(&entry); +/// } +/// } +/// } +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +/// +/// ```rust,no_run +/// use std::{fs, io}; +/// +/// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { +/// let mut entries = fs::read_dir(".")? +/// .map(|res| res.map(|e| e.path())) +/// .collect::<Result<Vec<_>, io::Error>>()?; +/// +/// // The order in which `read_dir` returns entries is not guaranteed. If reproducible +/// // ordering is required the entries should be explicitly sorted. +/// +/// entries.sort(); +/// +/// // The entries have now been sorted by their path. +/// +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub fn read_dir<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> io::Result<ReadDir> { + fs_imp::readdir(path.as_ref()).map(ReadDir) +} + +/// Changes the permissions found on a file or a directory. +/// +/// # Platform-specific behavior +/// +/// This function currently corresponds to the `chmod` function on Unix +/// and the `SetFileAttributes` function on Windows. +/// Note that, this [may change in the future][changes]. +/// +/// [changes]: ../io/index.html#platform-specific-behavior +/// +/// # Errors +/// +/// This function will return an error in the following situations, but is not +/// limited to just these cases: +/// +/// * `path` does not exist. +/// * The user lacks the permission to change attributes of the file. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use std::fs; +/// +/// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { +/// let mut perms = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?.permissions(); +/// perms.set_readonly(true); +/// fs::set_permissions("foo.txt", perms)?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "set_permissions", since = "1.1.0")] +pub fn set_permissions<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P, perm: Permissions) -> io::Result<()> { + fs_imp::set_perm(path.as_ref(), perm.0) +} + +impl DirBuilder { + /// Creates a new set of options with default mode/security settings for all + /// platforms and also non-recursive. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use std::fs::DirBuilder; + /// + /// let builder = DirBuilder::new(); + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "dir_builder", since = "1.6.0")] + pub fn new() -> DirBuilder { + DirBuilder { inner: fs_imp::DirBuilder::new(), recursive: false } + } + + /// Indicates that directories should be created recursively, creating all + /// parent directories. Parents that do not exist are created with the same + /// security and permissions settings. + /// + /// This option defaults to `false`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use std::fs::DirBuilder; + /// + /// let mut builder = DirBuilder::new(); + /// builder.recursive(true); + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "dir_builder", since = "1.6.0")] + pub fn recursive(&mut self, recursive: bool) -> &mut Self { + self.recursive = recursive; + self + } + + /// Creates the specified directory with the options configured in this + /// builder. + /// + /// It is considered an error if the directory already exists unless + /// recursive mode is enabled. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```no_run + /// use std::fs::{self, DirBuilder}; + /// + /// let path = "/tmp/foo/bar/baz"; + /// DirBuilder::new() + /// .recursive(true) + /// .create(path).unwrap(); + /// + /// assert!(fs::metadata(path).unwrap().is_dir()); + /// ``` + #[stable(feature = "dir_builder", since = "1.6.0")] + pub fn create<P: AsRef<Path>>(&self, path: P) -> io::Result<()> { + self._create(path.as_ref()) + } + + fn _create(&self, path: &Path) -> io::Result<()> { + if self.recursive { self.create_dir_all(path) } else { self.inner.mkdir(path) } + } + + fn create_dir_all(&self, path: &Path) -> io::Result<()> { + if path == Path::new("") { + return Ok(()); + } + + match self.inner.mkdir(path) { + Ok(()) => return Ok(()), + Err(ref e) if e.kind() == io::ErrorKind::NotFound => {} + Err(_) if path.is_dir() => return Ok(()), + Err(e) => return Err(e), + } + match path.parent() { + Some(p) => self.create_dir_all(p)?, + None => { + return Err(io::Error::new(io::ErrorKind::Other, "failed to create whole tree")); + } + } + match self.inner.mkdir(path) { + Ok(()) => Ok(()), + Err(_) if path.is_dir() => Ok(()), + Err(e) => Err(e), + } + } +} + +impl AsInnerMut<fs_imp::DirBuilder> for DirBuilder { + fn as_inner_mut(&mut self) -> &mut fs_imp::DirBuilder { + &mut self.inner + } +} + +#[cfg(all(test, not(any(target_os = "cloudabi", target_os = "emscripten", target_env = "sgx"))))] +mod tests { + use crate::io::prelude::*; + + use crate::fs::{self, File, OpenOptions}; + use crate::io::{ErrorKind, SeekFrom}; + use crate::path::Path; + use crate::str; + use crate::sys_common::io::test::{tmpdir, TempDir}; + use crate::thread; + + use rand::{rngs::StdRng, RngCore, SeedableRng}; + + #[cfg(unix)] + use crate::os::unix::fs::symlink as symlink_dir; + #[cfg(unix)] + use crate::os::unix::fs::symlink as symlink_file; + #[cfg(unix)] + use crate::os::unix::fs::symlink as symlink_junction; + #[cfg(windows)] + use crate::os::windows::fs::{symlink_dir, symlink_file}; + #[cfg(windows)] + use crate::sys::fs::symlink_junction; + + macro_rules! check { + ($e:expr) => { + match $e { + Ok(t) => t, + Err(e) => panic!("{} failed with: {}", stringify!($e), e), + } + }; + } + + #[cfg(windows)] + macro_rules! error { + ($e:expr, $s:expr) => { + match $e { + Ok(_) => panic!("Unexpected success. Should've been: {:?}", $s), + Err(ref err) => assert!( + err.raw_os_error() == Some($s), + format!("`{}` did not have a code of `{}`", err, $s) + ), + } + }; + } + + #[cfg(unix)] + macro_rules! error { + ($e:expr, $s:expr) => { + error_contains!($e, $s) + }; + } + + macro_rules! error_contains { + ($e:expr, $s:expr) => { + match $e { + Ok(_) => panic!("Unexpected success. Should've been: {:?