1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257
|
// Copyright 2020 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Package fs defines basic interfaces to a file system.
// A file system can be provided by the host operating system
// but also by other packages.
package fs
import (
"internal/oserror"
"time"
"unicode/utf8"
)
// An FS provides access to a hierarchical file system.
//
// The FS interface is the minimum implementation required of the file system.
// A file system may implement additional interfaces,
// such as ReadFileFS, to provide additional or optimized functionality.
type FS interface {
// Open opens the named file.
//
// When Open returns an error, it should be of type *PathError
// with the Op field set to "open", the Path field set to name,
// and the Err field describing the problem.
//
// Open should reject attempts to open names that do not satisfy
// ValidPath(name), returning a *PathError with Err set to
// ErrInvalid or ErrNotExist.
Open(name string) (File, error)
}
// ValidPath reports whether the given path name
// is valid for use in a call to Open.
//
// Path names passed to open are UTF-8-encoded,
// unrooted, slash-separated sequences of path elements, like “x/y/z”.
// Path names must not contain an element that is “.” or “..” or the empty string,
// except for the special case that the root directory is named “.”.
// Paths must not start or end with a slash: “/x” and “x/” are invalid.
//
// Note that paths are slash-separated on all systems, even Windows.
// Paths containing other characters such as backslash and colon
// are accepted as valid, but those characters must never be
// interpreted by an FS implementation as path element separators.
func ValidPath(name string) bool {
if !utf8.ValidString(name) {
return false
}
if name == "." {
// special case
return true
}
// Iterate over elements in name, checking each.
for {
i := 0
for i < len(name) && name[i] != '/' {
i++
}
elem := name[:i]
if elem == "" || elem == "." || elem == ".." {
return false
}
if i == len(name) {
return true // reached clean ending
}
name = name[i+1:]
}
}
// A File provides access to a single file.
// The File interface is the minimum implementation required of the file.
// Directory files should also implement ReadDirFile.
// A file may implement io.ReaderAt or io.Seeker as optimizations.
type File interface {
Stat() (FileInfo, error)
Read([]byte) (int, error)
Close() error
}
// A DirEntry is an entry read from a directory
// (using the ReadDir function or a ReadDirFile's ReadDir method).
type DirEntry interface {
// Name returns the name of the file (or subdirectory) described by the entry.
// This name is only the final element of the path (the base name), not the entire path.
// For example, Name would return "hello.go" not "home/gopher/hello.go".
Name() string
// IsDir reports whether the entry describes a directory.
IsDir() bool
// Type returns the type bits for the entry.
// The type bits are a subset of the usual FileMode bits, those returned by the FileMode.Type method.
Type() FileMode
// Info returns the FileInfo for the file or subdirectory described by the entry.
// The returned FileInfo may be from the time of the original directory read
// or from the time of the call to Info. If the file has been removed or renamed
// since the directory read, Info may return an error satisfying errors.Is(err, ErrNotExist).
// If the entry denotes a symbolic link, Info reports the information about the link itself,
// not the link's target.
Info() (FileInfo, error)
}
// A ReadDirFile is a directory file whose entries can be read with the ReadDir method.
// Every directory file should implement this interface.
// (It is permissible for any file to implement this interface,
// but if so ReadDir should return an error for non-directories.)
type ReadDirFile interface {
File
// ReadDir reads the contents of the directory and returns
// a slice of up to n DirEntry values in directory order.
// Subsequent calls on the same file will yield further DirEntry values.
//
// If n > 0, ReadDir returns at most n DirEntry structures.
// In this case, if ReadDir returns an empty slice, it will return
// a non-nil error explaining why.
// At the end of a directory, the error is io.EOF.
//
// If n <= 0, ReadDir returns all the DirEntry values from the directory
// in a single slice. In this case, if ReadDir succeeds (reads all the way
// to the end of the directory), it returns the slice and a nil error.
// If it encounters an error before the end of the directory,
// ReadDir returns the DirEntry list read until that point and a non-nil error.
ReadDir(n int) ([]DirEntry, error)
}
// Generic file system errors.
