Struct git2::SubmoduleStatus [−][src]
pub struct SubmoduleStatus { /* fields omitted */ }
Expand description
Return codes for submodule status.
A combination of these flags will be returned to describe the status of a submodule. Depending on the “ignore” property of the submodule, some of the flags may never be returned because they indicate changes that are supposed to be ignored.
Submodule info is contained in 4 places: the HEAD tree, the index, config files (both .git/config and .gitmodules), and the working directory. Any or all of those places might be missing information about the submodule depending on what state the repo is in. We consider all four places to build the combination of status flags.
There are four values that are not really status, but give basic info about what sources of submodule data are available. These will be returned even if ignore is set to “ALL”.
- IN_HEAD - superproject head contains submodule
- IN_INDEX - superproject index contains submodule
- IN_CONFIG - superproject gitmodules has submodule
- IN_WD - superproject workdir has submodule
The following values will be returned so long as ignore is not “ALL”.
- INDEX_ADDED - in index, not in head
- INDEX_DELETED - in head, not in index
- INDEX_MODIFIED - index and head don’t match
- WD_UNINITIALIZED - workdir contains empty directory
- WD_ADDED - in workdir, not index
- WD_DELETED - in index, not workdir
- WD_MODIFIED - index and workdir head don’t match
The following can only be returned if ignore is “NONE” or “UNTRACKED”.
- WD_INDEX_MODIFIED - submodule workdir index is dirty
- WD_WD_MODIFIED - submodule workdir has modified files
Lastly, the following will only be returned for ignore “NONE”.
- WD_UNTRACKED - wd contains untracked files
Implementations
Convert from underlying bit representation, unless that representation contains bits that do not correspond to a flag.
Convert from underlying bit representation, dropping any bits that do not correspond to flags.
Convert from underlying bit representation, preserving all bits (even those not corresponding to a defined flag).
Safety
The caller of the bitflags!
macro can chose to allow or
disallow extra bits for their bitflags type.
The caller of from_bits_unchecked()
has to ensure that
all bits correspond to a defined flag or that extra bits
are valid for this bitflags type.
Returns true
if there are flags common to both self
and other
.
Returns true
if all of the flags in other
are contained within self
.
Inserts or removes the specified flags depending on the passed value.
Returns the intersection between the flags in self
and
other
.
Specifically, the returned set contains only the flags which are
present in both self
and other
.
This is equivalent to using the &
operator (e.g.
ops::BitAnd
), as in flags & other
.
Returns the union of between the flags in self
and other
.
Specifically, the returned set contains all flags which are
present in either self
or other
, including any which are
present in both (see Self::symmetric_difference
if that
is undesirable).
This is equivalent to using the |
operator (e.g.
ops::BitOr
), as in flags | other
.
Returns the difference between the flags in self
and other
.
Specifically, the returned set contains all flags present in
self
, except for the ones present in other
.
It is also conceptually equivalent to the “bit-clear” operation:
flags & !other
(and this syntax is also supported).
This is equivalent to using the -
operator (e.g.
ops::Sub
), as in flags - other
.
Returns the symmetric difference between the flags
in self
and other
.
Specifically, the returned set contains the flags present which
are present in self
or other
, but that are not present in
both. Equivalently, it contains the flags present in exactly
one of the sets self
and other
.
This is equivalent to using the ^
operator (e.g.
ops::BitXor
), as in flags ^ other
.
Returns the complement of this set of flags.
Specifically, the returned set contains all the flags which are
not set in self
, but which are allowed for this type.
Alternatively, it can be thought of as the set difference
between Self::all()
and self
(e.g. Self::all() - self
)
This is equivalent to using the !
operator (e.g.
ops::Not
), as in !flags
.
Trait Implementations
Disables all flags disabled in the set.
Returns the union of the two sets of flags.
type Output = Self
type Output = Self
The resulting type after applying the |
operator.
Adds the set of flags.
Toggles the set of flags.
Extends a collection with the contents of an iterator. Read more
extend_one
)Extends a collection with exactly one element.
extend_one
)Reserves capacity in a collection for the given number of additional elements. Read more
Creates a value from an iterator. Read more
This method tests for self
and other
values to be equal, and is used
by ==
. Read more
This method tests for !=
.
This method returns an ordering between self
and other
values if one exists. Read more
This method tests less than (for self
and other
) and is used by the <
operator. Read more
This method tests less than or equal to (for self
and other
) and is used by the <=
operator. Read more
This method tests greater than (for self
and other
) and is used by the >
operator. Read more
Disables all flags enabled in the set.
Auto Trait Implementations
impl RefUnwindSafe for SubmoduleStatus
impl Send for SubmoduleStatus
impl Sync for SubmoduleStatus
impl Unpin for SubmoduleStatus
impl UnwindSafe for SubmoduleStatus
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more