Struct otter_api_tests::tempfile::TempPath [−][src]
pub struct TempPath { /* fields omitted */ }Expand description
A path to a named temporary file without an open file handle.
This is useful when the temporary file needs to be used by a child process, for example.
When dropped, the temporary file is deleted.
Implementations
Close and remove the temporary file.
Use this if you want to detect errors in deleting the file.
Errors
If the file cannot be deleted, Err is returned.
Examples
use tempfile::NamedTempFile; let file = NamedTempFile::new()?; // Close the file, but keep the path to it around. let path = file.into_temp_path(); // By closing the `TempPath` explicitly, we can check that it has // been deleted successfully. If we don't close it explicitly, the // file will still be deleted when `file` goes out of scope, but we // won't know whether deleting the file succeeded. path.close()?;
Persist the temporary file at the target path.
If a file exists at the target path, persist will atomically replace it.
If this method fails, it will return self in the resulting
PathPersistError.
Note: Temporary files cannot be persisted across filesystems. Also
neither the file contents nor the containing directory are
synchronized, so the update may not yet have reached the disk when
persist returns.
Security
Only use this method if you’re positive that a temporary file cleaner won’t have deleted your file. Otherwise, you might end up persisting an attacker controlled file.
Errors
If the file cannot be moved to the new location, Err is returned.
Examples
use tempfile::NamedTempFile; let mut file = NamedTempFile::new()?; writeln!(file, "Brian was here. Briefly.")?; let path = file.into_temp_path(); path.persist("./saved_file.txt")?;
pub fn persist_noclobber<P>(self, new_path: P) -> Result<(), PathPersistError> where
P: AsRef<Path>, [src]
pub fn persist_noclobber<P>(self, new_path: P) -> Result<(), PathPersistError> where
P: AsRef<Path>, [src]Persist the temporary file at the target path if and only if no file exists there.
If a file exists at the target path, fail. If this method fails, it will
return self in the resulting PathPersistError.
Note: Temporary files cannot be persisted across filesystems. Also Note: This method is not atomic. It can leave the original link to the temporary file behind.
Security
Only use this method if you’re positive that a temporary file cleaner won’t have deleted your file. Otherwise, you might end up persisting an attacker controlled file.
Errors
If the file cannot be moved to the new location or a file already exists
there, Err is returned.
Examples
use tempfile::NamedTempFile; let mut file = NamedTempFile::new()?; writeln!(file, "Brian was here. Briefly.")?; let path = file.into_temp_path(); path.persist_noclobber("./saved_file.txt")?;
Keep the temporary file from being deleted. This function will turn the temporary file into a non-temporary file without moving it.
Errors
On some platforms (e.g., Windows), we need to mark the file as non-temporary. This operation could fail.
Examples
use tempfile::NamedTempFile; let mut file = NamedTempFile::new()?; writeln!(file, "Brian was here. Briefly.")?; let path = file.into_temp_path(); let path = path.keep()?;
Methods from Deref<Target = Path>
Yields a &str slice if the Path is valid unicode.
This conversion may entail doing a check for UTF-8 validity. Note that validation is performed because non-UTF-8 strings are perfectly valid for some OS.
Examples
use std::path::Path; let path = Path::new("foo.txt"); assert_eq!(path.to_str(), Some("foo.txt"));
Converts a Path to a Cow<str>.
Any non-Unicode sequences are replaced with
U+FFFD REPLACEMENT CHARACTER.
Examples
Calling to_string_lossy on a Path with valid unicode:
use std::path::Path; let path = Path::new("foo.txt"); assert_eq!(path.to_string_lossy(), "foo.txt");
Had path contained invalid unicode, the to_string_lossy call might
have returned "fo�.txt".
Returns true if the Path is absolute, i.e., if it is independent of
the current directory.
-
On Unix, a path is absolute if it starts with the root, so
is_absoluteandhas_rootare equivalent. -
On Windows, a path is absolute if it has a prefix and starts with the root:
c:\windowsis absolute, whilec:tempand\tempare not.
