Basically everything that has a direct replacement or no uses left.
Notable omissions:
- std.ArrayHashMap: Too much fallout, needs a separate cleanup.
- std.debug.runtime_safety: Too much fallout.
- std.heap.GeneralPurposeAllocator: Lots of references to it remain, not
a simple find and replace as "debug allocator" is not equivalent to
"general purpose allocator".
- std.io.Reader: Is being reworked at the moment.
- std.unicode.utf8Decode(): No replacement, needs a new API first.
- Manifest backwards compat options: Removal would break test data used
by TestFetchBuilder.
- panic handler needs to be a namespace: Many tests still rely on it
being a function, needs a separate cleanup.
This PR consistently maps .ACCES into AccessDenied and .PERM into
PermissionDenied. AccessDenied is returned if the file mode bit
(user/group/other rwx bits) disallow access (errno was `EACCES`).
PermissionDenied is returned if something else denies access (errno was
`EPERM`) (immutable bit, SELinux, capabilities, etc). This somewhat
subtle distinction is a POSIX thing.
Most of the change is updating std.posix Error Sets to contain both
errors, and then propagating the pair up through caller Error Sets.
Fixes#16782
Windows defines an `ACCESS_DENIED` error code. There is no
PERMISSION_DENIED (or its equivalent) which seems to only exist on POSIX
systems. Fix a couple Windows calls code to return `error.AccessDenied`
for `ACCESS_DENIED` and to stop mapping AccessDenied into
PermissionDenied.
Functions like isMinGW() and isGnuLibC() have a good reason to exist: They look
at multiple components of the target. But functions like isWasm(), isDarwin(),
isGnu(), etc only exist to save 4-8 characters. I don't think this is a good
enough reason to keep them, especially given that:
* It's not immediately obvious to a reader whether target.isDarwin() means the
same thing as target.os.tag.isDarwin() precisely because isMinGW() and similar
functions *do* look at multiple components.
* It's not clear where we would draw the line. The logical conclusion before
this commit would be to also wrap Arch.isX86(), Os.Tag.isSolarish(),
Abi.isOpenHarmony(), etc... this obviously quickly gets out of hand.
* It's nice to just have a single correct way of doing something.
Zig's copy of the `SYMLINK_{NO,}FOLLOW` constants from wasi-musl was
wrong, as were the `IFIFO` and `IFSOCK` file type flags. Fix these up,
and add comments pointing to exactly where they come from (as the
wasi-musl source has lots of unused, different definitions of these
constants).
Add tests for the Zig convention that WASM preopen 3 is the current
working directory. This is true for WASM with or without libc.
Enable several fs and posix tests that are now passing (not necessarily
because of this change) on wasm targets.
Fixes#20890.
* fix compilation errors for fs and fs.Dir
* mem.span instead of mem.sliceTo
* Updating symLinkAbsoluteW function parameters
* Update with expected rename semantics
statx() is strictly superior to stat() and friends. We can do this because the
standard library declares Linux 4.19 to be the minimum version supported in
std.Target. This is also necessary on riscv32 where there is only statx().
While here, I improved std.fs.File.metadata() to gather as much information as
possible when calling statx() since that is the expectation from this particular
API.
Deprecates std.fs.atomicSymLink and removes the allocator requirement
from the new std.fs.Dir.atomicSymLink. Replaces the two usages of this
within std.
I did not include the TODOs from the original code that were based
off of `switch (err) { ..., else => return err }` not having correct
inference that cases handled in `...` are impossible in the error
union return type because these are not specified in many places but
I can add them back if wanted.
Thank you @squeek502 for help with fixing buffer overflows!
* common symbols are now public from std.c even if they live in
std.posix
* LOCK is now one of the common symbols since it is the same on 100% of
operating systems.
* flock is now void value on wasi and windows
* std.fs.Dir now uses flock being void as feature detection, avoiding
trying to call it on wasi and windows
It is now composed of these main sections:
* Declarations that are shared among all operating systems.
* Declarations that have the same name, but different type signatures
depending on the operating system. Often multiple operating systems
share the same type signatures however.
* Declarations that are specific to a single operating system.
- These are imported one per line so you can see where they come from,
protected by a comptime block to prevent accessing the wrong one.
Closes#19352 by changing the convention to making types `void` and
functions `{}`, so that it becomes possible to update `@hasDecl` sites
to use `@TypeOf(f) != void` or `T != void`. Happily, this ended up
removing some duplicate logic and update some bitrotted feature
detection checks.
A handful of types have been modified to gain namespacing and type
safety. This is a breaking change.
Oh, and the last usage of `usingnamespace` site is eliminated.