}", $s), + Err(ref err) => assert!( + err.to_string().contains($s), + format!("`{}` did not contain `{}`", err, $s) + ), + } + }; + } + + // Several test fail on windows if the user does not have permission to + // create symlinks (the `SeCreateSymbolicLinkPrivilege`). Instead of + // disabling these test on Windows, use this function to test whether we + // have permission, and return otherwise. This way, we still don't run these + // tests most of the time, but at least we do if the user has the right + // permissions. + pub fn got_symlink_permission(tmpdir: &TempDir) -> bool { + if cfg!(unix) { + return true; + } + let link = tmpdir.join("some_hopefully_unique_link_name"); + + match symlink_file(r"nonexisting_target", link) { + Ok(_) => true, + // ERROR_PRIVILEGE_NOT_HELD = 1314 + Err(ref err) if err.raw_os_error() == Some(1314) => false, + Err(_) => true, + } + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_io_smoke_test() { + let message = "it's alright. have a good time"; + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = &tmpdir.join("file_rt_io_file_test.txt"); + { + let mut write_stream = check!(File::create(filename)); + check!(write_stream.write(message.as_bytes())); + } + { + let mut read_stream = check!(File::open(filename)); + let mut read_buf = [0; 1028]; + let read_str = match check!(read_stream.read(&mut read_buf)) { + 0 => panic!("shouldn't happen"), + n => str::from_utf8(&read_buf[..n]).unwrap().to_string(), + }; + assert_eq!(read_str, message); + } + check!(fs::remove_file(filename)); + } + + #[test] + fn invalid_path_raises() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = &tmpdir.join("file_that_does_not_exist.txt"); + let result = File::open(filename); + + #[cfg(all(unix, not(target_os = "vxworks")))] + error!(result, "No such file or directory"); + #[cfg(target_os = "vxworks")] + error!(result, "no such file or directory"); + #[cfg(windows)] + error!(result, 2); // ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_iounlinking_invalid_path_should_raise_condition() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = &tmpdir.join("file_another_file_that_does_not_exist.txt"); + + let result = fs::remove_file(filename); + + #[cfg(all(unix, not(target_os = "vxworks")))] + error!(result, "No such file or directory"); + #[cfg(target_os = "vxworks")] + error!(result, "no such file or directory"); + #[cfg(windows)] + error!(result, 2); // ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_io_non_positional_read() { + let message: &str = "ten-four"; + let mut read_mem = [0; 8]; + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = &tmpdir.join("file_rt_io_file_test_positional.txt"); + { + let mut rw_stream = check!(File::create(filename)); + check!(rw_stream.write(message.as_bytes())); + } + { + let mut read_stream = check!(File::open(filename)); + { + let read_buf = &mut read_mem[0..4]; + check!(read_stream.read(read_buf)); + } + { + let read_buf = &mut read_mem[4..8]; + check!(read_stream.read(read_buf)); + } + } + check!(fs::remove_file(filename)); + let read_str = str::from_utf8(&read_mem).unwrap(); + assert_eq!(read_str, message); + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_io_seek_and_tell_smoke_test() { + let message = "ten-four"; + let mut read_mem = [0; 4]; + let set_cursor = 4 as u64; + let tell_pos_pre_read; + let tell_pos_post_read; + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = &tmpdir.join("file_rt_io_file_test_seeking.txt"); + { + let mut rw_stream = check!(File::create(filename)); + check!(rw_stream.write(message.as_bytes())); + } + { + let mut read_stream = check!(File::open(filename)); + check!(read_stream.seek(SeekFrom::Start(set_cursor))); + tell_pos_pre_read = check!(read_stream.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))); + check!(read_stream.read(&mut read_mem)); + tell_pos_post_read = check!(read_stream.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))); + } + check!(fs::remove_file(filename)); + let read_str = str::from_utf8(&read_mem).unwrap(); + assert_eq!(read_str, &message[4..8]); + assert_eq!(tell_pos_pre_read, set_cursor); + assert_eq!(tell_pos_post_read, message.len() as u64); + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_io_seek_and_write() { + let initial_msg = "food-is-yummy"; + let overwrite_msg = "-the-bar!!"; + let final_msg = "foo-the-bar!!"; + let seek_idx = 3; + let mut read_mem = [0; 13]; + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = &tmpdir.join("file_rt_io_file_test_seek_and_write.txt"); + { + let mut rw_stream = check!(File::create(filename)); + check!(rw_stream.write(initial_msg.as_bytes())); + check!(rw_stream.seek(SeekFrom::Start(seek_idx))); + check!(rw_stream.write(overwrite_msg.as_bytes())); + } + { + let mut read_stream = check!(File::open(filename)); + check!(read_stream.read(&mut read_mem)); + } + check!(fs::remove_file(filename)); + let read_str = str::from_utf8(&read_mem).unwrap(); + assert!(read_str == final_msg); + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_io_seek_shakedown() { + // 01234567890123 + let initial_msg = "qwer-asdf-zxcv"; + let chunk_one: &str = "qwer"; + let chunk_two: &str = "asdf"; + let chunk_three: &str = "zxcv"; + let mut read_mem = [0; 4]; + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = &tmpdir.join("file_rt_io_file_test_seek_shakedown.txt"); + { + let mut rw_stream = check!(File::create(filename)); + check!(rw_stream.write(initial_msg.as_bytes())); + } + { + let mut read_stream = check!(File::open(filename)); + + check!(read_stream.seek(SeekFrom::End(-4))); + check!(read_stream.read(&mut read_mem)); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&read_mem).unwrap(), chunk_three); + + check!(read_stream.seek(SeekFrom::Current(-9))); + check!(read_stream.read(&mut read_mem)); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&read_mem).unwrap(), chunk_two); + + check!