Examples
use std::path::Path; assert!(!Path::new("foo.txt").is_absolute());
Returns true if the Path is relative, i.e., not absolute.
See is_absolute’s documentation for more details.
Examples
use std::path::Path; assert!(Path::new("foo.txt").is_relative());
Returns true if the Path has a root.
-
On Unix, a path has a root if it begins with
/. -
On Windows, a path has a root if it:
- has no prefix and begins with a separator, e.g.,
\windows - has a prefix followed by a separator, e.g.,
c:\windowsbut notc:windows - has any non-disk prefix, e.g.,
\\server\share
- has no prefix and begins with a separator, e.g.,
Examples
use std::path::Path; assert!(Path::new("/etc/passwd").has_root());
Returns the Path without its final component, if there is one.
Returns None if the path terminates in a root or prefix.
Examples
use std::path::Path; let path = Path::new("/foo/bar"); let parent = path.parent().unwrap(); assert_eq!(parent, Path::new("/foo")); let grand_parent = parent.parent().unwrap(); assert_eq!(grand_parent, Path::new("/")); assert_eq!(grand_parent.parent(), None);
Produces an iterator over Path and its ancestors.
The iterator will yield the Path that is returned if the parent method is used zero
or more times. That means, the iterator will yield &self, &self.parent().unwrap(),
&self.parent().unwrap().parent().unwrap() and so on. If the parent method returns
None, the iterator will do likewise. The iterator will always yield at least one value,
namely &self.
Examples
use std::path::Path; let mut ancestors = Path::new("/foo/bar").ancestors(); assert_eq!(ancestors.next(), Some(Path::new("/foo/bar"))); assert_eq!(ancestors.next(), Some(Path::new("/foo"))); assert_eq!(ancestors.next(), Some(Path::new("/"))); assert_eq!(ancestors.next(), None); let mut ancestors = Path::new("../foo/bar").ancestors(); assert_eq!(ancestors.next(), Some(Path::new("../foo/bar"))); assert_eq!(ancestors.next(), Some(Path::new("../foo"))); assert_eq!(ancestors.next(), Some(Path::new(".."))); assert_eq!(ancestors.next(), Some(Path::new(""))); assert_eq!(ancestors.next(), None);
Returns the final component of the Path, if there is one.
If the path is a normal file, this is the file name. If it’s the path of a directory, this is the directory name.
Returns None if the path terminates in ...
Examples
use std::path::Path; use std::ffi::OsStr; assert_eq!(Some(OsStr::new("bin")), Path::new("/usr/bin/").file_name()); assert_eq!(Some(OsStr::new("foo.txt")), Path::new("tmp/foo.txt").file_name()); assert_eq!(Some(OsStr::new("foo.txt")), Path::new("foo.txt/.").file_name()); assert_eq!(Some(OsStr::new("foo.txt")), Path::new("foo.txt/.//").file_name()); assert_eq!(None, Path::new("foo.txt/..").file_name()); assert_eq!(None, Path::new("/").file_name());
pub fn strip_prefix<P>(&self, base: P) -> Result<&Path, StripPrefixError> where
P: AsRef<Path>, 1.7.0[src]
pub fn strip_prefix<P>(&self, base: P) -> Result<&Path, StripPrefixError> where
P: AsRef<Path>, 1.7.0[src]Returns a path that, when joined onto base, yields self.
Errors
If base is not a prefix of self (i.e., starts_with
returns false), returns Err.
