|  | //! Traits, helpers, and type definitions for core I/O functionality. | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! The `std::io` module contains a number of common things you'll need | 
|  | //! when doing input and output. The most core part of this module is | 
|  | //! the [`Read`] and [`Write`] traits, which provide the | 
|  | //! most general interface for reading and writing input and output. | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ## Read and Write | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! Because they are traits, [`Read`] and [`Write`] are implemented by a number | 
|  | //! of other types, and you can implement them for your types too. As such, | 
|  | //! you'll see a few different types of I/O throughout the documentation in | 
|  | //! this module: [`File`]s, [`TcpStream`]s, and sometimes even [`Vec<T>`]s. For | 
|  | //! example, [`Read`] adds a [`read`][`Read::read`] method, which we can use on | 
|  | //! [`File`]s: | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ```no_run | 
|  | //! use std::io; | 
|  | //! use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | //! use std::fs::File; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | //!     let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | //!     let mut buffer = [0; 10]; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     // read up to 10 bytes | 
|  | //!     let n = f.read(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     println!("The bytes: {:?}", &buffer[..n]); | 
|  | //!     Ok(()) | 
|  | //! } | 
|  | //! ``` | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! [`Read`] and [`Write`] are so important, implementors of the two traits have a | 
|  | //! nickname: readers and writers. So you'll sometimes see 'a reader' instead | 
|  | //! of 'a type that implements the [`Read`] trait'. Much easier! | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ## Seek and BufRead | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! Beyond that, there are two important traits that are provided: [`Seek`] | 
|  | //! and [`BufRead`]. Both of these build on top of a reader to control | 
|  | //! how the reading happens. [`Seek`] lets you control where the next byte is | 
|  | //! coming from: | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ```no_run | 
|  | //! use std::io; | 
|  | //! use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | //! use std::io::SeekFrom; | 
|  | //! use std::fs::File; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | //!     let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | //!     let mut buffer = [0; 10]; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     // skip to the last 10 bytes of the file | 
|  | //!     f.seek(SeekFrom::End(-10))?; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     // read up to 10 bytes | 
|  | //!     let n = f.read(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     println!("The bytes: {:?}", &buffer[..n]); | 
|  | //!     Ok(()) | 
|  | //! } | 
|  | //! ``` | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! [`BufRead`] uses an internal buffer to provide a number of other ways to read, but | 
|  | //! to show it off, we'll need to talk about buffers in general. Keep reading! | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ## BufReader and BufWriter | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! Byte-based interfaces are unwieldy and can be inefficient, as we'd need to be | 
|  | //! making near-constant calls to the operating system. To help with this, | 
|  | //! `std::io` comes with two structs, [`BufReader`] and [`BufWriter`], which wrap | 
|  | //! readers and writers. The wrapper uses a buffer, reducing the number of | 
|  | //! calls and providing nicer methods for accessing exactly what you want. | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! For example, [`BufReader`] works with the [`BufRead`] trait to add extra | 
|  | //! methods to any reader: | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ```no_run | 
|  | //! use std::io; | 
|  | //! use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | //! use std::io::BufReader; | 
|  | //! use std::fs::File; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | //!     let f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | //!     let mut reader = BufReader::new(f); | 
|  | //!     let mut buffer = String::new(); | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     // read a line into buffer | 
|  | //!     reader.read_line(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     println!("{buffer}"); | 
|  | //!     Ok(()) | 
|  | //! } | 
|  | //! ``` | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! [`BufWriter`] doesn't add any new ways of writing; it just buffers every call | 
|  | //! to [`write`][`Write::write`]: | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ```no_run | 
|  | //! use std::io; | 
|  | //! use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | //! use std::io::BufWriter; | 
|  | //! use std::fs::File; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | //!     let f = File::create("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | //!     { | 
|  | //!         let mut writer = BufWriter::new(f); | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!         // write a byte to the buffer | 
|  | //!         writer.write(&[42])?; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     } // the buffer is flushed once writer goes out of scope | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     Ok(()) | 
|  | //! } | 
|  | //! ``` | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ## Standard input and output | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! A very common source of input is standard input: | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ```no_run | 
|  | //! use std::io; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | //!     let mut input = String::new(); | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     io::stdin().read_line(&mut input)?; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     println!("You typed: {}", input.trim()); | 