(read_stream.seek(SeekFrom::Start(0))); + check!(read_stream.read(&mut read_mem)); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&read_mem).unwrap(), chunk_one); + } + check!(fs::remove_file(filename)); + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_io_eof() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = tmpdir.join("file_rt_io_file_test_eof.txt"); + let mut buf = [0; 256]; + { + let oo = OpenOptions::new().create_new(true).write(true).read(true).clone(); + let mut rw = check!(oo.open(&filename)); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.read(&mut buf)), 0); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.read(&mut buf)), 0); + } + check!(fs::remove_file(&filename)); + } + + #[test] + #[cfg(unix)] + fn file_test_io_read_write_at() { + use crate::os::unix::fs::FileExt; + + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = tmpdir.join("file_rt_io_file_test_read_write_at.txt"); + let mut buf = [0; 256]; + let write1 = "asdf"; + let write2 = "qwer-"; + let write3 = "-zxcv"; + let content = "qwer-asdf-zxcv"; + { + let oo = OpenOptions::new().create_new(true).write(true).read(true).clone(); + let mut rw = check!(oo.open(&filename)); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.write_at(write1.as_bytes(), 5)), write1.len()); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 0); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.read_at(&mut buf, 5)), write1.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..write1.len()]), Ok(write1)); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 0); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.read_at(&mut buf[..write2.len()], 0)), write2.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..write2.len()]), Ok("\0\0\0\0\0")); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 0); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.write(write2.as_bytes())), write2.len()); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 5); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.read(&mut buf)), write1.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..write1.len()]), Ok(write1)); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 9); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.read_at(&mut buf[..write2.len()], 0)), write2.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..write2.len()]), Ok(write2)); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 9); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.write_at(write3.as_bytes(), 9)), write3.len()); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 9); + } + { + let mut read = check!(File::open(&filename)); + assert_eq!(check!(read.read_at(&mut buf, 0)), content.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..content.len()]), Ok(content)); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 0); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::End(-5))), 9); + assert_eq!(check!(read.read_at(&mut buf, 0)), content.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..content.len()]), Ok(content)); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 9); + assert_eq!(check!(read.read(&mut buf)), write3.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..write3.len()]), Ok(write3)); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 14); + assert_eq!(check!(read.read_at(&mut buf, 0)), content.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..content.len()]), Ok(content)); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 14); + assert_eq!(check!(read.read_at(&mut buf, 14)), 0); + assert_eq!(check!(read.read_at(&mut buf, 15)), 0); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 14); + } + check!(fs::remove_file(&filename)); + } + + #[test] + #[cfg(unix)] + fn set_get_unix_permissions() { + use crate::os::unix::fs::PermissionsExt; + + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = &tmpdir.join("set_get_unix_permissions"); + check!(fs::create_dir(filename)); + let mask = 0o7777; + + check!(fs::set_permissions(filename, fs::Permissions::from_mode(0))); + let metadata0 = check!(fs::metadata(filename)); + assert_eq!(mask & metadata0.permissions().mode(), 0); + + check!(fs::set_permissions(filename, fs::Permissions::from_mode(0o1777))); + let metadata1 = check!(fs::metadata(filename)); + #[cfg(all(unix, not(target_os = "vxworks")))] + assert_eq!(mask & metadata1.permissions().mode(), 0o1777); + #[cfg(target_os = "vxworks")] + assert_eq!(mask & metadata1.permissions().mode(), 0o0777); + } + + #[test] + #[cfg(windows)] + fn file_test_io_seek_read_write() { + use crate::os::windows::fs::FileExt; + + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = tmpdir.join("file_rt_io_file_test_seek_read_write.txt"); + let mut buf = [0; 256]; + let write1 = "asdf"; + let write2 = "qwer-"; + let write3 = "-zxcv"; + let content = "qwer-asdf-zxcv"; + { + let oo = OpenOptions::new().create_new(true).write(true).read(true).clone(); + let mut rw = check!(oo.open(&filename)); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek_write(write1.as_bytes(), 5)), write1.len()); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 9); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek_read(&mut buf, 5)), write1.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..write1.len()]), Ok(write1)); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 9); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Start(0))), 0); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.write(write2.as_bytes())), write2.len()); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 5); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.read(&mut buf)), write1.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..write1.len()]), Ok(write1)); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 9); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek_read(&mut buf[..write2.len()], 0)), write2.