Struct async_tar::Entry[][src]

pub struct Entry<R: Read + Unpin> { /* fields omitted */ }
Expand description

A read-only view into an entry of an archive.

This structure is a window into a portion of a borrowed archive which can be inspected. It acts as a file handle by implementing the Reader trait. An entry cannot be rewritten once inserted into an archive.

Implementations

Returns the path name for this entry.

This method may fail if the pathname is not valid Unicode and this is called on a Windows platform.

Note that this function will convert any \ characters to directory separators, and it will not always return the same value as self.header().path() as some archive formats have support for longer path names described in separate entries.

It is recommended to use this method instead of inspecting the header directly to ensure that various archive formats are handled correctly.

Returns the raw bytes listed for this entry.

Note that this function will convert any \ characters to directory separators, and it will not always return the same value as self.header().path_bytes() as some archive formats have support for longer path names described in separate entries.

Returns the link name for this entry, if any is found.

This method may fail if the pathname is not valid Unicode and this is called on a Windows platform. Ok(None) being returned, however, indicates that the link name was not present.

Note that this function will convert any \ characters to directory separators, and it will not always return the same value as self.header().link_name() as some archive formats have support for longer path names described in separate entries.

It is recommended to use this method instead of inspecting the header directly to ensure that various archive formats are handled correctly.

Returns the link name for this entry, in bytes, if listed.

Note that this will not always return the same value as self.header().link_name_bytes() as some archive formats have support for longer path names described in separate entries.

Returns an iterator over the pax extensions contained in this entry.

Pax extensions are a form of archive where extra metadata is stored in key/value pairs in entries before the entry they’re intended to describe. For example this can be used to describe long file name or other metadata like atime/ctime/mtime in more precision.

The returned iterator will yield key/value pairs for each extension.

None will be returned if this entry does not indicate that it itself contains extensions, or if there were no previous extensions describing it.

Note that global pax extensions are intended to be applied to all archive entries.

Also note that this function will read the entire entry if the entry itself is a list of extensions.

Returns access to the header of this entry in the archive.

This provides access to the metadata for this entry in the archive.

Returns the starting position, in bytes, of the header of this entry in the archive.

The header is always a contiguous section of 512 bytes, so if the underlying reader implements Seek, then the slice from header_pos to header_pos + 512 contains the raw header bytes.

Returns the starting position, in bytes, of the file of this entry in the archive.

If the file of this entry is continuous (e.g. not a sparse file), and if the underlying reader implements Seek, then the slice from file_pos to file_pos + entry_size contains the raw file bytes.

Writes this file to the specified location.

This function will write the entire contents of this file into the location specified by dst. Metadata will also be propagated to the path dst.

This function will create a file at the path dst, and it is required that the intermediate directories are created. Any existing file at the location dst will be overwritten.

Note: This function does not have as many sanity checks as Archive::unpack or Entry::unpack_in. As a result if you’re thinking of unpacking untrusted tarballs you may want to review the implementations of the previous two functions and perhaps implement similar logic yourself.

Examples

use async_std::fs::File;
use async_std::prelude::*;
use async_tar::Archive;

let mut ar = Archive::new(File::open("foo.tar").await?);
let mut entries = ar.entries()?;
let mut i = 0;
while let Some(file) = entries.next().await {
    let mut file = file?;
    file.unpack(format!("file-{}", i)).await?;
    i += 1;
}

Extracts this file under the specified path, avoiding security issues.

This function will write the entire contents of this file into the location obtained by appending the path of this file in the archive to dst, creating any intermediate directories if needed. Metadata will also be propagated to the path dst. Any existing file at the location dst will be overwritten.

This function carefully avoids writing outside of dst. If the file has a ‘..’ in its path, this function will skip it and return false.

Examples

use async_std::fs::File;
use async_tar::Archive;
use async_std::prelude::*;

let mut ar = Archive::new(File::open("foo.tar").await?);
let mut entries = ar.entries()?;
let mut i = 0;
while let Some(file) = entries.next().await {
    let mut file = file.unwrap();
    file.unpack_in("target").await?;
    i += 1;
}

Indicate whether extended file attributes (xattrs on Unix) are preserved when unpacking this entry.

This flag is disabled by default and is currently only implemented on Unix using xattr support. This may eventually be implemented for Windows, however, if other archive implementations are found which do this as well.

Indicate whether extended permissions (like suid on Unix) are preserved when unpacking this entry.

This flag is disabled by default and is currently only implemented on Unix.

Indicate whether access time information is preserved when unpacking this entry.

This flag is enabled by default.

Trait Implementations

Attempt to read from the AsyncRead into buf. Read more

Attempt to read from the AsyncRead into bufs using vectored IO operations. Read more

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more

Auto Trait Implementations

Blanket Implementations

Gets the TypeId of self. Read more

Reads some bytes from the byte stream. Read more

Like [read()][AsyncReadExt::read()], except it reads into a slice of buffers. Read more

Reads the entire contents and appends them to a Vec. Read more

Reads the entire contents and appends them to a String. Read more

Reads the exact number of bytes required to fill buf. Read more

Creates an adapter which will read at most limit bytes from it. Read more

Converts this [AsyncRead] into a [Stream] of bytes. Read more

Creates an adapter which will chain this stream with another. Read more

Boxes the reader and changes its type to dyn AsyncRead + Send + 'a. Read more

Immutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Performs the conversion.

Performs the conversion.

Reads some bytes from the byte stream. Read more

Like read, except that it reads into a slice of buffers. Read more

Reads all bytes from the byte stream. Read more

Reads all bytes from the byte stream and appends them into a string. Read more

Reads the exact number of bytes required to fill buf. Read more

Creates an adaptor which will read at most limit bytes from it. Read more

Creates a “by reference” adaptor for this instance of Read. Read more

Transforms this Read instance to a Stream over its bytes. Read more

Creates an adaptor which will chain this stream with another. 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.