Examples
use std::path::{Path, PathBuf}; let path = Path::new("/test/haha/foo.txt"); assert_eq!(path.strip_prefix("/"), Ok(Path::new("test/haha/foo.txt"))); assert_eq!(path.strip_prefix("/test"), Ok(Path::new("haha/foo.txt"))); assert_eq!(path.strip_prefix("/test/"), Ok(Path::new("haha/foo.txt"))); assert_eq!(path.strip_prefix("/test/haha/foo.txt"), Ok(Path::new(""))); assert_eq!(path.strip_prefix("/test/haha/foo.txt/"), Ok(Path::new(""))); assert!(path.strip_prefix("test").is_err()); assert!(path.strip_prefix("/haha").is_err()); let prefix = PathBuf::from("/test/"); assert_eq!(path.strip_prefix(prefix), Ok(Path::new("haha/foo.txt")));
Determines whether base is a prefix of self.
Only considers whole path components to match.
Examples
use std::path::Path; let path = Path::new("/etc/passwd"); assert!(path.starts_with("/etc")); assert!(path.starts_with("/etc/")); assert!(path.starts_with("/etc/passwd")); assert!(path.starts_with("/etc/passwd/")); // extra slash is okay assert!(path.starts_with("/etc/passwd///")); // multiple extra slashes are okay assert!(!path.starts_with("/e")); assert!(!path.starts_with("/etc/passwd.txt")); assert!(!Path::new("/etc/foo.rs").starts_with("/etc/foo"));
Determines whether child is a suffix of self.
Only considers whole path components to match.
Examples
use std::path::Path; let path = Path::new("/etc/resolv.conf"); assert!(path.ends_with("resolv.conf")); assert!(path.ends_with("etc/resolv.conf")); assert!(path.ends_with("/etc/resolv.conf")); assert!(!path.ends_with("/resolv.conf")); assert!(!path.ends_with("conf")); // use .extension() instead
Extracts the stem (non-extension) portion of self.file_name.
The stem is:
None, if there is no file name;- The entire file name if there is no embedded
.; - The entire file name if the file name begins with
.and has no other.s within; - Otherwise, the portion of the file name before the final
.
Examples
use std::path::Path; assert_eq!("foo", Path::new("foo.rs").file_stem().unwrap()); assert_eq!("foo.tar", Path::new("foo.tar.gz").file_stem().unwrap());
Extracts the extension of self.file_name, if possible.
The extension is:
None, if there is no file name;None, if there is no embedded.;None, if the file name begins with.and has no other.s within;- Otherwise, the portion of the file name after the final
.
Examples
use std::path::Path; assert_eq!("rs", Path::new("foo.rs").extension().unwrap()); assert_eq!("gz", Path::new("foo.tar.gz").extension().unwrap());
Creates an owned PathBuf with path adjoined to self.
See PathBuf::push for more details on what it means to adjoin a path.
Examples
use std::path::{Path, PathBuf}; assert_eq!(Path::new("/etc").join("passwd"), PathBuf::from("/etc/passwd"));
Creates an owned PathBuf like self but with the given file name.
See PathBuf::set_file_name for more details.
Examples
use std::path::{Path, PathBuf}; let path = Path::new("/tmp/foo.txt"); assert_eq!(path.with_file_name("bar.txt"), PathBuf::from("/tmp/bar.txt")); let path = Path::new("/tmp"); assert_eq!(path.with_file_name("var"), PathBuf::from("/var"));
Creates an owned PathBuf like self but with the given extension.
See PathBuf::set_extension for more details.
Examples
use std::path::{Path, PathBuf}; let path = Path::new("foo.rs"); assert_eq!(path.with_extension("txt"), PathBuf::from("foo.txt")); let path = Path::new("foo.tar.gz"); assert_eq!(path.with_extension(""), PathBuf::from("foo.tar")); assert_eq!(path.with_extension("xz"), PathBuf::from("foo.tar.xz")); assert_eq!(path.with_extension("").with_extension("txt"), PathBuf::from("foo.txt"));
pub fn components(&self) -> Components<'_>ⓘNotable traits for Components<'a>
impl<'a> Iterator for Components<'a> type Item = Component<'a>;1.0.0[src]
pub fn components(&self) -> Components<'_>ⓘNotable traits for Components<'a>
impl<'a> Iterator for Components<'a> type Item = Component<'a>;1.0.0[src]Produces an iterator over the Components of the path.