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..write2.len()]), Ok(write2)); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 5); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek_write(write3.as_bytes(), 9)), write3.len()); + assert_eq!(check!(rw.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 14); + } + { + let mut read = check!(File::open(&filename)); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek_read(&mut buf, 0)), content.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..content.len()]), Ok(content)); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 14); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::End(-5))), 9); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek_read(&mut buf, 0)), content.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..content.len()]), Ok(content)); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 14); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::End(-5))), 9); + assert_eq!(check!(read.read(&mut buf)), write3.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..write3.len()]), Ok(write3)); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 14); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek_read(&mut buf, 0)), content.len()); + assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&buf[..content.len()]), Ok(content)); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))), 14); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek_read(&mut buf, 14)), 0); + assert_eq!(check!(read.seek_read(&mut buf, 15)), 0); + } + check!(fs::remove_file(&filename)); + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_stat_is_correct_on_is_file() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = &tmpdir.join("file_stat_correct_on_is_file.txt"); + { + let mut opts = OpenOptions::new(); + let mut fs = check!(opts.read(true).write(true).create(true).open(filename)); + let msg = "hw"; + fs.write(msg.as_bytes()).unwrap(); + + let fstat_res = check!(fs.metadata()); + assert!(fstat_res.is_file()); + } + let stat_res_fn = check!(fs::metadata(filename)); + assert!(stat_res_fn.is_file()); + let stat_res_meth = check!(filename.metadata()); + assert!(stat_res_meth.is_file()); + check!(fs::remove_file(filename)); + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_stat_is_correct_on_is_dir() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let filename = &tmpdir.join("file_stat_correct_on_is_dir"); + check!(fs::create_dir(filename)); + let stat_res_fn = check!(fs::metadata(filename)); + assert!(stat_res_fn.is_dir()); + let stat_res_meth = check!(filename.metadata()); + assert!(stat_res_meth.is_dir()); + check!(fs::remove_dir(filename)); + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_fileinfo_false_when_checking_is_file_on_a_directory() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let dir = &tmpdir.join("fileinfo_false_on_dir"); + check!(fs::create_dir(dir)); + assert!(!dir.is_file()); + check!(fs::remove_dir(dir)); + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_fileinfo_check_exists_before_and_after_file_creation() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let file = &tmpdir.join("fileinfo_check_exists_b_and_a.txt"); + check!(check!(File::create(file)).write(b"foo")); + assert!(file.exists()); + check!(fs::remove_file(file)); + assert!(!file.exists()); + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_directoryinfo_check_exists_before_and_after_mkdir() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let dir = &tmpdir.join("before_and_after_dir"); + assert!(!dir.exists()); + check!(fs::create_dir(dir)); + assert!(dir.exists()); + assert!(dir.is_dir()); + check!(fs::remove_dir(dir)); + assert!(!dir.exists()); + } + + #[test] + fn file_test_directoryinfo_readdir() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let dir = &tmpdir.join("di_readdir"); + check!(fs::create_dir(dir)); + let prefix = "foo"; + for n in 0..3 { + let f = dir.join(&format!("{}.txt", n)); + let mut w = check!(File::create(&f)); + let msg_str = format!("{}{}", prefix, n.to_string()); + let msg = msg_str.as_bytes(); + check!(w.write(msg)); + } + let files = check!(fs::read_dir(dir)); + let mut mem = [0; 4]; + for f in files { + let f = f.unwrap().path(); + { + let n = f.file_stem().unwrap(); + check!(check!(File::open(&f)).read(&mut mem)); + let read_str = str::from_utf8(&mem).unwrap(); + let expected = format!("{}{}", prefix, n.to_str().unwrap()); + assert_eq!(expected, read_str); + } + check!(fs::remove_file(&f)); + } + check!(fs::remove_dir(dir)); + } + + #[test] + fn file_create_new_already_exists_error() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let file = &tmpdir.join("file_create_new_error_exists"); + check!(fs::File::create(file)); + let e = fs::OpenOptions::new().write(true).create_new(true).open(file).unwrap_err(); + assert_eq!(e.kind(), ErrorKind::AlreadyExists); + } + + #[test] + fn mkdir_path_already_exists_error() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let dir = &tmpdir.join("mkdir_error_twice"); + check!(fs::create_dir(dir)); + let e = fs::create_dir(dir).unwrap_err(); + assert_eq!(e.kind(), ErrorKind::AlreadyExists); + } + + #[test] + fn recursive_mkdir() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let dir = tmpdir.join("d1/d2"); + check!(fs::create_dir_all(&dir)); + assert!(dir.is_dir()) + } + + #[test] + fn recursive_mkdir_failure() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let dir = tmpdir.join("d1"); + let file = dir.join("f1"); + + check!(fs::create_dir_all(&dir)); + check!(File::create(&file)); + + let result = fs::create_dir_all(&file); + + assert!(result.is_err()); + } + + #[test] + fn concurrent_recursive_mkdir() { + for _ in 0..100 { + let dir = tmpdir(); + let mut dir = dir.join("a"); + for _ in 0..40 { + dir = dir.join("a"); + } + let mut join = vec![]; + for _ in 0..8 { + let dir = dir.clone(); + join.push(thread::spawn(move || { + check!