|  | //!     Ok(()) | 
|  | //! } | 
|  | //! ``` | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! Note that you cannot use the [`?` operator] in functions that do not return | 
|  | //! a [`Result<T, E>`][`Result`]. Instead, you can call [`.unwrap()`] | 
|  | //! or `match` on the return value to catch any possible errors: | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ```no_run | 
|  | //! use std::io; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! let mut input = String::new(); | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! io::stdin().read_line(&mut input).unwrap(); | 
|  | //! ``` | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! And a very common source of output is standard output: | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ```no_run | 
|  | //! use std::io; | 
|  | //! use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | //!     io::stdout().write(&[42])?; | 
|  | //!     Ok(()) | 
|  | //! } | 
|  | //! ``` | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! Of course, using [`io::stdout`] directly is less common than something like | 
|  | //! [`println!`]. | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ## Iterator types | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! A large number of the structures provided by `std::io` are for various | 
|  | //! ways of iterating over I/O. For example, [`Lines`] is used to split over | 
|  | //! lines: | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ```no_run | 
|  | //! use std::io; | 
|  | //! use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | //! use std::io::BufReader; | 
|  | //! use std::fs::File; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | //!     let f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | //!     let reader = BufReader::new(f); | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     for line in reader.lines() { | 
|  | //!         println!("{}", line?); | 
|  | //!     } | 
|  | //!     Ok(()) | 
|  | //! } | 
|  | //! ``` | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ## Functions | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! There are a number of [functions][functions-list] that offer access to various | 
|  | //! features. For example, we can use three of these functions to copy everything | 
|  | //! from standard input to standard output: | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ```no_run | 
|  | //! use std::io; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | //!     io::copy(&mut io::stdin(), &mut io::stdout())?; | 
|  | //!     Ok(()) | 
|  | //! } | 
|  | //! ``` | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! [functions-list]: #functions-1 | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ## io::Result | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! Last, but certainly not least, is [`io::Result`]. This type is used | 
|  | //! as the return type of many `std::io` functions that can cause an error, and | 
|  | //! can be returned from your own functions as well. Many of the examples in this | 
|  | //! module use the [`?` operator]: | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ``` | 
|  | //! use std::io; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! fn read_input() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | //!     let mut input = String::new(); | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     io::stdin().read_line(&mut input)?; | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     println!("You typed: {}", input.trim()); | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //!     Ok(()) | 
|  | //! } | 
|  | //! ``` | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! The return type of `read_input()`, [`io::Result<()>`][`io::Result`], is a very | 
|  | //! common type for functions which don't have a 'real' return value, but do want to | 
|  | //! return errors if they happen. In this case, the only purpose of this function is | 
|  | //! to read the line and print it, so we use `()`. | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ## Platform-specific behavior | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! Many I/O functions throughout the standard library are documented to indicate | 
|  | //! what various library or syscalls they are delegated to. This is done to help | 
|  | //! applications both understand what's happening under the hood as well as investigate | 
|  | //! any possibly unclear semantics. Note, however, that this is informative, not a binding | 
|  | //! contract. The implementation of many of these functions are subject to change over | 
|  | //! time and may call fewer or more syscalls/library functions. | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! ## I/O Safety | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! Rust follows an I/O safety discipline that is comparable to its memory safety discipline. This | 
|  | //! means that file descriptors can be *exclusively owned*. (Here, "file descriptor" is meant to | 
|  | //! subsume similar concepts that exist across a wide range of operating systems even if they might | 
|  | //! use a different name, such as "handle".) An exclusively owned file descriptor is one that no | 
|  | //! other code is allowed to access in any way, but the owner is allowed to access and even close | 
|  | //! it any time. A type that owns its file descriptor should usually close it in its `drop` | 
|  | //! function. Types like [`File`] own their file descriptor. Similarly, file descriptors | 
|  | //! can be *borrowed*, granting the temporary right to perform operations on this file descriptor. | 
|  | //! This indicates that the file descriptor will not be closed for the lifetime of the borrow, but | 
|  | //! it does *not* imply any right to close this file descriptor, since it will likely be owned by | 
|  | //! someone else. | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! The platform-specific parts of the Rust standard library expose types that reflect these | 
