Otherwise, the behaviour can lead to unexpected results, resulting
in removing an entire tree that's not necessarily under the root.
Furthermore, this change is needed if are to properly handle dir
symlinks on Windows. Without explicitly requiring that a directory
or file is opened with `FILE_OPEN_REPARSE_POINT`, Windows automatically
dereferences all symlinks along the way. This commit adds another
option to `OpenDirOptions`, namely `.no_follow`, which defaults to
`false` and can be used to specifically open a directory symlink on
Windows or call `openat` with `O_NOFOLLOW` flag in POSIX.
This way `std.fs.symlinkAbsolute` becomes cross-platform and we can
legally include `SymlinkFlags` as an argument that's only used on
Windows. Also, now `std.os.symlink` generates a compile error on
Windows with a message to instead use `std.os.windows.CreateSymbolicLink`.
Finally, this PR also reshuffles the tests between `std.os.test` and
`std.fs.test`.
This is direct result of review comments left by andrewrk and
daurnimator. It makes sense to map `ENOTCAPABLE` into a more generic
`error.AccessDenied`.
This commit adds `error.NotCapable` enum value and makes sure that
every applicable WASI syscall that can return `ENOTCAPABLE` errno
remaps it to `error.NotCapable.
Also, add more informative `@compileError` in a few `std.os` functions
that would otherwise yield a cryptic compile error when targeting
WASI. Finally, enhance docs in a few places and add test case for
`fstatat`.
Adds Windows stub (still needs to be implemented on Windows),
adds WASI implementation, adds unit test testing basic chain of
ops: create file -> symlink -> readlink.
* improve docs
* add TODO comments for things that don't have open issues
* remove redundant namespacing of struct fields
* guard against ioctl returning EINTR
* remove the general std.os.ioctl function in favor of the specific
ioctl_SIOCGIFINDEX function. This allows us to have a more precise
error set, and more type-safe API.
Remove the constants that assume a base unit in favor of explicit
x_per_y constants.
nanosecond calendar timestamps now use i128 for the type. This affects
fs.File.Stat, std.time.nanoTimestamp, and fs.File.updateTimes.
calendar timestamps are now signed, because the value can be less than
the epoch (the user can set their computer time to whatever they wish).
implement std.os.clock_gettime for Windows when clock id is
CLOCK_CALENDAR.
This rather large commit adds/fixes missing WASI functionality
in `libstd` needed to pass the `libstd` tests. As such, now by
default tests targeting `wasm32-wasi` target are enabled in
`test/tests.zig` module. However, they can be disabled by passing
the `-Dskip-wasi=true` flag when invoking the `zig build test`
command. When the flag is set to `false`, i.e., when WASI tests are
included, `wasmtime` with `--dir=.` is used as the default testing
command.
Since the majority of `libstd` tests were relying on `fs.cwd()`
call to get current working directory handle wrapped in `Dir`
struct, in order to make the tests WASI-friendly, `fs.cwd()`
call was replaced with `testing.getTestDir()` function which
resolved to either `fs.cwd()` for non-WASI targets, or tries to
fetch the preopen list from the WASI runtime and extract a
preopen for '.' path.
The summary of changes introduced by this commit:
* implement `Dir.makeDir` and `Dir.openDir` targeting WASI
* implement `Dir.deleteFile` and `Dir.deleteDir` targeting WASI
* fix `os.close` and map errors in `unlinkat`
* move WASI-specific `mkdirat` and `unlinkat` from `std.fs.wasi`
to `std.os` module
* implement `lseek_{SET, CUR, END}` targeting WASI
* implement `futimens` targeting WASI
* implement `ftruncate` targeting WASI
* implement `readv`, `writev`, `pread{v}`, `pwrite{v}` targeting WASI
* make sure ANSI escape codes are _not_ used in stderr or stdout
in WASI, as WASI always sanitizes stderr, and sanitizes stdout if
fd is a TTY
* fix specifying WASI rights when opening/creating files/dirs
* tweak `AtomicFile` to be WASI-compatible
* implement `os.renameatWasi` for WASI-compliant `os.renameat` function
* implement sleep() targeting WASI
* fix `process.getEnvMap` targeting WASI
According to documentation ETIMEDOUT (110) is a valid error code for the read function. I just had my long-running (been running for about 7 weeks) network program crash because it did not handle the ETIMEDOUT error code from "read".
Before it was possible for .intended_io_mode = .blocking,
.capable_io_mode = .evented, and then the implementation would put a
request on the fs thread, which is the wrong behavior. Now it always
calls the appropriate WriteFile/ReadFile function, passing the intended
io mode directly as a parameter.
This makes the behavior tests pass on Windows with --test-evented-io.