Could prevent callers from catching the situation and lead to e.g early
iterator terminations (cf. `Reader::read_byte') since `None' is only to
be returned only on EOF.
- `Buffer.lines()` returns `LineIterator` which yields line using
`.read_line()`.
- `Reader.bytes()` now takes `&mut self` instead of `self`.
- `Reader.read_until()` swallows `EndOfFile`. This also affects
`.read_line()`.
BufferedWriter::inner flushes before returning the underlying writer.
BufferedWriter::write no longer flushes the underlying writer.
LineBufferedWriter::write flushes up to the *last* newline in the input
string, not the first.
This implements a fair amount of the unimpl() functionality in io::native
relating to filesystem operations. I've also modified all io::fs tests to run in
both a native and uv environment (so everything is actually tested).
There are a two bits of remaining functionality which I was unable to get
working:
* change_file_times on windows
* lstat on windows
I think that change_file_times may just need a better interface, but lstat has a
large implementation in libuv which I didn't want to tackle trying to copy.
This trait is meant to abstract whether a reader is actually implemented with an
underlying buffer. For all readers which are implemented as such, we can
efficiently implement things like read_char, read_line, read_until, etc. There
are two required methods for managing the internal buffer, and otherwise
read_line and friends can all become default methods.
Closes#10334