hpath-directory-0.14.2.2: Alternative to 'directory' package with ByteString based filepaths
Copyright© 2020 Julian Ospald
LicenseBSD3
MaintainerJulian Ospald <hasufell@posteo.de>
Stabilityexperimental
Portabilityportable
Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell2010

System.Posix.RawFilePath.Directory

Description

This module provides IO related file operations like copy, delete, move and so on, similar to the directory package.

Some of these operations are due to their nature not atomic, which means they may do multiple syscalls which form one context. Some of them also have to examine the filetypes explicitly before the syscalls, so a reasonable decision can be made. That means the result is undefined if another process changes that context while the non-atomic operation is still happening. However, where possible, as few syscalls as possible are used and the underlying exception handling is kept.

Note: BlockDevice, CharacterDevice, NamedPipe and Socket are ignored by some of the more high-level functions (like easyCopy). For other functions (like copyFile), the behavior on these file types is unreliable/unsafe. Check the documentation of those functions for details.

Import as: > import System.Posix.RawFilePath.Directory

Synopsis

Types

data RecursiveErrorMode Source #

The error mode for recursive operations.

On FailEarly the whole operation fails immediately if any of the recursive sub-operations fail, which is sort of the default for IO operations.

On CollectFailures skips errors in the recursion and keeps on recursing. However all errors are collected in the RecursiveFailure error type, which is raised finally if there was any error. Also note that RecursiveFailure does not give any guarantees on the ordering of the collected exceptions.

Constructors

FailEarly 
CollectFailures 

data CopyMode Source #

The mode for copy and file moves. Overwrite mode is usually not very well defined, but is a convenience shortcut.

Constructors

Strict

fail if any target exists

Overwrite

overwrite targets

File copying

copyDirRecursive Source #

Arguments

:: RawFilePath

source dir

-> RawFilePath

destination (parent dirs are not automatically created)

-> CopyMode 
-> RecursiveErrorMode 
-> IO () 

Copies the contents of a directory recursively to the given destination, while preserving permissions. Does not follow symbolic links. This behaves more or less like the following, without descending into the destination if it already exists:

  cp -a /source/dir /destination/somedir

For directory contents, this will ignore any file type that is not RegularFile, SymbolicLink or Directory.

For Overwrite copy mode this does not prune destination directory contents, so the destination might contain more files than the source after the operation has completed. Permissions of existing directories are fixed.

Safety/reliability concerns:

  • not atomic
  • examines filetypes explicitly
  • an explicit check throwDestinationInSource is carried out for the top directory for basic sanity, because otherwise we might end up with an infinite copy loop... however, this operation is not carried out recursively (because it's slow)

Throws:

Throws in FailEarly RecursiveErrorMode only:

Throws in CollectFailures RecursiveErrorMode only:

Throws in Strict CopyMode only:

recreateSymlink Source #

Arguments

:: RawFilePath

the old symlink file

-> RawFilePath

destination file

-> CopyMode 
-> IO () 

Recreate a symlink.

In Overwrite copy mode only files and empty directories are deleted.

Safety/reliability concerns:

Throws:

Throws in Strict mode only:

Throws in Overwrite mode only:

Notes:

  • calls symlink

copyFile Source #

Arguments

:: RawFilePath

source file

-> RawFilePath

destination file

-> CopyMode 
-> IO () 

Copies the given regular file to the given destination. Neither follows symbolic links, nor accepts them. For "copying" symbolic links, use recreateSymlink instead.

Note that this is still sort of a low-level function and doesn't examine file types. For a more high-level version, use easyCopy instead.

In Overwrite copy mode only overwrites actual files, not directories. In Strict mode the destination file must not exist.

Safety/reliability concerns:

  • Overwrite mode is not atomic
  • when used on CharacterDevice, reads the "contents" and copies them to a regular file, which might take indefinitely
  • when used on BlockDevice, may either read the "contents" and copy them to a regular file (potentially hanging indefinitely) or may create a regular empty destination file
  • when used on NamedPipe, will hang indefinitely

Throws:

Throws in Strict mode only:

easyCopy :: RawFilePath -> RawFilePath -> CopyMode -> RecursiveErrorMode -> IO () Source #

Copies a regular file, directory or symbolic link. In case of a symbolic link it is just recreated, even if it points to a directory. Any other file type is ignored.

Safety/reliability concerns:

File deletion

deleteFile :: RawFilePath -> IO () Source #

Deletes the given file. Raises eISDIR if run on a directory. Does not follow symbolic links.

Throws:

Notes: calls unlink

deleteDir :: RawFilePath -> IO () Source #

Deletes the given directory, which must be empty, never symlinks.

Throws:

Notes: calls rmdir

deleteDirRecursive :: RawFilePath -> IO () Source #

Deletes the given directory recursively. Does not follow symbolic links. Tries deleteDir first before attemtping a recursive deletion.

On directory contents this behaves like easyDelete and thus will ignore any file type that is not RegularFile, SymbolicLink or Directory.

Safety/reliability concerns:

  • not atomic
  • examines filetypes explicitly

Throws:

easyDelete :: RawFilePath -> IO () Source #

Deletes a file, directory or symlink. In case of directory, performs recursive deletion. In case of a symlink, the symlink file is deleted. Any other file type is ignored.

Safety/reliability concerns:

File opening

openFile :: RawFilePath -> IO ProcessID Source #

Opens a file appropriately by invoking xdg-open. The file type is not checked. This forks a process.

executeFile Source #

Arguments

:: RawFilePath

program

-> [ByteString]

arguments

-> IO ProcessID 

Executes a program with the given arguments. This forks a process.