When parsing the path, there is a small amount of normalization:
-
Repeated separators are ignored, so
a/banda//bboth haveaandbas components. -
Occurrences of
.are normalized away, except if they are at the beginning of the path. For example,a/./b,a/b/,a/b/.anda/ball haveaandbas components, but./a/bstarts with an additionalCurDircomponent. -
A trailing slash is normalized away,
/a/band/a/b/are equivalent.
Note that no other normalization takes place; in particular, a/c
and a/b/../c are distinct, to account for the possibility that b
is a symbolic link (so its parent isn’t a).
Examples
use std::path::{Path, Component}; use std::ffi::OsStr; let mut components = Path::new("/tmp/foo.txt").components(); assert_eq!(components.next(), Some(Component::RootDir)); assert_eq!(components.next(), Some(Component::Normal(OsStr::new("tmp")))); assert_eq!(components.next(), Some(Component::Normal(OsStr::new("foo.txt")))); assert_eq!(components.next(), None)
Produces an iterator over the path’s components viewed as OsStr
slices.
For more information about the particulars of how the path is separated
into components, see components.
Examples
use std::path::{self, Path}; use std::ffi::OsStr; let mut it = Path::new("/tmp/foo.txt").iter(); assert_eq!(it.next(), Some(OsStr::new(&path::MAIN_SEPARATOR.to_string()))); assert_eq!(it.next(), Some(OsStr::new("tmp"))); assert_eq!(it.next(), Some(OsStr::new("foo.txt"))); assert_eq!(it.next(), None)
Returns an object that implements Display for safely printing paths
that may contain non-Unicode data. This may perform lossy conversion,
depending on the platform. If you would like an implementation which
escapes the path please use Debug instead.
Examples
use std::path::Path; let path = Path::new("/tmp/foo.rs"); println!("{}", path.display());
Queries the file system to get information about a file, directory, etc.
This function will traverse symbolic links to query information about the destination file.
This is an alias to fs::metadata.
Examples
use std::path::Path; let path = Path::new("/Minas/tirith"); let metadata = path.metadata().expect("metadata call failed"); println!("{:?}", metadata.file_type());
Queries the metadata about a file without following symlinks.
This is an alias to fs::symlink_metadata.
Examples
use std::path::Path; let path = Path::new("/Minas/tirith"); let metadata = path.symlink_metadata().expect("symlink_metadata call failed"); println!("{:?}", metadata.file_type());
Returns the canonical, absolute form of the path with all intermediate components normalized and symbolic links resolved.
This is an alias to fs::canonicalize.
Examples
use std::path::{Path, PathBuf}; let path = Path::new("/foo/test/../test/bar.rs"); assert_eq!(path.canonicalize().unwrap(), PathBuf::from("/foo/test/bar.rs"));
Reads a symbolic link, returning the file that the link points to.
This is an alias to fs::read_link.
Examples
use std::path::Path; let path = Path::new("/laputa/sky_castle.rs"); let path_link = path.read_link().expect("read_link call failed");
Returns an iterator over the entries within a directory.
The iterator will yield instances of io::Result<fs::DirEntry>. New
errors may be encountered after an iterator is initially constructed.
This is an alias to fs::read_dir.
Examples
use std::path::Path; let path = Path::new("/laputa"); for entry in path.read_dir().expect("read_dir call failed") { if let Ok(entry) = entry { println!("{:?}", entry.path()); } }
Returns true if the path points at an existing entity.
This function will traverse symbolic links to query information about the destination file.
If you cannot access the metadata of the file, e.g. because of a
permission error or broken symbolic links, this will return false.
Examples
use std::path::Path; assert!(!Path::new("does_not_exist.txt").exists());
See Also
This is a convenience function that coerces errors to false. If you want to
check errors, call fs::metadata.