(fs::create_dir_all(&dir)); + })) + } + + // No `Display` on result of `join()` + join.drain(..).map(|join| join.join().unwrap()).count(); + } + } + + #[test] + fn recursive_mkdir_slash() { + check!(fs::create_dir_all(Path::new("/"))); + } + + #[test] + fn recursive_mkdir_dot() { + check!(fs::create_dir_all(Path::new("."))); + } + + #[test] + fn recursive_mkdir_empty() { + check!(fs::create_dir_all(Path::new(""))); + } + + #[test] + fn recursive_rmdir() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let d1 = tmpdir.join("d1"); + let dt = d1.join("t"); + let dtt = dt.join("t"); + let d2 = tmpdir.join("d2"); + let canary = d2.join("do_not_delete"); + check!(fs::create_dir_all(&dtt)); + check!(fs::create_dir_all(&d2)); + check!(check!(File::create(&canary)).write(b"foo")); + check!(symlink_junction(&d2, &dt.join("d2"))); + let _ = symlink_file(&canary, &d1.join("canary")); + check!(fs::remove_dir_all(&d1)); + + assert!(!d1.is_dir()); + assert!(canary.exists()); + } + + #[test] + fn recursive_rmdir_of_symlink() { + // test we do not recursively delete a symlink but only dirs. + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let link = tmpdir.join("d1"); + let dir = tmpdir.join("d2"); + let canary = dir.join("do_not_delete"); + check!(fs::create_dir_all(&dir)); + check!(check!(File::create(&canary)).write(b"foo")); + check!(symlink_junction(&dir, &link)); + check!(fs::remove_dir_all(&link)); + + assert!(!link.is_dir()); + assert!(canary.exists()); + } + + #[test] + // only Windows makes a distinction between file and directory symlinks. + #[cfg(windows)] + fn recursive_rmdir_of_file_symlink() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + if !got_symlink_permission(&tmpdir) { + return; + }; + + let f1 = tmpdir.join("f1"); + let f2 = tmpdir.join("f2"); + check!(check!(File::create(&f1)).write(b"foo")); + check!(symlink_file(&f1, &f2)); + match fs::remove_dir_all(&f2) { + Ok(..) => panic!("wanted a failure"), + Err(..) => {} + } + } + + #[test] + fn unicode_path_is_dir() { + assert!(Path::new(".").is_dir()); + assert!(!Path::new("test/stdtest/fs.rs").is_dir()); + + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + + let mut dirpath = tmpdir.path().to_path_buf(); + dirpath.push("test-가一ー你好"); + check!(fs::create_dir(&dirpath)); + assert!(dirpath.is_dir()); + + let mut filepath = dirpath; + filepath.push("unicode-file-\u{ac00}\u{4e00}\u{30fc}\u{4f60}\u{597d}.rs"); + check!(File::create(&filepath)); // ignore return; touch only + assert!(!filepath.is_dir()); + assert!(filepath.exists()); + } + + #[test] + fn unicode_path_exists() { + assert!(Path::new(".").exists()); + assert!(!Path::new("test/nonexistent-bogus-path").exists()); + + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let unicode = tmpdir.path(); + let unicode = unicode.join("test-각丁ー再见"); + check!(fs::create_dir(&unicode)); + assert!(unicode.exists()); + assert!(!Path::new("test/unicode-bogus-path-각丁ー再见").exists()); + } + + #[test] + fn copy_file_does_not_exist() { + let from = Path::new("test/nonexistent-bogus-path"); + let to = Path::new("test/other-bogus-path"); + + match fs::copy(&from, &to) { + Ok(..) => panic!(), + Err(..) => { + assert!(!from.exists()); + assert!(!to.exists()); + } + } + } + + #[test] + fn copy_src_does_not_exist() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let from = Path::new("test/nonexistent-bogus-path"); + let to = tmpdir.join("out.txt"); + check!(check!(File::create(&to)).write(b"hello")); + assert!(fs::copy(&from, &to).is_err()); + assert!(!from.exists()); + let mut v = Vec::new(); + check!(check!(File::open(&to)).read_to_end(&mut v)); + assert_eq!(v, b"hello"); + } + + #[test] + fn copy_file_ok() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let input = tmpdir.join("in.txt"); + let out = tmpdir.join("out.txt"); + + check!(check!(File::create(&input)).write(b"hello")); + check!(fs::copy(&input, &out)); + let mut v = Vec::new(); + check!(check!(File::open(&out)).read_to_end(&mut v)); + assert_eq!(v, b"hello"); + + assert_eq!(check!(input.metadata()).permissions(), check!(out.metadata()).permissions()); + } + + #[test] + fn copy_file_dst_dir() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let out = tmpdir.join("out"); + + check!(File::create(&out)); + match fs::copy(&*out, tmpdir.path()) { + Ok(..) => panic!(), + Err(..) => {} + } + } + + #[test] + fn copy_file_dst_exists() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let input = tmpdir.join("in"); + let output = tmpdir.join("out"); + + check!(check!(File::create(&input)).write("foo".as_bytes())); + check!(check!(File::create(&output)).write("bar".as_bytes())); + check!(fs::copy(&input, &output)); + + let mut v = Vec::new(); + check!(check!(File::open(&output)).read_to_end(&mut v)); + assert_eq!(v, b"foo".to_vec()); + } + + #[test] + fn copy_file_src_dir() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let out = tmpdir.join("out"); + + match fs::copy(tmpdir.path(), &out) { + Ok(..) => panic!(), + Err(..) => {} + } + assert!(!out.exists()); + } + + #[test] + fn copy_file_preserves_perm_bits() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let input = tmpdir.join("in.txt"); + let out = tmpdir.join("out.txt"); + + let attr = check!(check!(File::create(&input)).metadata()); + let mut p = attr.permissions(); + p.set_readonly(true); + check!(fs::set_permissions(&input, p)); + check!(fs::copy(&input, &out)); + assert!(check!(out.metadata()).permissions().readonly()); + check!(fs::set_permissions(&input, attr.permissions())); + check!(fs::set_permissions(&out, attr.permissions())); + } + + #[test] + #[cfg(windows)] + fn copy_file_preserves_streams() { + let tmp = tmpdir(); + check!(check!(File::create(tmp.join("in.txt:bunny"))).write("carrot".as_bytes())); + assert_eq!(check!(fs::copy(tmp.join("in.txt"), tmp.join("out.txt"))), 0); + assert_eq!(check!