#[repr(C)]pub struct FSResource { /* private fields */ }
FSResource
only.Expand description
An abstract resource a file system uses to provide data for a volume.
FSResource
is a base class to represent the various possible sources of data for a file system.
These range from dedicated storage devices like hard drives and flash storage to network connections, and beyond.
Subclasses define behavior specific to a given kind of resource, such as FSBlockDeviceResource-c.class
for disk partition (IOMedia) file systems.
These file systems are typical disk file systems such as HFS, APFS, ExFAT, ext2fs, or NTFS.
A resource’s type also determines its life cycle.
Resources based on block storage devices come into being when the system probes the media underlying the volumes and container.
Other kinds of resources, like those based on URLs, might have different life cycles.
For example, a resource based on a file://
URL might iniitalize when a person uses the “Connect to server” command in the macOS Finder.
§Proxying resources
Some resources, like FSBlockDeviceResource
, come in proxy and non-proxy variants.
This addresses the issue that opening an external device like /dev/disk2s1
requires an entitlement.
Proxy resources allow unentitled clients of FSKit to describe which disk an FSBlockDeviceResource
should represent.
This allows, for example, the mount(8)
tool to mount FSKit file systems on block devices when run as root.
The tool uses a proxy when executing a command like mount -t ffs /dev/disk2s1 /some/path
, which prevents leaking privileged resource access.
See also Apple’s documentation
Implementations§
Source§impl FSResource
impl FSResource
Sourcepub unsafe fn isRevoked(&self) -> bool
pub unsafe fn isRevoked(&self) -> bool
A Boolean value that indicates whether the resource is revoked.
If this is a proxy resource, the value of this property is always true
(Swift) or YES
(Objective-C).
pub unsafe fn init(this: Allocated<Self>) -> Retained<Self>
Methods from Deref<Target = NSObject>§
Sourcepub fn doesNotRecognizeSelector(&self, sel: Sel) -> !
pub fn doesNotRecognizeSelector(&self, sel: Sel) -> !
Handle messages the object doesn’t recognize.
See Apple’s documentation for details.
Methods from Deref<Target = AnyObject>§
Sourcepub fn class(&self) -> &'static AnyClass
pub fn class(&self) -> &'static AnyClass
Dynamically find the class of this object.
§Panics
May panic if the object is invalid (which may be the case for objects
returned from unavailable init
/new
methods).
§Example
Check that an instance of NSObject
has the precise class NSObject
.
use objc2::ClassType;
use objc2::runtime::NSObject;
let obj = NSObject::new();
assert_eq!(obj.class(), NSObject::class());
Sourcepub unsafe fn get_ivar<T>(&self, name: &str) -> &Twhere
T: Encode,
👎Deprecated: this is difficult to use correctly, use Ivar::load
instead.
pub unsafe fn get_ivar<T>(&self, name: &str) -> &Twhere
T: Encode,
Ivar::load
instead.Use Ivar::load
instead.
§Safety
The object must have an instance variable with the given name, and it
must be of type T
.
See Ivar::load_ptr
for details surrounding this.
Sourcepub fn downcast_ref<T>(&self) -> Option<&T>where
T: DowncastTarget,
pub fn downcast_ref<T>(&self) -> Option<&T>where
T: DowncastTarget,
Attempt to downcast the object to a class of type T
.
This is the reference-variant. Use Retained::downcast
if you want
to convert a retained object to another type.
§Mutable classes
Some classes have immutable and mutable variants, such as NSString
and NSMutableString
.
When some Objective-C API signature says it gives you an immutable class, it generally expects you to not mutate that, even though it may technically be mutable “under the hood”.
So using this method to convert a NSString
to a NSMutableString
,
while not unsound, is generally frowned upon unless you created the
string yourself, or the API explicitly documents the string to be
mutable.
See Apple’s documentation on mutability and on
isKindOfClass:
for more details.
§Generic classes
Objective-C generics are called “lightweight generics”, and that’s because they aren’t exposed in the runtime. This makes it impossible to safely downcast to generic collections, so this is disallowed by this method.