🔬 This is a nightly-only experimental API. (path_try_exists)
path_try_exists)Returns Ok(true) if the path points at an existing entity.
This function will traverse symbolic links to query information about the
destination file. In case of broken symbolic links this will return Ok(false).
As opposed to the exists() method, this one doesn’t silently ignore errors
unrelated to the path not existing. (E.g. it will return Err(_) in case of permission
denied on some of the parent directories.)
Examples
#![feature(path_try_exists)] use std::path::Path; assert!(!Path::new("does_not_exist.txt").try_exists().expect("Can't check existence of file does_not_exist.txt")); assert!(Path::new("/root/secret_file.txt").try_exists().is_err());
Returns true if the path exists on disk and is pointing at a regular file.
This function will traverse symbolic links to query information about the destination file.
If you cannot access the metadata of the file, e.g. because of a
permission error or broken symbolic links, this will return false.
Examples
use std::path::Path; assert_eq!(Path::new("./is_a_directory/").is_file(), false); assert_eq!(Path::new("a_file.txt").is_file(), true);
See Also
This is a convenience function that coerces errors to false. If you want to
check errors, call fs::metadata and handle its Result. Then call
fs::Metadata::is_file if it was Ok.
When the goal is simply to read from (or write to) the source, the most
reliable way to test the source can be read (or written to) is to open
it. Only using is_file can break workflows like diff <( prog_a ) on
a Unix-like system for example. See fs::File::open or
fs::OpenOptions::open for more information.
Returns true if the path exists on disk and is pointing at a directory.
This function will traverse symbolic links to query information about the destination file.
If you cannot access the metadata of the file, e.g. because of a
permission error or broken symbolic links, this will return false.
Examples
use std::path::Path; assert_eq!(Path::new("./is_a_directory/").is_dir(), true); assert_eq!(Path::new("a_file.txt").is_dir(), false);
See Also
This is a convenience function that coerces errors to false. If you want to
check errors, call fs::metadata and handle its Result. Then call
fs::Metadata::is_dir if it was Ok.
Trait Implementations
Performs the conversion.
Auto Trait Implementations
impl RefUnwindSafe for TempPathimpl UnwindSafe for TempPathBlanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
pub fn into_any(self: Box<T, Global>) -> Box<dyn Any + 'static, Global>ⓘNotable traits for Box<R, Global>
impl<R> Read for Box<R, Global> where
R: Read + ?Sized, impl<W> Write for Box<W, Global> where
W: Write + ?Sized, impl<I, A> Iterator for Box<I, A> where
A: Allocator,
I: Iterator + ?Sized, type Item = <I as Iterator>::Item;impl<F, A> Future for Box<F, A> where
A: Allocator + 'static,
F: Future + Unpin + ?Sized, type Output = <F as Future>::Output;
pub fn into_any(self: Box<T, Global>) -> Box<dyn Any + 'static, Global>ⓘNotable traits for Box<R, Global>
impl<R> Read for Box<R, Global> where
R: Read + ?Sized, impl<W> Write for Box<W, Global> where
W: Write + ?Sized, impl<I, A> Iterator for Box<I, A> where
A: Allocator,
I: Iterator + ?Sized, type Item = <I as Iterator>::Item;impl<F, A> Future for Box<F, A> where
A: Allocator + 'static,
F: Future + Unpin + ?Sized, type Output = <F as Future>::Output;Convert Box<dyn Trait> (where Trait: Downcast) to Box<dyn Any>. Box<dyn Any> can
then be further downcast into Box<ConcreteType> where ConcreteType implements Trait. Read more
pub fn into_any_rc(self: Rc<T>) -> Rc<dyn Any + 'static>
pub fn into_any_rc(self: Rc<T>) -> Rc<dyn Any + 'static>Convert Rc<Trait> (where Trait: Downcast) to Rc<Any>. Rc<Any> can then be