(tmp.join("out.txt").metadata()).len(), 0); + let mut v = Vec::new(); + check!(check!(File::open(tmp.join("out.txt:bunny"))).read_to_end(&mut v)); + assert_eq!(v, b"carrot".to_vec()); + } + + #[test] + fn copy_file_returns_metadata_len() { + let tmp = tmpdir(); + let in_path = tmp.join("in.txt"); + let out_path = tmp.join("out.txt"); + check!(check!(File::create(&in_path)).write(b"lettuce")); + #[cfg(windows)] + check!(check!(File::create(tmp.join("in.txt:bunny"))).write(b"carrot")); + let copied_len = check!(fs::copy(&in_path, &out_path)); + assert_eq!(check!(out_path.metadata()).len(), copied_len); + } + + #[test] + fn copy_file_follows_dst_symlink() { + let tmp = tmpdir(); + if !got_symlink_permission(&tmp) { + return; + }; + + let in_path = tmp.join("in.txt"); + let out_path = tmp.join("out.txt"); + let out_path_symlink = tmp.join("out_symlink.txt"); + + check!(fs::write(&in_path, "foo")); + check!(fs::write(&out_path, "bar")); + check!(symlink_file(&out_path, &out_path_symlink)); + + check!(fs::copy(&in_path, &out_path_symlink)); + + assert!(check!(out_path_symlink.symlink_metadata()).file_type().is_symlink()); + assert_eq!(check!(fs::read(&out_path_symlink)), b"foo".to_vec()); + assert_eq!(check!(fs::read(&out_path)), b"foo".to_vec()); + } + + #[test] + fn symlinks_work() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + if !got_symlink_permission(&tmpdir) { + return; + }; + + let input = tmpdir.join("in.txt"); + let out = tmpdir.join("out.txt"); + + check!(check!(File::create(&input)).write("foobar".as_bytes())); + check!(symlink_file(&input, &out)); + assert!(check!(out.symlink_metadata()).file_type().is_symlink()); + assert_eq!(check!(fs::metadata(&out)).len(), check!(fs::metadata(&input)).len()); + let mut v = Vec::new(); + check!(check!(File::open(&out)).read_to_end(&mut v)); + assert_eq!(v, b"foobar".to_vec()); + } + + #[test] + fn symlink_noexist() { + // Symlinks can point to things that don't exist + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + if !got_symlink_permission(&tmpdir) { + return; + }; + + // Use a relative path for testing. Symlinks get normalized by Windows, + // so we may not get the same path back for absolute paths + check!(symlink_file(&"foo", &tmpdir.join("bar"))); + assert_eq!(check!(fs::read_link(&tmpdir.join("bar"))).to_str().unwrap(), "foo"); + } + + #[test] + fn read_link() { + if cfg!(windows) { + // directory symlink + assert_eq!( + check!(fs::read_link(r"C:\Users\All Users")).to_str().unwrap(), + r"C:\ProgramData" + ); + // junction + assert_eq!( + check!(fs::read_link(r"C:\Users\Default User")).to_str().unwrap(), + r"C:\Users\Default" + ); + // junction with special permissions + assert_eq!( + check!(fs::read_link(r"C:\Documents and Settings\")).to_str().unwrap(), + r"C:\Users" + ); + } + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let link = tmpdir.join("link"); + if !got_symlink_permission(&tmpdir) { + return; + }; + check!(symlink_file(&"foo", &link)); + assert_eq!(check!(fs::read_link(&link)).to_str().unwrap(), "foo"); + } + + #[test] + fn readlink_not_symlink() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + match fs::read_link(tmpdir.path()) { + Ok(..) => panic!("wanted a failure"), + Err(..) => {} + } + } + + #[test] + fn links_work() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let input = tmpdir.join("in.txt"); + let out = tmpdir.join("out.txt"); + + check!(check!(File::create(&input)).write("foobar".as_bytes())); + check!(fs::hard_link(&input, &out)); + assert_eq!(check!(fs::metadata(&out)).len(), check!(fs::metadata(&input)).len()); + assert_eq!(check!(fs::metadata(&out)).len(), check!(input.metadata()).len()); + let mut v = Vec::new(); + check!(check!(File::open(&out)).read_to_end(&mut v)); + assert_eq!(v, b"foobar".to_vec()); + + // can't link to yourself + match fs::hard_link(&input, &input) { + Ok(..) => panic!("wanted a failure"), + Err(..) => {} + } + // can't link to something that doesn't exist + match fs::hard_link(&tmpdir.join("foo"), &tmpdir.join("bar")) { + Ok(..) => panic!("wanted a failure"), + Err(..) => {} + } + } + + #[test] + fn chmod_works() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let file = tmpdir.join("in.txt"); + + check!(File::create(&file)); + let attr = check!(fs::metadata(&file)); + assert!(!attr.permissions().readonly()); + let mut p = attr.permissions(); + p.set_readonly(true); + check!(fs::set_permissions(&file, p.clone())); + let attr = check!(fs::metadata(&file)); + assert!(attr.permissions().readonly()); + + match fs::set_permissions(&tmpdir.join("foo"), p.clone()) { + Ok(..) => panic!("wanted an error"), + Err(..) => {} + } + + p.set_readonly(false); + check!(fs::set_permissions(&file, p)); + } + + #[test] + fn fchmod_works() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let path = tmpdir.join("in.txt"); + + let file = check!(File::create(&path)); + let attr = check!(fs::metadata(&path)); + assert!(!attr.permissions().readonly()); + let mut p = attr.permissions(); + p.set_readonly(true); + check!(file.set_permissions(p.clone())); + let attr = check!(fs::metadata(&path)); + assert!(attr.permissions().readonly()); + + p.set_readonly(false); + check!(file.set_permissions(p)); + } + + #[test] + fn sync_doesnt_kill_anything() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let path = tmpdir.join("in.txt"); + + let mut file = check!(File::create(&path)); + check!(file.sync_all()); + check!(file.sync_data()); + check!(file.write(b"foo")); + check!(file.sync_all()); + check!(file.sync_data()); + } + + #[test] + fn truncate_works() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let path = tmpdir.join("in.txt"); + + let mut file = check!(File::create(&path)); + check!(file.write(b"foo")); + check!(file.sync_all()); + + // Do some simple things with truncation + assert_eq!(check!(file.metadata()).len(), 3); + check!(file.set_len(10)); + assert_eq!(check!(file.metadata()).len(), 10); + check!