File creation

createRegularFile :: FileMode -> RawFilePath -> IO () Source #

Create an empty regular file at the given directory with the given filename.

Throws:

createDir :: FileMode -> RawFilePath -> IO () Source #

Create an empty directory at the given directory with the given filename.

Throws:

createDirIfMissing :: FileMode -> RawFilePath -> IO () Source #

Create an empty directory at the given directory with the given filename.

Throws:

createDirRecursive :: FileMode -> RawFilePath -> IO () Source #

Create an empty directory at the given directory with the given filename. All parent directories are created with the same filemode. This basically behaves like:

  mkdir -p /some/dir

Safety/reliability concerns:

  • not atomic

Throws:

  • PermissionDenied if any part of the path components do not exist and cannot be written to
  • AlreadyExists if destination already exists and is *not* a directory

createSymlink Source #

Arguments

:: RawFilePath

destination file

-> RawFilePath

path the symlink points to

-> IO () 

Create a symlink.

Throws:

Note: calls symlink

File renaming/moving

renameFile :: RawFilePath -> RawFilePath -> IO () Source #

Rename a given file with the provided filename. Destination and source must be on the same device, otherwise eXDEV will be raised.

Does not follow symbolic links, but renames the symbolic link file.

Safety/reliability concerns:

  • has a separate set of exception handling, apart from the syscall

Throws:

Note: calls rename (but does not allow to rename over existing files)

moveFile Source #

Arguments

:: RawFilePath

file to move

-> RawFilePath

destination

-> CopyMode 
-> IO () 

Move a file. This also works across devices by copy-delete fallback. And also works on directories.

Does not follow symbolic links, but renames the symbolic link file.

Safety/reliability concerns:

Throws:

Throws in Strict mode only:

Notes:

  • calls rename (but does not allow to rename over existing files)

File reading

readFile :: RawFilePath -> IO ByteString Source #

Read the given file lazily.

Symbolic links are followed. File must exist.

Throws:

readFileStrict :: RawFilePath -> IO ByteString Source #

Read the given file strictly into memory.

Symbolic links are followed. File must exist.

Throws:

readFileStream :: RawFilePath -> IO (SerialT IO (Array Word8)) Source #

Open the given file as a filestream. Once the filestream exits, the filehandle is cleaned up.

Throws:

File writing

writeFile Source #

Arguments

:: RawFilePath 
-> Maybe FileMode

if Nothing, file must exist

-> ByteString 
-> IO () 

Write a given ByteString to a file, truncating the file beforehand. Follows symlinks.

Throws:

writeFileL Source #

Arguments

:: RawFilePath 
-> Maybe FileMode

if Nothing, file must exist

-> ByteString 
-> IO () 

Write a given lazy ByteString to a file, truncating the file beforehand. Follows symlinks.

Throws:

Note: uses streamly under the hood

appendFile :: RawFilePath -> ByteString -> IO () Source #

Append a given ByteString to a file. The file must exist. Follows symlinks.

Throws:

File permissions

newFilePerms :: FileMode Source #

Default permissions for a new file.

newDirPerms :: FileMode Source #

Default permissions for a new directory.

File checks

doesExist :: RawFilePath -> IO Bool Source #

Checks if the given file exists. Does not follow symlinks.

Only eNOENT is catched (and returns False).

doesFileExist :: RawFilePath -> IO Bool Source #

Checks if the given file exists and is not a directory. Does not follow symlinks.

Only eNOENT is catched (and returns False).

doesDirectoryExist :: RawFilePath -> IO Bool Source #

Checks if the given file exists and is a directory. Does not follow symlinks.

Only eNOENT is catched (and returns False).

isReadable :: RawFilePath -> IO Bool Source #

Checks whether a file or folder is readable.

Only eACCES, eROFS, eTXTBSY, ePERM are catched (and return False).

Throws:

isWritable :: RawFilePath -> IO Bool Source #

Checks whether a file or folder is writable.

Only eACCES, eROFS, eTXTBSY, ePERM are catched (and return False).

Throws:

isExecutable :: RawFilePath -> IO Bool Source #

Checks whether a file or folder is executable.

Only eACCES, eROFS, eTXTBSY, ePERM are catched (and return False).

Throws:

canOpenDirectory :: RawFilePath -> IO Bool Source #

Checks whether the directory at the given path exists and can be opened. This invokes openDirStream which follows symlinks.

File times

Directory reading

getDirsFiles Source #

Arguments

:: RawFilePath

dir to read

-> IO [RawFilePath] 

Gets all filenames of the given directory. This excludes "." and "..". This version does not follow symbolic links.

The contents are not sorted and there is no guarantee on the ordering.

Throws:

getDirsFiles' Source #

Arguments

:: RawFilePath

dir to read

-> IO [RawFilePath] 

Like getDirsFiles, but returns the filename only, instead of prepending the base path.

Filetype operations

getFileType :: RawFilePath -> IO FileType Source #

Get the file type of the file located at the given path. Does not follow symbolic links.

Throws:

Others

canonicalizePath :: RawFilePath -> IO RawFilePath Source #

Applies realpath on the given path.

Throws:

toAbs :: RawFilePath -> IO RawFilePath Source #

Converts any path to an absolute path. This is done in the following way:

  • if the path is already an absolute one, just return it
  • if it's a relative path, prepend the current directory to it