// Errors returned by file systems can be tested against these errors
// using errors.Is.
var (
ErrInvalid = errInvalid() // "invalid argument"
ErrPermission = errPermission() // "permission denied"
ErrExist = errExist() // "file already exists"
ErrNotExist = errNotExist() // "file does not exist"
ErrClosed = errClosed() // "file already closed"
)
func errInvalid() error { return oserror.ErrInvalid }
func errPermission() error { return oserror.ErrPermission }
func errExist() error { return oserror.ErrExist }
func errNotExist() error { return oserror.ErrNotExist }
func errClosed() error { return oserror.ErrClosed }
// A FileInfo describes a file and is returned by Stat.
type FileInfo interface {
Name() string // base name of the file
Size() int64 // length in bytes for regular files; system-dependent for others
Mode() FileMode // file mode bits
ModTime() time.Time // modification time
IsDir() bool // abbreviation for Mode().IsDir()
Sys() any // underlying data source (can return nil)
}
// A FileMode represents a file's mode and permission bits.
// The bits have the same definition on all systems, so that
// information about files can be moved from one system
// to another portably. Not all bits apply to all systems.
// The only required bit is ModeDir for directories.
type FileMode uint32
// The defined file mode bits are the most significant bits of the FileMode.
// The nine least-significant bits are the standard Unix rwxrwxrwx permissions.
// The values of these bits should be considered part of the public API and
// may be used in wire protocols or disk representations: they must not be
// changed, although new bits might be added.
const (
// The single letters are the abbreviations
// used by the String method's formatting.
ModeDir FileMode = 1 << (32 - 1 - iota) // d: is a directory
ModeAppend // a: append-only
ModeExclusive // l: exclusive use
ModeTemporary // T: temporary file; Plan 9 only
ModeSymlink // L: symbolic link
ModeDevice // D: device file
ModeNamedPipe // p: named pipe (FIFO)
ModeSocket // S: Unix domain socket
ModeSetuid // u: setuid
ModeSetgid // g: setgid
ModeCharDevice // c: Unix character device, when ModeDevice is set
ModeSticky // t: sticky
ModeIrregular // ?: non-regular file; nothing else is known about this file
// Mask for the type bits. For regular files, none will be set.
ModeType = ModeDir | ModeSymlink | ModeNamedPipe | ModeSocket | ModeDevice | ModeCharDevice | ModeIrregular
ModePerm FileMode = 0777 // Unix permission bits
)
func (m FileMode) String() string {
const str = "dalTLDpSugct?"
var buf [32]byte // Mode is uint32.
w := 0
for i, c := range str {
if m&(1<<uint(32-1-i)) != 0 {
buf[w] = byte(c)
w++
}
}
if w == 0 {
buf[w] = '-'
w++
}
const rwx = "rwxrwxrwx"
for i, c := range rwx {
if m&(1<<uint(9-1-i)) != 0 {
buf[w] = byte(c)
} else {
buf[w] = '-'
}
w++
}
return string(buf[:w])
}
// IsDir reports whether m describes a directory.
// That is, it tests for the ModeDir bit being set in m.
func (m FileMode) IsDir() bool {
return m&ModeDir != 0
}
// IsRegular reports whether m describes a regular file.
// That is, it tests that no mode type bits are set.
func (m FileMode) IsRegular() bool {
return m&ModeType == 0
}
// Perm returns the Unix permission bits in m (m & ModePerm).
func (m FileMode) Perm() FileMode {
return m & ModePerm
}
// Type returns type bits in m (m & ModeType).
func (m FileMode) Type() FileMode {
return m & ModeType
}
// PathError records an error and the operation and file path that caused it.
type PathError struct {
Op string
Path string
Err error
}
func (e *PathError) Error() string { return e.Op + " " + e.Path + ": " + e.Err.Error() }
func (e *PathError) Unwrap() error { return e.Err }
// Timeout reports whether this error represents a timeout.
func (e *PathError) Timeout() bool {
t, ok := e.Err.(interface{ Timeout() bool })
return ok && t.Timeout()
}
|