(file.write(b"bar")); + check!(file.sync_all()); + assert_eq!(check!(file.metadata()).len(), 10); + + let mut v = Vec::new(); + check!(check!(File::open(&path)).read_to_end(&mut v)); + assert_eq!(v, b"foobar\0\0\0\0".to_vec()); + + // Truncate to a smaller length, don't seek, and then write something. + // Ensure that the intermediate zeroes are all filled in (we have `seek`ed + // past the end of the file). + check!(file.set_len(2)); + assert_eq!(check!(file.metadata()).len(), 2); + check!(file.write(b"wut")); + check!(file.sync_all()); + assert_eq!(check!(file.metadata()).len(), 9); + let mut v = Vec::new(); + check!(check!(File::open(&path)).read_to_end(&mut v)); + assert_eq!(v, b"fo\0\0\0\0wut".to_vec()); + } + + #[test] + fn open_flavors() { + use crate::fs::OpenOptions as OO; + fn c<T: Clone>(t: &T) -> T { + t.clone() + } + + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + + let mut r = OO::new(); + r.read(true); + let mut w = OO::new(); + w.write(true); + let mut rw = OO::new(); + rw.read(true).write(true); + let mut a = OO::new(); + a.append(true); + let mut ra = OO::new(); + ra.read(true).append(true); + + #[cfg(windows)] + let invalid_options = 87; // ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER + #[cfg(all(unix, not(target_os = "vxworks")))] + let invalid_options = "Invalid argument"; + #[cfg(target_os = "vxworks")] + let invalid_options = "invalid argument"; + + // Test various combinations of creation modes and access modes. + // + // Allowed: + // creation mode | read | write | read-write | append | read-append | + // :-----------------------|:-----:|:-----:|:----------:|:------:|:-----------:| + // not set (open existing) | X | X | X | X | X | + // create | | X | X | X | X | + // truncate | | X | X | | | + // create and truncate | | X | X | | | + // create_new | | X | X | X | X | + // + // tested in reverse order, so 'create_new' creates the file, and 'open existing' opens it. + + // write-only + check!(c(&w).create_new(true).open(&tmpdir.join("a"))); + check!(c(&w).create(true).truncate(true).open(&tmpdir.join("a"))); + check!(c(&w).truncate(true).open(&tmpdir.join("a"))); + check!(c(&w).create(true).open(&tmpdir.join("a"))); + check!(c(&w).open(&tmpdir.join("a"))); + + // read-only + error!(c(&r).create_new(true).open(&tmpdir.join("b")), invalid_options); + error!(c(&r).create(true).truncate(true).open(&tmpdir.join("b")), invalid_options); + error!(c(&r).truncate(true).open(&tmpdir.join("b")), invalid_options); + error!(c(&r).create(true).open(&tmpdir.join("b")), invalid_options); + check!(c(&r).open(&tmpdir.join("a"))); // try opening the file created with write_only + + // read-write + check!(c(&rw).create_new(true).open(&tmpdir.join("c"))); + check!(c(&rw).create(true).truncate(true).open(&tmpdir.join("c"))); + check!(c(&rw).truncate(true).open(&tmpdir.join("c"))); + check!(c(&rw).create(true).open(&tmpdir.join("c"))); + check!(c(&rw).open(&tmpdir.join("c"))); + + // append + check!(c(&a).create_new(true).open(&tmpdir.join("d"))); + error!(c(&a).create(true).truncate(true).open(&tmpdir.join("d")), invalid_options); + error!(c(&a).truncate(true).open(&tmpdir.join("d")), invalid_options); + check!(c(&a).create(true).open(&tmpdir.join("d"))); + check!(c(&a).open(&tmpdir.join("d"))); + + // read-append + check!(c(&ra).create_new(true).open(&tmpdir.join("e"))); + error!(c(&ra).create(true).truncate(true).open(&tmpdir.join("e")), invalid_options); + error!(c(&ra).truncate(true).open(&tmpdir.join("e")), invalid_options); + check!(c(&ra).create(true).open(&tmpdir.join("e"))); + check!(c(&ra).open(&tmpdir.join("e"))); + + // Test opening a file without setting an access mode + let mut blank = OO::new(); + error!(blank.create(true).open(&tmpdir.join("f")), invalid_options); + + // Test write works + check!(check!(File::create(&tmpdir.join("h"))).write("foobar".as_bytes())); + + // Test write fails for read-only + check!(r.open(&tmpdir.join("h"))); + { + let mut f = check!(r.open(&tmpdir.join("h"))); + assert!(f.write("wut".as_bytes()).is_err()); + } + + // Test write overwrites + { + let mut f = check!(c(&w).open(&tmpdir.join("h"))); + check!(f.write("baz".as_bytes())); + } + { + let mut f = check!(c(&r).open(&tmpdir.join("h"))); + let mut b = vec![0; 6]; + check!(f.read(&mut b)); + assert_eq!(b, "bazbar".as_bytes()); + } + + // Test truncate works + { + let mut f = check!(c(&w).truncate(true).open(&tmpdir.join("h"))); + check!(f.write("foo".as_bytes())); + } + assert_eq!(check!(fs::metadata(&tmpdir.join("h"))).len(), 3); + + // Test append works + assert_eq!(check!(fs::metadata(&tmpdir.join("h"))).len(), 3); + { + let mut f = check!(c(&a).open(&tmpdir.join("h"))); + check!(f.write("bar".as_bytes())); + } + assert_eq!(check!(fs::metadata(&tmpdir.join("h"))).len(), 6); + + // Test .append(true) equals .write(true).append(true) + { + let mut f = check!(c(&w).append(true).open(&tmpdir.join("h"))); + check!(f.write("baz".as_bytes())); + } + assert_eq!(check!(fs::metadata(&tmpdir.join("h"))).len(), 9); + } + + #[test] + fn _assert_send_sync() { + fn _assert_send_sync<T: Send + Sync>() {} + _assert_send_sync::<OpenOptions>(); + } + + #[test] + fn binary_file() { + let mut bytes = [0; 1024]; + StdRng::from_entropy().fill_bytes(&mut bytes); + + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + + check!(check!(File::create(&tmpdir.join("test"))).write(&bytes)); + let mut v = Vec::new(); + check!(check!(File::open(&tmpdir.join("test"))).read_to_end(&mut v)); + assert!(v == &bytes[..]); + } + + #[test] + fn write_then_read() { + let mut bytes = [0; 1024]; + StdRng::from_entropy().fill_bytes(&mut bytes); + + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + + check!(fs::write(&tmpdir.join("test"), &bytes[..])); + let v = check!(fs::read(&tmpdir.join("test"))); + assert!(v == &bytes[..]); + + check!(fs::write(&tmpdir.join("not-utf8"), &[0xFF])); + error_contains!