rust/src/libstd/io/stdio.rs
bors 95ee0a04fd auto merge of #12980 : cmr/rust/overhaul-stdio, r=thestinger
this comes from a discussion on IRC where the split between stdin and stdout
seemed unnatural, and the fact that reading on stdin won't flush stdout, which
is unlike every other language (including C's stdio).
2014-03-20 04:36:50 -07:00

421 lines
14 KiB
Rust

// Copyright 2013 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
// except according to those terms.
/*! Non-blocking access to stdin, stdout, and stderr.
This module provides bindings to the local event loop's TTY interface, using it
to offer synchronous but non-blocking versions of stdio. These handles can be
inspected for information about terminal dimensions or for related information
about the stream or terminal to which it is attached.
# Example
```rust
# #[allow(unused_must_use)];
use std::io;
let mut out = io::stdout();
out.write(bytes!("Hello, world!"));
```
*/
use container::Container;
use fmt;
use io::{Reader, Writer, IoResult, IoError, OtherIoError,
standard_error, EndOfFile, LineBufferedWriter, BufferedReader};
use libc;
use mem::replace;
use option::{Option, Some, None};
use prelude::drop;
use result::{Ok, Err};
use rt::local::Local;
use rt::rtio::{DontClose, IoFactory, LocalIo, RtioFileStream, RtioTTY};
use rt::task::Task;
use str::StrSlice;
use slice::ImmutableVector;
// And so begins the tale of acquiring a uv handle to a stdio stream on all
// platforms in all situations. Our story begins by splitting the world into two
// categories, windows and unix. Then one day the creators of unix said let
// there be redirection! And henceforth there was redirection away from the
// console for standard I/O streams.
//
// After this day, the world split into four factions:
//
// 1. Unix with stdout on a terminal.
// 2. Unix with stdout redirected.
// 3. Windows with stdout on a terminal.
// 4. Windows with stdout redirected.
//
// Many years passed, and then one day the nation of libuv decided to unify this
// world. After months of toiling, uv created three ideas: TTY, Pipe, File.
// These three ideas propagated throughout the lands and the four great factions
// decided to settle among them.
//
// The groups of 1, 2, and 3 all worked very hard towards the idea of TTY. Upon
// doing so, they even enhanced themselves further then their Pipe/File
// brethren, becoming the dominant powers.
//
// The group of 4, however, decided to work independently. They abandoned the
// common TTY belief throughout, and even abandoned the fledgling Pipe belief.
// The members of the 4th faction decided to only align themselves with File.
//
// tl;dr; TTY works on everything but when windows stdout is redirected, in that
// case pipe also doesn't work, but magically file does!
enum StdSource {
TTY(~RtioTTY),
File(~RtioFileStream),
}
fn src<T>(fd: libc::c_int, readable: bool, f: |StdSource| -> T) -> T {
LocalIo::maybe_raise(|io| {
Ok(match io.tty_open(fd, readable) {
Ok(tty) => f(TTY(tty)),
Err(_) => f(File(io.fs_from_raw_fd(fd, DontClose))),
})
}).unwrap()
}
/// Creates a new non-blocking handle to the stdin of the current process.
///
/// The returned handled is buffered by default with a `BufferedReader`. If
/// buffered access is not desired, the `stdin_raw` function is provided to
/// provided unbuffered access to stdin.
///
/// Care should be taken when creating multiple handles to the stdin of a
/// process. Beause this is a buffered reader by default, it's possible for
/// pending input to be unconsumed in one reader and unavailable to other
/// readers. It is recommended that only one handle at a time is created for the
/// stdin of a process.
///
/// See `stdout()` for more notes about this function.
pub fn stdin() -> BufferedReader<StdReader> {
BufferedReader::new(stdin_raw())
}
/// Creates a new non-blocking handle to the stdin of the current process.
///
/// Unlike `stdin()`, the returned reader is *not* a buffered reader.
///
/// See `stdout()` for more notes about this function.
pub fn stdin_raw() -> StdReader {
src(libc::STDIN_FILENO, true, |src| StdReader { inner: src })
}
/// Creates a line-buffered handle to the stdout of the current process.
///
/// Note that this is a fairly expensive operation in that at least one memory
/// allocation is performed. Additionally, this must be called from a runtime
/// task context because the stream returned will be a non-blocking object using
/// the local scheduler to perform the I/O.