further downcast into Rc<ConcreteType> where ConcreteType implements Trait. Read more
Convert &Trait (where Trait: Downcast) to &Any. This is needed since Rust cannot
generate &Any’s vtable from &Trait’s. Read more
pub fn as_any_mut(&mut self) -> &mut (dyn Any + 'static)
pub fn as_any_mut(&mut self) -> &mut (dyn Any + 'static)Convert &mut Trait (where Trait: Downcast) to &Any. This is needed since Rust cannot
generate &mut Any’s vtable from &mut Trait’s. Read more
impl<A> DynCastExt for A
impl<A> DynCastExt for Apub fn dyn_cast<T>(
self
) -> Result<<A as DynCastExtHelper<T>>::Target, <A as DynCastExtHelper<T>>::Source> where
T: ?Sized,
A: DynCastExtHelper<T>,
pub fn dyn_cast<T>(
self
) -> Result<<A as DynCastExtHelper<T>>::Target, <A as DynCastExtHelper<T>>::Source> where
T: ?Sized,
A: DynCastExtHelper<T>, Use this to cast from one trait object type to another. Read more
pub fn dyn_upcast<T>(self) -> <A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<T, T>>::Target where
T: ?Sized,
A: DynCastExtAdvHelper<T, T, Source = <A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<T, T>>::Target>,
pub fn dyn_upcast<T>(self) -> <A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<T, T>>::Target where
T: ?Sized,
A: DynCastExtAdvHelper<T, T, Source = <A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<T, T>>::Target>, Use this to upcast a trait to one of its supertraits. Read more
pub fn dyn_cast_adv<F, T>(
self
) -> Result<<A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<F, T>>::Target, <A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<F, T>>::Source> where
T: ?Sized,
A: DynCastExtAdvHelper<F, T>,
F: ?Sized,
pub fn dyn_cast_adv<F, T>(
self
) -> Result<<A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<F, T>>::Target, <A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<F, T>>::Source> where
T: ?Sized,
A: DynCastExtAdvHelper<F, T>,
F: ?Sized, pub fn dyn_cast_with_config<C>(
self
) -> Result<<A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<<C as DynCastConfig>::Source, <C as DynCastConfig>::Target>>::Target, <A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<<C as DynCastConfig>::Source, <C as DynCastConfig>::Target>>::Source> where
C: DynCastConfig,
A: DynCastExtAdvHelper<<C as DynCastConfig>::Source, <C as DynCastConfig>::Target>,
pub fn dyn_cast_with_config<C>(
self
) -> Result<<A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<<C as DynCastConfig>::Source, <C as DynCastConfig>::Target>>::Target, <A as DynCastExtAdvHelper<<C as DynCastConfig>::Source, <C as DynCastConfig>::Target>>::Source> where
C: DynCastConfig,
A: DynCastExtAdvHelper<<C as DynCastConfig>::Source, <C as DynCastConfig>::Target>, Use this to cast from one trait object type to another. With this method the type parameter is a config type that uniquely specifies which cast should be preformed. Read more
fn instrument(self, span: Span) -> Instrumented<Self>ⓘNotable traits for Instrumented<T>
impl<T> Future for Instrumented<T> where
T: Future, type Output = <T as Future>::Output;[src]
fn instrument(self, span: Span) -> Instrumented<Self>ⓘNotable traits for Instrumented<T>
impl<T> Future for Instrumented<T> where
T: Future, type Output = <T as Future>::Output;[src]Instruments this type with the provided Span, returning an
Instrumented wrapper. Read more
fn in_current_span(self) -> Instrumented<Self>ⓘNotable traits for Instrumented<T>
impl<T> Future for Instrumented<T> where
T: Future, type Output = <T as Future>::Output;[src]
fn in_current_span(self) -> Instrumented<Self>ⓘNotable traits for Instrumented<T>
impl<T> Future for Instrumented<T> where
T: Future, type Output = <T as Future>::Output;[src]pub fn vzip(self) -> V