( + fs::read_to_string(&tmpdir.join("not-utf8")), + "stream did not contain valid UTF-8" + ); + + let s = "𐁁𐀓𐀠𐀴𐀍"; + check!(fs::write(&tmpdir.join("utf8"), s.as_bytes())); + let string = check!(fs::read_to_string(&tmpdir.join("utf8"))); + assert_eq!(string, s); + } + + #[test] + fn file_try_clone() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + + let mut f1 = check!( + OpenOptions::new().read(true).write(true).create(true).open(&tmpdir.join("test")) + ); + let mut f2 = check!(f1.try_clone()); + + check!(f1.write_all(b"hello world")); + check!(f1.seek(SeekFrom::Start(2))); + + let mut buf = vec![]; + check!(f2.read_to_end(&mut buf)); + assert_eq!(buf, b"llo world"); + drop(f2); + + check!(f1.write_all(b"!")); + } + + #[test] + #[cfg(not(windows))] + fn unlink_readonly() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let path = tmpdir.join("file"); + check!(File::create(&path)); + let mut perm = check!(fs::metadata(&path)).permissions(); + perm.set_readonly(true); + check!(fs::set_permissions(&path, perm)); + check!(fs::remove_file(&path)); + } + + #[test] + fn mkdir_trailing_slash() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let path = tmpdir.join("file"); + check!(fs::create_dir_all(&path.join("a/"))); + } + + #[test] + fn canonicalize_works_simple() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let tmpdir = fs::canonicalize(tmpdir.path()).unwrap(); + let file = tmpdir.join("test"); + File::create(&file).unwrap(); + assert_eq!(fs::canonicalize(&file).unwrap(), file); + } + + #[test] + fn realpath_works() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + if !got_symlink_permission(&tmpdir) { + return; + }; + + let tmpdir = fs::canonicalize(tmpdir.path()).unwrap(); + let file = tmpdir.join("test"); + let dir = tmpdir.join("test2"); + let link = dir.join("link"); + let linkdir = tmpdir.join("test3"); + + File::create(&file).unwrap(); + fs::create_dir(&dir).unwrap(); + symlink_file(&file, &link).unwrap(); + symlink_dir(&dir, &linkdir).unwrap(); + + assert!(link.symlink_metadata().unwrap().file_type().is_symlink()); + + assert_eq!(fs::canonicalize(&tmpdir).unwrap(), tmpdir); + assert_eq!(fs::canonicalize(&file).unwrap(), file); + assert_eq!(fs::canonicalize(&link).unwrap(), file); + assert_eq!(fs::canonicalize(&linkdir).unwrap(), dir); + assert_eq!(fs::canonicalize(&linkdir.join("link")).unwrap(), file); + } + + #[test] + fn realpath_works_tricky() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + if !got_symlink_permission(&tmpdir) { + return; + }; + + let tmpdir = fs::canonicalize(tmpdir.path()).unwrap(); + let a = tmpdir.join("a"); + let b = a.join("b"); + let c = b.join("c"); + let d = a.join("d"); + let e = d.join("e"); + let f = a.join("f"); + + fs::create_dir_all(&b).unwrap(); + fs::create_dir_all(&d).unwrap(); + File::create(&f).unwrap(); + if cfg!(not(windows)) { + symlink_file("../d/e", &c).unwrap(); + symlink_file("../f", &e).unwrap(); + } + if cfg!(windows) { + symlink_file(r"..\d\e", &c).unwrap(); + symlink_file(r"..\f", &e).unwrap(); + } + + assert_eq!(fs::canonicalize(&c).unwrap(), f); + assert_eq!(fs::canonicalize(&e).unwrap(), f); + } + + #[test] + fn dir_entry_methods() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + + fs::create_dir_all(&tmpdir.join("a")).unwrap(); + File::create(&tmpdir.join("b")).unwrap(); + + for file in tmpdir.path().read_dir().unwrap().map(|f| f.unwrap()) { + let fname = file.file_name(); + match fname.to_str() { + Some("a") => { + assert!(file.file_type().unwrap().is_dir()); + assert!(file.metadata().unwrap().is_dir()); + } + Some("b") => { + assert!(file.file_type().unwrap().is_file()); + assert!(file.metadata().unwrap().is_file()); + } + f => panic!("unknown file name: {:?}", f), + } + } + } + + #[test] + fn dir_entry_debug() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + File::create(&tmpdir.join("b")).unwrap(); + let mut read_dir = tmpdir.path().read_dir().unwrap(); + let dir_entry = read_dir.next().unwrap().unwrap(); + let actual = format!("{:?}", dir_entry); + let expected = format!("DirEntry({:?})", dir_entry.0.path()); + assert_eq!(actual, expected); + } + + #[test] + fn read_dir_not_found() { + let res = fs::read_dir("/path/that/does/not/exist"); + assert_eq!(res.err().unwrap().kind(), ErrorKind::NotFound); + } + + #[test] + fn create_dir_all_with_junctions() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + let target = tmpdir.join("target"); + + let junction = tmpdir.join("junction"); + let b = junction.join("a/b"); + + let link = tmpdir.join("link"); + let d = link.join("c/d"); + + fs::create_dir(&target).unwrap(); + + check!(symlink_junction(&target, &junction)); + check!(fs::create_dir_all(&b)); + // the junction itself is not a directory, but `is_dir()` on a Path + // follows links + assert!(junction.is_dir()); + assert!(b.exists()); + + if !got_symlink_permission(&tmpdir) { + return; + }; + check!(symlink_dir(&target, &link)); + check!(fs::create_dir_all(&d)); + assert!(link.is_dir()); + assert!(d.exists()); + } + + #[test] + fn metadata_access_times() { + let tmpdir = tmpdir(); + + let b = tmpdir.join("b"); + File::create(&b).unwrap(); + + let a = check!(fs::metadata(&tmpdir.path())); + let b = check!(fs::metadata(&b)); + + assert_eq!(check!(a.accessed()), check!(a.accessed())); + assert_eq!(check!(a.modified()), check!(a.modified())); + assert_eq!(check!(b.accessed()), check!(b.modified())); + + if cfg!(target_os = "macos") || cfg!(target_os = "windows") { + check!(a.created()); + check!(b.created()); + } + + if cfg!(target_os = "linux") { + // Not always available + match (a.created(), b.created()) { + (Ok(t1), Ok(t2)) => assert!(t1 <= t2), + (Err(e1), Err(e2)) + if e1.kind() == ErrorKind::Other && e2.kind() == ErrorKind::Other => {} + (a, b) => panic!( + "creation time must be always supported or not supported: {:?} {:?}", + a, b, + ), + } + } + } +} |