///
/// Care should be taken when creating multiple handles to an output stream for
/// a single process. While usage is still safe, the output may be surprising if
/// no synchronization is performed to ensure a sane output.
pub fn stdout() -> LineBufferedWriter<StdWriter> {
LineBufferedWriter::new(stdout_raw())
}
/// Creates an unbuffered handle to the stdout of the current process
///
/// See notes in `stdout()` for more information.
pub fn stdout_raw() -> StdWriter {
src(libc::STDOUT_FILENO, false, |src| StdWriter { inner: src })
}
/// Creates a line-buffered handle to the stderr of the current process.
///
/// See `stdout()` for notes about this function.
pub fn stderr() -> LineBufferedWriter<StdWriter> {
LineBufferedWriter::new(stderr_raw())
}
/// Creates an unbuffered handle to the stderr of the current process
///
/// See notes in `stdout()` for more information.
pub fn stderr_raw() -> StdWriter {
src(libc::STDERR_FILENO, false, |src| StdWriter { inner: src })
}
fn reset_helper(w: ~Writer,
f: |&mut Task, ~Writer| -> Option<~Writer>) -> Option<~Writer> {
let mut t = Local::borrow(None::<Task>);
// Be sure to flush any pending output from the writer
match f(t.get(), w) {
Some(mut w) => {
drop(t);
// FIXME: is failing right here?
w.flush().unwrap();
Some(w)
}
None => None
}
}
/// Resets the task-local stdout handle to the specified writer
///
/// This will replace the current task's stdout handle, returning the old
/// handle. All future calls to `print` and friends will emit their output to
/// this specified handle.
///
/// Note that this does not need to be called for all new tasks; the default
/// output handle is to the process's stdout stream.
pub fn set_stdout(stdout: ~Writer) -> Option<~Writer> {
reset_helper(stdout, |t, w| replace(&mut t.stdout, Some(w)))
}
/// Resets the task-local stderr handle to the specified writer
///
/// This will replace the current task's stderr handle, returning the old
/// handle. Currently, the stderr handle is used for printing failure messages
/// during task failure.
///
/// Note that this does not need to be called for all new tasks; the default
/// output handle is to the process's stderr stream.
pub fn set_stderr(stderr: ~Writer) -> Option<~Writer> {
reset_helper(stderr, |t, w| replace(&mut t.stderr, Some(w)))
}
// Helper to access the local task's stdout handle
//
// Note that this is not a safe function to expose because you can create an
// aliased pointer very easily:
//
// with_task_stdout(|io1| {
// with_task_stdout(|io2| {
// // io1 aliases io2
// })
// })
fn with_task_stdout(f: |&mut Writer| -> IoResult<()> ) {
let task: Option<~Task> = Local::try_take();
let result = match task {
Some(mut task) => {
// Printing may run arbitrary code, so ensure that the task is in
// TLS to allow all std services. Note that this means a print while
// printing won't use the task's normal stdout handle, but this is
// necessary to ensure safety (no aliasing).
let mut my_stdout = task.stdout.take();
Local::put(task);
if my_stdout.is_none() {
my_stdout = Some(~stdout() as ~Writer);
}
let ret = f(*my_stdout.get_mut_ref());
// Note that we need to be careful when putting the stdout handle
// back into the task. If the handle was set to `Some` while
// printing, then we can run aribitrary code when destroying the
// previous handle. This means that the local task needs to be in
// TLS while we do this.
//
// To protect against this, we do a little dance in which we
// temporarily take the task, swap the handles, put the task in TLS,
// and only then drop the previous handle.
let mut t = Local::borrow(None::<Task>);
let prev = replace(&mut t.get().stdout, my_stdout);
drop(t);
drop(prev);
ret
}
None => {
struct Stdout;
impl Writer for Stdout {
fn write(&mut self, data: &[u8]) -> IoResult<()> {
unsafe {
libc::write(libc::STDOUT_FILENO,
data.as_ptr() as *libc::c_void,
data.len() as libc::size_t);
}
Ok(()) // just ignore the results
}
}
let mut io = Stdout;
f(&mut io as &mut Writer)
}
};
match result {
Ok(()) => {}
Err(e) => fail!("failed printing to stdout: {}", e),
}
}
/// Flushes the local task's stdout handle.
///
/// By default, this stream is a line-buffering stream, so flushing may be
/// necessary to ensure that all output is printed to the screen (if there are
/// no newlines printed).
