Expand description
A light utility helping with unix mode representation, with strong types to avoid misusing constants.
The Mode struct implements Display
and prints as "rwxrwxrwx"
use umask::*;
// You can build from a number:
assert_eq!("rw-r--r--", Mode::from(0b110100100).to_string());
assert_eq!("rw-r--r--", Mode::from(0o644).to_string());
// Or from a string:
let mode: Mode = "rw-rw-r--".parse().unwrap();
assert_eq!("rw-rw-r--", mode.to_string());
// You may use `|` to combine class permissions:
let mu = Mode::from(0o640);
let mo = Mode::from(0o044);
assert_eq!("rw-r--r--", (mu | mo).to_string());
assert_eq!("---r-----", (mu & mo).to_string());
// You can use more semantic constructs:
let m = Mode::all()
.without(ALL_EXEC);
assert_eq!("rw-rw-rw-", m.to_string());
let mut m = Mode::new()
.with_class_perm(ALL, READ)
.with_class_perm(USER, WRITE);
assert_eq!("rw-r--r--", m.to_string());
// (semantic functions can be used in const declarations)
// Or
m |= ALL_EXEC;
assert_eq!("rwxr-xr-x", m.to_string());
let m = ALL_READ | USER_WRITE;
assert_eq!("rw-r--r--", m.to_string());
// Displaying the mode can be done with the `Display`
// implementation but also bit per bit for more control
assert_eq!(
m.to_string().chars().next().unwrap(), // first char: 'r' or '-'
if m.has(USER_READ) { 'r' } else { '-' },
);
// The `Display` implementation shows the extra permission bits
// (setuid, setgid and sticky):
let mut m = Mode::all()
.with_extra(STICKY)
.with_extra(SETUID)
.with_extra(SETGID);
assert_eq!("rwsrwsrwt", m.to_string());
// But you can remove those bits for display if you want the
// sometimes more familiar 'x' for execution:
assert_eq!("rwxrwxrwx", m.without_any_extra().to_string());
Structs
Enums
- Parsing error.
Constants
- When the setgid bit is set on a an executable file, the file will be executed by with the permissions of the file’s group instead of the executing user’s group.
- When the setuid bit is set on a an executable file, the file will be executed by with the permissions of the file’s owner instead of the executing user.
- When the sticky bit is set on a directory, files in that directory can only be deleted by the owner.