fs
only.Expand description
Asynchronous file and standard stream adaptation.
This module contains utility methods and adapter types for input/output to
files or standard streams (Stdin
, Stdout
, Stderr
), and
filesystem manipulation, for use within (and only within) a Tokio runtime.
Tasks run by worker threads should not block, as this could delay
servicing reactor events. Portable filesystem operations are blocking,
however. This module offers adapters which use a blocking
annotation
to inform the runtime that a blocking operation is required. When
necessary, this allows the runtime to convert the current thread from a
worker to a backup thread, where blocking is acceptable.
§Usage
Where possible, users should prefer the provided asynchronous-specific
traits such as AsyncRead
, or methods returning a Future
or Poll
type. Adaptions also extend to traits like std::io::Read
where methods
return std::io::Result
. Be warned that these adapted methods may return
std::io::ErrorKind::WouldBlock
if a worker thread can not be converted
to a backup thread immediately.
Modules§
- OS-specific functionality.
Structs§
- Entries returned by the
ReadDir
stream. - A reference to an open file on the filesystem.
- Options and flags which can be used to configure how a file is opened.
- Stream of the entries in a directory.
Functions§
- Returns the canonical, absolute form of a path with all intermediate components normalized and symbolic links resolved.
- Creates a new, empty directory at the provided path
- Recursively create a directory and all of its parent components if they are missing.
- Creates a new hard link on the filesystem.
- Given a path, query the file system to get information about a file, directory, etc.
- Read the entire contents of a file into a bytes vector.
- Returns a stream over the entries within a directory.
- Reads a symbolic link, returning the file that the link points to.
- Creates a future which will open a file for reading and read the entire contents into a string and return said string.
- Removes an existing, empty directory.
- Removes a directory at this path, after removing all its contents. Use carefully!
- Removes a file from the filesystem.
- Rename a file or directory to a new name, replacing the original file if
to
already exists. - Changes the permissions found on a file or a directory.
- Queries the file system metadata for a path.
- Creates a future that will open a file for writing and write the entire contents of
contents
to it.