///
/// Note that logging macros do not use this stream. Using the logging macros
/// will emit output to stderr, and while they are line buffered the log
/// messages are always terminated in a newline (no need to flush).
pub fn flush() {
with_task_stdout(|io| io.flush())
}
/// Prints a string to the stdout of the current process. No newline is emitted
/// after the string is printed.
pub fn print(s: &str) {
with_task_stdout(|io| io.write(s.as_bytes()))
}
/// Prints a string as a line. to the stdout of the current process. A literal
/// `\n` character is printed to the console after the string.
pub fn println(s: &str) {
with_task_stdout(|io| {
io.write(s.as_bytes()).and_then(|()| io.write(['\n' as u8]))
})
}
/// Similar to `print`, but takes a `fmt::Arguments` structure to be compatible
/// with the `format_args!` macro.
pub fn print_args(fmt: &fmt::Arguments) {
with_task_stdout(|io| fmt::write(io, fmt))
}
/// Similar to `println`, but takes a `fmt::Arguments` structure to be
/// compatible with the `format_args!` macro.
pub fn println_args(fmt: &fmt::Arguments) {
with_task_stdout(|io| fmt::writeln(io, fmt))
}
/// Representation of a reader of a standard input stream
pub struct StdReader {
priv inner: StdSource
}
impl Reader for StdReader {
fn read(&mut self, buf: &mut [u8]) -> IoResult<uint> {
let ret = match self.inner {
TTY(ref mut tty) => {
// Flush the task-local stdout so that weird issues like a
// print!'d prompt not being shown until after the user hits
// enter.
flush();
tty.read(buf)
},
File(ref mut file) => file.read(buf).map(|i| i as uint),
};
match ret {
// When reading a piped stdin, libuv will return 0-length reads when
// stdin reaches EOF. For pretty much all other streams it will
// return an actual EOF error, but apparently for stdin it's a
// little different. Hence, here we convert a 0 length read to an
// end-of-file indicator so the caller knows to stop reading.
Ok(0) => { Err(standard_error(EndOfFile)) }
ret @ Ok(..) | ret @ Err(..) => ret,
}
}
}
/// Representation of a writer to a standard output stream
pub struct StdWriter {
priv inner: StdSource
}
impl StdWriter {
/// Gets the size of this output window, if possible. This is typically used
/// when the writer is attached to something like a terminal, this is used
/// to fetch the dimensions of the terminal.
///
/// If successful, returns `Ok((width, height))`.
///
/// # Error
///
/// This function will return an error if the output stream is not actually
/// connected to a TTY instance, or if querying the TTY instance fails.
pub fn winsize(&mut self) -> IoResult<(int, int)> {
match self.inner {
TTY(ref mut tty) => tty.get_winsize(),
File(..) => {
Err(IoError {
kind: OtherIoError,
desc: "stream is not a tty",
detail: None,
})
}
}
}
/// Controls whether this output stream is a "raw stream" or simply a normal
/// stream.
///
/// # Error
///
/// This function will return an error if the output stream is not actually
/// connected to a TTY instance, or if querying the TTY instance fails.
pub fn set_raw(&mut self, raw: bool) -> IoResult<()> {
match self.inner {
TTY(ref mut tty) => tty.set_raw(raw),
File(..) => {
Err(IoError {
kind: OtherIoError,
desc: "stream is not a tty",
detail: None,
})
}
}
}
/// Returns whether this stream is attached to a TTY instance or not.
pub fn isatty(&self) -> bool {
match self.inner {
TTY(..) => true,
File(..) => false,
}
}
}
impl Writer for StdWriter {
fn write(&mut self, buf: &[u8]) -> IoResult<()> {
match self.inner {
TTY(ref mut tty) => tty.write(buf),
File(ref mut file) => file.write(buf),
}
}
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
iotest!(fn smoke() {
// Just make sure we can acquire handles
stdin();
stdout();
stderr();
})
iotest!(fn capture_stdout() {
use io::{ChanReader, ChanWriter};
let (tx, rx) = channel();
let (mut r, w) = (ChanReader::new(rx), ChanWriter::new(tx));
spawn(proc() {
set_stdout(~w as ~Writer);
println!("hello!");
});
assert_eq!(r.read_to_str().unwrap(), ~"hello!\n");
})
iotest!(fn capture_stderr() {
use io::{ChanReader, ChanWriter};
let (tx, rx) = channel();
let (mut r, w) = (ChanReader::new(rx), ChanWriter::new(tx));
spawn(proc() {
set_stderr(~w as ~Writer);
fail!("my special message");
});
let s = r.read_to_str().unwrap();
assert!(s.contains("my special message"));
})
}