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Struct cap_std::fs::Dir

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pub struct Dir { /* private fields */ }
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A reference to an open directory on a filesystem.

This does not directly correspond to anything in std, however its methods correspond to the functions in std::fs and the constructor methods for std::fs::File.

Unlike std::fs, this API’s canonicalize returns a relative path since absolute paths don’t interoperate well with the capability model.

Implementations

Constructs a new instance of Self from the given std::fs::File.

To prevent race conditions on Windows, the file must be opened without FILE_SHARE_DELETE.

This grants access the resources the std::fs::File instance already has access to.

Consumes self and returns a std::fs::File.

Attempts to open a file in read-only mode.

This corresponds to std::fs::File::open, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Opens a file at path with the options specified by options.

This corresponds to std::fs::OpenOptions::open.

Instead of being a method on OpenOptions, this is a method on Dir, and it only accesses paths relative to self.

Attempts to open a directory.

Creates a new, empty directory at the provided path.

This corresponds to std::fs::create_dir, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Recursively create a directory and all of its parent components if they are missing.

This corresponds to std::fs::create_dir_all, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Creates the specified directory with the options configured in this builder.

This corresponds to std::fs::DirBuilder::create.

Opens a file in write-only mode.

This corresponds to std::fs::File::create, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Returns the canonical form of a path with all intermediate components normalized and symbolic links resolved.

This corresponds to std::fs::canonicalize, but instead of returning an absolute path, returns a path relative to the directory represented by self.

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 corresponds to std::fs::copy, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Creates a new hard link on a filesystem.

This corresponds to std::fs::hard_link, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Given a path, query the file system to get information about a file, directory, etc.

This corresponds to std::fs::metadata, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Queries metadata about the underlying directory.

This is similar to std::fs::File::metadata, but for Dir rather than for File.

Returns an iterator over the entries within self.

Returns an iterator over the entries within a directory.

This corresponds to std::fs::read_dir, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Read the entire contents of a file into a bytes vector.

This corresponds to std::fs::read, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Reads a symbolic link, returning the file that the link points to.

This corresponds to std::fs::read_link, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Read the entire contents of a file into a string.

This corresponds to std::fs::read_to_string, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Removes an empty directory.

This corresponds to std::fs::remove_dir, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Removes a directory at this path, after removing all its contents. Use carefully!

This corresponds to std::fs::remove_dir_all, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Remove the directory referenced by self and consume self.

Even though this implementation works in terms of handles as much as possible, removal is not guaranteed to be atomic with respect to a concurrent rename of the directory.

Removes the directory referenced by self, after removing all its contents, and consume self. Use carefully!

Even though this implementation works in terms of handles as much as possible, removal is not guaranteed to be atomic with respect to a concurrent rename of the directory.

Removes a file from a filesystem.

This corresponds to std::fs::remove_file, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Rename a file or directory to a new name, replacing the original file if to already exists.

This corresponds to std::fs::rename, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Changes the permissions found on a file or a directory.

This corresponds to std::fs::set_permissions, but only accesses paths relative to self. Also, on some platforms, this function may fail if the file or directory cannot be opened for reading or writing first.

Query the metadata about a file without following symlinks.

This corresponds to std::fs::symlink_metadata, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Write a slice as the entire contents of a file.

This corresponds to std::fs::write, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Creates a new symbolic link on a filesystem.

The original argument provides the target of the symlink. The link argument provides the name of the created symlink.

Despite the argument ordering, original is not resolved relative to self here. link is resolved relative to self, and original is not resolved within this function.

The link path is resolved when the symlink is dereferenced, relative to the directory that contains it.

This corresponds to std::os::unix::fs::symlink, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Creates a new UnixListener bound to the specified socket.

This corresponds to std::os::unix::net::UnixListener::bind, but only accesses paths relative to self.

XXX: This function is not yet implemented.

Connects to the socket named by path.

This corresponds to std::os::unix::net::UnixStream::connect, but only accesses paths relative to self.

XXX: This function is not yet implemented.

Creates a Unix datagram socket bound to the given path.

This corresponds to std::os::unix::net::UnixDatagram::bind, but only accesses paths relative to self.

XXX: This function is not yet implemented.

Connects the socket to the specified address.

This corresponds to std::os::unix::net::UnixDatagram::connect, but only accesses paths relative to self.

XXX: This function is not yet implemented.

Sends data on the socket to the specified address.

This corresponds to std::os::unix::net::UnixDatagram::send_to, but only accesses paths relative to self.

XXX: This function is not yet implemented.

Creates a new Dir instance that shares the same underlying file handle as the existing Dir instance.

Returns true if the path points at an existing entity.

This corresponds to std::path::Path::exists, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Returns true if the path points at an existing entity.

This corresponds to std::fs::try_exists, but only accesses paths relative to self.

API correspondence with std

This API is not yet stable in std, but is likely to be. For more information, see the tracker issue.

Returns true if the path exists on disk and is pointing at a regular file.

This corresponds to std::path::Path::is_file, but only accesses paths relative to self.

Checks if path is a directory.

This is similar to std::path::Path::is_dir in that it checks if path relative to Dir is a directory. This function will traverse symbolic links to query information about the destination file. In case of broken symbolic links, this will return false.

Constructs a new instance of Self by opening the given path as a directory using the host process’ ambient authority.

Ambient Authority

This function is not sandboxed and may access any path that the host process has access to.

Constructs a new instance of Self by opening the parent directory (aka “..”) of self, using the host process’ ambient authority.

Ambient Authority

This function accesses a directory outside of the self subtree.

Recursively create a directory and all of its parent components if they are missing, using the host process’ ambient authority.

Ambient Authority

This function is not sandboxed and may access any path that the host process has access to.

Construct a new instance of Self from existing directory file descriptor.

This can be useful when interacting with other libraries and or C/C++ code which has invoked openat(..., O_DIRECTORY) external to this crate.

Trait Implementations

Borrows the file descriptor. Read more

Extracts the raw file descriptor. Read more

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more

Constructs a new instance of Self from the given file descriptor. Read more

Constructs a new instance of Self from the given file descriptor converted from into_owned. Read more

Constructs a new instance of Self from the given raw file descriptor. Read more

Consumes this object, returning the underlying file descriptor. Read more

Consumes this object, returning the raw underlying file descriptor. Read more

Auto Trait Implementations

Blanket Implementations

Gets the TypeId of self. Read more

Borrows the reference. Read more

Return a borrowing view of a resource which dereferences to a &Target. Read more

Extracts the grip.

Returns the raw value.

Extracts the raw grip.

Returns the raw value.

Borrows the reference.

Return a borrowing view of a resource which dereferences to a &Target. Read more

Immutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Returns the argument unchanged.

Constructs a new instance of Self from the given filelike object. Read more

Constructs a new instance of Self from the given filelike object converted from into_owned. Read more

Consume an OwnedGrip and convert into a Self.

Constructs Self from the raw value. Read more

Consume an RawGrip and convert into a Self. Read more

Constructs Self from the raw value. Read more

Constructs a new instance of Self from the given socketlike object.

Constructs a new instance of Self from the given socketlike object converted from into_owned. Read more

Calls U::from(self).

That is, this conversion is whatever the implementation of From<T> for U chooses to do.

Consumes this object, returning the underlying filelike object. Read more

Consume self and convert into an OwnedGrip.

Returns the raw value.

Consume self and convert into an RawGrip.

Returns the raw value.

Consumes this object, returning the underlying socketlike object.

Set the last access and last modification timestamps of an open file handle. Read more

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.

Performs the conversion.

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.

Performs the conversion.