Ignore the type of error altogether. The rationale is: it doesn't matter
what was the problem if the directory is there. In the previous versions
if the directory was there already we wouldn't even attempt to create
it, so we wouldn't know about the problem neither.
Make test path length smaller in `concurrent_recursive_mkdir` test.
It is more robust to not fail if any directory in a path was created
concurrently. This change lifts rustc internal `create_dir_racy` that
was created to handle such conditions to be new `create_dir_all`
implementation.
This commit applies the stabilization/deprecations of the 1.16.0 release, as
tracked by the rust-lang/rust issue tracker and the final-comment-period tag.
The following APIs were stabilized:
* `VecDeque::truncate`
* `VecDeque::resize`
* `String::insert_str`
* `Duration::checked_{add,sub,div,mul}`
* `str::replacen`
* `SocketAddr::is_ipv{4,6}`
* `IpAddr::is_ipv{4,6}`
* `str::repeat`
* `Vec::dedup_by`
* `Vec::dedup_by_key`
* `Result::unwrap_or_default`
* `<*const T>::wrapping_offset`
* `<*mut T>::wrapping_offset`
* `CommandExt::creation_flags` (on Windows)
* `File::set_permissions`
* `String::split_off`
The following APIs were deprecated
* `EnumSet` - replaced with other ecosystem abstractions, long since unstable
Closes#27788Closes#35553Closes#35774Closes#36436Closes#36949Closes#37079Closes#37087Closes#37516Closes#37827Closes#37916Closes#37966Closes#38080
Use fs::symlink_metadata in doc for is_symlink
fs::metadata() follows symlinks so is_symlink() will always return
false. Use symlink_metadata instead in the example in the
documentation.
See issue #39088.
fs::metadata() follows symlinks so is_symlink() will always return
false. Use symlink_metadata instead in the example in the
documentation.
See issue #39088.
On unix like systems, the underlying file corresponding to any given path may
change at any time. This function makes it possible to set the permissions of
the a file corresponding to a `File` object even if its path changes.
It is good practice to implement Debug for public types, and
indicating what directory you're reading seems useful.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <diwic@ubuntu.com>
These functions allow to read from and write to a file in one atomic
action from multiple threads, avoiding the race between the seek and the
read.
The functions are named `{read,write}_at` on non-Windows (which don't
change the file cursor), and `seek_{read,write}` on Windows (which
change the file cursor).
Restore original meaning of std::fs::read_dir's example changed in #33958
`DirEntry.file_type().is_dir()` will not follow symlinks, but the original example (`fs::metadata(&path).is_dir()`) does. Therefore the change in #33958 introduced a subtle difference that now it won't enter linked folders. To preserve the same behavior, we use `Path::is_dir()` instead, which does follow symlink.
(See discussion in the previous PR for detail.)
DirEntry.file_type().is_dir() will not follow symlinks, but the original
example (fs::metadata(&path).is_dir()) does. Therefore the change in
#33958 introduced a subtle difference that now it won't enter linked
folders. To preserve the same behavior, we use Path::is_dir() instead,
which does follow symlink.