2019-06-19 09:35:53 +03:00
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<!-- cargo-sync-readme start -->
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2019-06-01 18:19:18 +03:00
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The purpose of this crate is to make it a bit more ergonomic for portable
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applications that need to work with the platform level `RawFd` and
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`RawHandle` types.
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Rather than conditionally using `RawFd` and `RawHandle`, the `FileDescriptor`
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type can be used to manage ownership, duplicate, read and write.
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## FileDescriptor
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This is a bit of a contrived example, but demonstrates how to avoid
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the conditional code that would otherwise be required to deal with
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calling `as_raw_fd` and `as_raw_handle`:
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2019-06-19 09:35:53 +03:00
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```
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2021-05-24 00:24:01 +03:00
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use filedescriptor::{FileDescriptor, FromRawFileDescriptor, Result};
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2019-06-01 18:19:18 +03:00
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use std::io::Write;
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2021-05-24 00:24:01 +03:00
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fn get_stdout() -> Result<FileDescriptor> {
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2019-06-01 18:19:18 +03:00
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let stdout = std::io::stdout();
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let handle = stdout.lock();
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FileDescriptor::dup(&handle)
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}
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2021-05-24 00:24:01 +03:00
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fn print_something() -> Result<()> {
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2019-06-01 18:19:18 +03:00
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get_stdout()?.write(b"hello")?;
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Ok(())
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}
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```
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## Pipe
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The `Pipe` type makes it more convenient to create a pipe and manage
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the lifetime of both the read and write ends of that pipe.
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2019-06-19 09:35:53 +03:00
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```
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2019-06-01 18:19:18 +03:00
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use filedescriptor::Pipe;
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2019-06-19 09:35:53 +03:00
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use std::io::{Read, Write};
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2019-06-01 18:19:18 +03:00
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let mut pipe = Pipe::new()?;
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pipe.write.write(b"hello")?;
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drop(pipe.write);
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let mut s = String::new();
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pipe.read.read_to_string(&mut s)?;
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assert_eq!(s, "hello");
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```
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2019-06-19 09:35:53 +03:00
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## Socketpair
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The `socketpair` function returns a pair of connected `SOCK_STREAM`
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sockets and functions both on posix and windows systems.
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```
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use std::io::{Read, Write};
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let (mut a, mut b) = filedescriptor::socketpair()?;
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a.write(b"hello")?;
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drop(a);
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let mut s = String::new();
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b.read_to_string(&mut s)?;
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assert_eq!(s, "hello");
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```
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## Polling
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The `mio` crate offers powerful and scalable IO multiplexing, but there
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are some situations where `mio` doesn't fit. The `filedescriptor` crate
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offers a `poll(2)` compatible interface suitable for testing the readiness
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of a set of file descriptors. On unix systems this is a very thin wrapper
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around `poll(2)`, except on macOS where it is actually a wrapper around
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the `select(2)` interface. On Windows systems the winsock `WSAPoll`
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function is used instead.
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```
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use filedescriptor::*;
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use std::time::Duration;
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use std::io::{Read, Write};
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let (mut a, mut b) = filedescriptor::socketpair()?;
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let mut poll_array = [pollfd {
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fd: a.as_socket_descriptor(),
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events: POLLIN,
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revents: 0
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}];
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// sleeps for 20 milliseconds because `a` is not yet ready
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assert_eq!(poll(&mut poll_array, Some(Duration::from_millis(20)))?, 0);
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b.write(b"hello")?;
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// Now a is ready for read
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assert_eq!(poll(&mut poll_array, Some(Duration::from_millis(20)))?, 1);
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```
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<!-- cargo-sync-readme end -->
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