You can, however, safely downcast to generic collections where all the
type-parameters are AnyObject
.
§Panics
This works internally by calling isKindOfClass:
. That means that the
object must have the instance method of that name, and an exception
will be thrown (if CoreFoundation is linked) or the process will abort
if that is not the case. In the vast majority of cases, you don’t need
to worry about this, since both root objects NSObject
and
NSProxy
implement this method.
§Examples
Cast an NSString
back and forth from NSObject
.
use objc2::rc::Retained;
use objc2_foundation::{NSObject, NSString};
let obj: Retained<NSObject> = NSString::new().into_super();
let string = obj.downcast_ref::<NSString>().unwrap();
// Or with `downcast`, if we do not need the object afterwards
let string = obj.downcast::<NSString>().unwrap();
Try (and fail) to cast an NSObject
to an NSString
.
use objc2_foundation::{NSObject, NSString};
let obj = NSObject::new();
assert!(obj.downcast_ref::<NSString>().is_none());
Try to cast to an array of strings.
use objc2_foundation::{NSArray, NSObject, NSString};
let arr = NSArray::from_retained_slice(&[NSObject::new()]);
// This is invalid and doesn't type check.
let arr = arr.downcast_ref::<NSArray<NSString>>();
This fails to compile, since it would require enumerating over the array to ensure that each element is of the desired type, which is a performance pitfall.
Downcast when processing each element instead.
use objc2_foundation::{NSArray, NSObject, NSString};
let arr = NSArray::from_retained_slice(&[NSObject::new()]);
for elem in arr {
if let Some(data) = elem.downcast_ref::<NSString>() {
// handle `data`
}
}
Trait Implementations§
Source§impl AsRef<AnyObject> for FSResource
impl AsRef<AnyObject> for FSResource
Source§impl AsRef<FSResource> for FSBlockDeviceResource
impl AsRef<FSResource> for FSBlockDeviceResource
Source§fn as_ref(&self) -> &FSResource
fn as_ref(&self) -> &FSResource
Source§impl AsRef<FSResource> for FSResource
impl AsRef<FSResource> for FSResource
Source§impl AsRef<NSObject> for FSResource
impl AsRef<NSObject> for FSResource
Source§impl Borrow<AnyObject> for FSResource
impl Borrow<AnyObject> for FSResource
Source§impl Borrow<FSResource> for FSBlockDeviceResource
impl Borrow<FSResource> for FSBlockDeviceResource
Source§fn borrow(&self) -> &FSResource
fn borrow(&self) -> &FSResource
Source§impl Borrow<NSObject> for FSResource
impl Borrow<NSObject> for FSResource
Source§impl ClassType for FSResource
impl ClassType for FSResource
Source§const NAME: &'static str = "FSResource"
const NAME: &'static str = "FSResource"
Source§type ThreadKind = <<FSResource as ClassType>::Super as ClassType>::ThreadKind
type ThreadKind = <<FSResource as ClassType>::Super as ClassType>::ThreadKind
Source§impl Debug for FSResource
impl Debug for FSResource
Source§impl Deref for FSResource
impl Deref for FSResource
Source§impl Hash for FSResource
impl Hash for FSResource
Source§impl Message for FSResource
impl Message for FSResource
Source§impl NSObjectProtocol for FSResource
impl NSObjectProtocol for FSResource
Source§fn isEqual(&self, other: Option<&AnyObject>) -> bool
fn isEqual(&self, other: Option<&AnyObject>) -> bool
Source§fn hash(&self) -> usize
fn hash(&self) -> usize
Source§fn isKindOfClass(&self, cls: &AnyClass) -> bool
fn isKindOfClass(&self, cls: &AnyClass) -> bool
Source§fn is_kind_of<T>(&self) -> bool
fn is_kind_of<T>(&self) -> bool
isKindOfClass
directly, or cast your objects with AnyObject::downcast_ref