Deprecated aliases that are now compile errors:
- `std.fs.MAX_PATH_BYTES` (renamed to `std.fs.max_path_bytes`)
- `std.mem.tokenize` (split into `tokenizeAny`, `tokenizeSequence`, `tokenizeScalar`)
- `std.mem.split` (split into `splitSequence`, `splitAny`, `splitScalar`)
- `std.mem.splitBackwards` (split into `splitBackwardsSequence`, `splitBackwardsAny`, `splitBackwardsScalar`)
- `std.unicode`
+ `utf16leToUtf8Alloc`, `utf16leToUtf8AllocZ`, `utf16leToUtf8`, `fmtUtf16le` (all renamed to have capitalized `Le`)
+ `utf8ToUtf16LeWithNull` (renamed to `utf8ToUtf16LeAllocZ`)
- `std.zig.CrossTarget` (moved to `std.Target.Query`)
Deprecated `lib/std/std.zig` decls were deleted instead of made a `@compileError` because the `refAllDecls` in the test block would trigger the `@compileError`. The deleted top-level `std` namespaces are:
- `std.rand` (renamed to `std.Random`)
- `std.TailQueue` (renamed to `std.DoublyLinkedList`)
- `std.ChildProcess` (renamed/moved to `std.process.Child`)
This is not exhaustive. Deprecated aliases that I didn't touch:
+ `std.io.*`
+ `std.Build.*`
+ `std.builtin.Mode`
+ `std.zig.c_translation.CIntLiteralRadix`
+ anything in `src/`
Fixes a regression introduced in 67455c5e70e86dbb7805ff9a415f1b13b14f36da. The `errdefer` cannot run since its not possible for an error to occur, and we don't want it to run on the last handle, so we move the closing back down to where it was before 67455c5e70e86dbb7805ff9a415f1b13b14f36da.
writeFile was deprecated in favor of writeFile2 in f645022d16361865e24582d28f1e62312fbc73bb. This commit renames writeFile2 to writeFile and makes writeFile2 a compile error.
Also removes the LOCK namespace from std.c.wasi because wasi libc does
not have flock.
closes#19336
related to #19352
Co-authored-by: Ryan Liptak <squeek502@hotmail.com>
InvalidHandle in OpenError is no longer a possible error on any platform. In the past it was able to be returned in `openOptionsFromFlagsWasi`, but the implementation was changed in 7680c5330cbc9141b9a5444e30c512b6068ab50d to make it no longer possible.
InvalidHandle in RealPathError was a holdover from before d5312d53a066092ba9efd687e25b29a87eb6290c, which made realpath a compile error on WASI. However, InvalidHandle was also a possible error in the FreeBSD fallback implementation added in 537624734c4db9e0cdbdc0ebce57375d17172a70. This commit changes the FreeBSD fallback implementation to return FileNotFound instead of InvalidHandle which matches how EBADF is handled in all the other `realpath` implementations (including the FreeBSD non-fallback implementation).
Closes#19084
Windows paths now use WTF-16 <-> WTF-8 conversion everywhere, which is lossless. Previously, conversion of ill-formed UTF-16 paths would either fail or invoke illegal behavior.
WASI paths must be valid UTF-8, and the relevant function calls have been updated to handle the possibility of failure due to paths not being encoded/encodable as valid UTF-8.
Closes#18694Closes#1774Closes#2565
Encountered in a recent CI run on an aarch64-windows dev kit.
Pretty sure I disabled the virus scanner but it looks like it turned
itself back on with a Windows Update.
Rather than marking the new error code as unreachable in the places
where it is unexpected, this commit makes it return `error.Unexpected`.
* std.c: consolidate some definitions, making them share code. For
example, freebsd, dragonfly, and openbsd can all share the same
`pthread_mutex_t` definition.
* add type safety to std.c.O
- this caught a bug where mode flags were incorrectly passed as the
open flags.
* 3 fewer uses of usingnamespace keyword
* as per convention, remove purposeless field prefixes from struct field
names even if they have those prefixes in the corresponding C code.
* fix incorrect wasi libc Stat definition
* remove C definitions from incorrectly being in std.os.wasi
* make std.os.wasi definitions type safe
* go through wasi native APIs even when linking libc because the libc
APIs are problematic and wasteful
* don't expose WASI definitions in std.posix
* remove std.os.wasi.rights_t.ALL: this is a footgun. should it be all
future rights too? or only all current rights known? both are
the wrong answer.
std.fs.dir.makePath silently failed if one of the items in the path already exists. For example:
cwd.makePath("foo/bar/baz")
Silently failing is OK if "bar" is already a directory - this is the intended use of makePath (like mkdir -p). But if bar is a file then the subdirectory baz cannot be created - the end result is that makePath doesn't do anything which should be a detectable error because baz is never created.
The existing code had a TODO comment that did not specifically cover this error, but the solution for this silent failure also accomplishes the TODO task - the code now stats "foo" and returns an appropriate error. The new code also handles potential race condition if "bar" is deleted/permissions changed/etc in between the initial makeDir and statFile calls.