pub trait AsyncWriteExt: AsyncWrite {
    fn flush(&mut self) -> Flush<'_, Self>Notable traits for Flush<'_, W>impl<W> Future for Flush<'_, W> where
    W: AsyncWrite + ?Sized + Unpin
type Output = Result<()>;

    where
        Self: Unpin
, { ... }
fn close(&mut self) -> Close<'_, Self>Notable traits for Close<'_, W>impl<W: AsyncWrite + ?Sized + Unpin> Future for Close<'_, W> type Output = Result<()>;
    where
        Self: Unpin
, { ... }
fn write<'a>(&'a mut self, buf: &'a [u8]) -> Write<'a, Self>Notable traits for Write<'_, W>impl<W: AsyncWrite + ?Sized + Unpin> Future for Write<'_, W> type Output = Result<usize>;
    where
        Self: Unpin
, { ... }
fn write_vectored<'a>(
        &'a mut self,
        bufs: &'a [IoSlice<'a>]
    ) -> WriteVectored<'a, Self>Notable traits for WriteVectored<'_, W>impl<W: AsyncWrite + ?Sized + Unpin> Future for WriteVectored<'_, W> type Output = Result<usize>;
    where
        Self: Unpin
, { ... }
fn write_all<'a>(&'a mut self, buf: &'a [u8]) -> WriteAll<'a, Self>Notable traits for WriteAll<'_, W>impl<W: AsyncWrite + ?Sized + Unpin> Future for WriteAll<'_, W> type Output = Result<()>;
    where
        Self: Unpin
, { ... }
fn write_all_vectored<'a>(
        &'a mut self,
        bufs: &'a mut [IoSlice<'a>]
    ) -> WriteAllVectored<'a, Self>Notable traits for WriteAllVectored<'_, W>impl<W: AsyncWrite + ?Sized + Unpin> Future for WriteAllVectored<'_, W> type Output = Result<()>;
    where
        Self: Unpin
, { ... }
fn compat_write(self) -> Compat<Self>Notable traits for Compat<R>impl<R: AsyncRead03 + Unpin> Read for Compat<R>impl<W: AsyncWrite03 + Unpin> Write for Compat<W>
    where
        Self: Sized + Unpin
, { ... }
fn into_sink<Item: AsRef<[u8]>>(self) -> IntoSink<Self, Item>
    where
        Self: Sized
, { ... } }
This is supported on crate feature io only.
Expand description

An extension trait which adds utility methods to AsyncWrite types.

Provided methods

Creates a future which will entirely flush this AsyncWrite.

Examples
use futures::io::{AllowStdIo, AsyncWriteExt};
use std::io::{BufWriter, Cursor};

let mut output = vec![0u8; 5];

{
    let writer = Cursor::new(&mut output);
    let mut buffered = AllowStdIo::new(BufWriter::new(writer));
    buffered.write_all(&[1, 2]).await?;
    buffered.write_all(&[3, 4]).await?;
    buffered.flush().await?;
}

assert_eq!(output, [1, 2, 3, 4, 0]);

Creates a future which will entirely close this AsyncWrite.

Creates a future which will write bytes from buf into the object.

The returned future will resolve to the number of bytes written once the write operation is completed.

Creates a future which will write bytes from bufs into the object using vectored IO operations.

The returned future will resolve to the number of bytes written once the write operation is completed.

Write data into this object.

Creates a future that will write the entire contents of the buffer buf into this AsyncWrite.

The returned future will not complete until all the data has been written.

Examples
use futures::io::{AsyncWriteExt, Cursor};

let mut writer = Cursor::new(vec![0u8; 5]);

writer.write_all(&[1, 2, 3, 4]).await?;

assert_eq!(writer.into_inner(), [1, 2, 3, 4, 0]);

Attempts to write multiple buffers into this writer.

Creates a future that will write the entire contents of bufs into this AsyncWrite using vectored writes.

The returned future will not complete until all the data has been written.

Notes

Unlike io::Write::write_vectored, this takes a mutable reference to a slice of IoSlices, not an immutable one. That’s because we need to modify the slice to keep track of the bytes already written.

Once this futures returns, the contents of bufs are unspecified, as this depends on how many calls to write_vectored were necessary. It is best to understand this function as taking ownership of bufs and to not use bufs afterwards. The underlying buffers, to which the IoSlices point (but not the IoSlices themselves), are unchanged and can be reused.

Examples
use futures::io::AsyncWriteExt;
use futures_util::io::Cursor;
use std::io::IoSlice;

let mut writer = Cursor::new(Vec::new());
let bufs = &mut [
    IoSlice::new(&[1]),
    IoSlice::new(&[2, 3]),
    IoSlice::new(&[4, 5, 6]),
];

writer.write_all_vectored(bufs).await?;
// Note: the contents of `bufs` is now unspecified, see the Notes section.

assert_eq!(writer.into_inner(), &[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]);
This is supported on crate feature io-compat only.

Wraps an AsyncWrite in a compatibility wrapper that allows it to be used as a futures 0.1 / tokio-io 0.1 AsyncWrite. Requires the io-compat feature to enable.

This is supported on crate feature sink only.

Allow using an AsyncWrite as a Sink<Item: AsRef<[u8]>>.

This adapter produces a sink that will write each value passed to it into the underlying writer.

Note that this function consumes the given writer, returning a wrapped version.

Examples
use futures::io::AsyncWriteExt;
use futures::stream::{self, StreamExt};

let stream = stream::iter(vec![Ok([1, 2, 3]), Ok([4, 5, 6])]);

let mut writer = vec![];

stream.forward((&mut writer).into_sink()).await?;

assert_eq!(writer, vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]);

Implementors