|  | //! concepts, see [`os::unix`] and [`os::windows`]. | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! To uphold I/O safety, it is crucial that no code acts on file descriptors it does not own or | 
|  | //! borrow, and no code closes file descriptors it does not own. In other words, a safe function | 
|  | //! that takes a regular integer, treats it as a file descriptor, and acts on it, is *unsound*. | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! Not upholding I/O safety and acting on a file descriptor without proof of ownership can lead to | 
|  | //! misbehavior and even Undefined Behavior in code that relies on ownership of its file | 
|  | //! descriptors: a closed file descriptor could be re-allocated, so the original owner of that file | 
|  | //! descriptor is now working on the wrong file. Some code might even rely on fully encapsulating | 
|  | //! its file descriptors with no operations being performed by any other part of the program. | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! Note that exclusive ownership of a file descriptor does *not* imply exclusive ownership of the | 
|  | //! underlying kernel object that the file descriptor references (also called "open file description" on | 
|  | //! some operating systems). File descriptors basically work like [`Arc`]: when you receive an owned | 
|  | //! file descriptor, you cannot know whether there are any other file descriptors that reference the | 
|  | //! same kernel object. However, when you create a new kernel object, you know that you are holding | 
|  | //! the only reference to it. Just be careful not to lend it to anyone, since they can obtain a | 
|  | //! clone and then you can no longer know what the reference count is! In that sense, [`OwnedFd`] is | 
|  | //! like `Arc` and [`BorrowedFd<'a>`] is like `&'a Arc` (and similar for the Windows types). In | 
|  | //! particular, given a `BorrowedFd<'a>`, you are not allowed to close the file descriptor -- just | 
|  | //! like how, given a `&'a Arc`, you are not allowed to decrement the reference count and | 
|  | //! potentially free the underlying object. There is no equivalent to `Box` for file descriptors in | 
|  | //! the standard library (that would be a type that guarantees that the reference count is `1`), | 
|  | //! however, it would be possible for a crate to define a type with those semantics. | 
|  | //! | 
|  | //! [`File`]: crate::fs::File | 
|  | //! [`TcpStream`]: crate::net::TcpStream | 
|  | //! [`io::stdout`]: stdout | 
|  | //! [`io::Result`]: self::Result | 
|  | //! [`?` operator]: ../../book/appendix-02-operators.html | 
|  | //! [`Result`]: crate::result::Result | 
|  | //! [`.unwrap()`]: crate::result::Result::unwrap | 
|  | //! [`os::unix`]: ../os/unix/io/index.html | 
|  | //! [`os::windows`]: ../os/windows/io/index.html | 
|  | //! [`OwnedFd`]: ../os/fd/struct.OwnedFd.html | 
|  | //! [`BorrowedFd<'a>`]: ../os/fd/struct.BorrowedFd.html | 
|  | //! [`Arc`]: crate::sync::Arc | 
|  |  | 
|  | #![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[cfg(test)] | 
|  | mod tests; | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "read_buf", issue = "78485")] | 
|  | pub use core::io::{BorrowedBuf, BorrowedCursor}; | 
|  | use core::slice::memchr; | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "bufwriter_into_parts", since = "1.56.0")] | 
|  | pub use self::buffered::WriterPanicked; | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "raw_os_error_ty", issue = "107792")] | 
|  | pub use self::error::RawOsError; | 
|  | #[doc(hidden)] | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "io_const_error_internals", issue = "none")] | 
|  | pub use self::error::SimpleMessage; | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "io_const_error", issue = "133448")] | 
|  | pub use self::error::const_error; | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "anonymous_pipe", since = "1.87.0")] | 
|  | pub use self::pipe::{PipeReader, PipeWriter, pipe}; | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "is_terminal", since = "1.70.0")] | 
|  | pub use self::stdio::IsTerminal; | 
|  | pub(crate) use self::stdio::attempt_print_to_stderr; | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "print_internals", issue = "none")] | 
|  | #[doc(hidden)] | 
|  | pub use self::stdio::{_eprint, _print}; | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "internal_output_capture", issue = "none")] | 
|  | #[doc(no_inline, hidden)] | 
|  | pub use self::stdio::{set_output_capture, try_set_output_capture}; | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | pub use self::{ | 
|  | buffered::{BufReader, BufWriter, IntoInnerError, LineWriter}, | 
|  | copy::copy, | 
|  | cursor::Cursor, | 
|  | error::{Error, ErrorKind, Result}, | 
|  | stdio::{Stderr, StderrLock, Stdin, StdinLock, Stdout, StdoutLock, stderr, stdin, stdout}, | 
|  | util::{Empty, Repeat, Sink, empty, repeat, sink}, | 
|  | }; | 
|  | use crate::mem::take; | 
|  | use crate::ops::{Deref, DerefMut}; | 
|  | use crate::{cmp, fmt, slice, str, sys}; | 
|  |  | 
|  | mod buffered; | 
|  | pub(crate) mod copy; | 
|  | mod cursor; | 
|  | mod error; | 
|  | mod impls; | 
|  | mod pipe; | 
|  | pub mod prelude; | 
|  | mod stdio; | 
|  | mod util; | 
|  |  | 
|  | const DEFAULT_BUF_SIZE: usize = crate::sys::io::DEFAULT_BUF_SIZE; | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub(crate) use stdio::cleanup; | 
|  |  | 
|  | struct Guard<'a> { | 
|  | buf: &'a mut Vec<u8>, | 
|  | len: usize, | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl Drop for Guard<'_> { | 
|  | fn drop(&mut self) { | 
|  | unsafe { | 
|  | self.buf.set_len(self.len); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Several `read_to_string` and `read_line` methods in the standard library will | 
|  | // append data into a `String` buffer, but we need to be pretty careful when | 
|  | // doing this. The implementation will just call `.as_mut_vec()` and then | 
|  | // delegate to a byte-oriented reading method, but we must ensure that when | 
|  | // returning we never leave `buf` in a state such that it contains invalid UTF-8 | 
|  | // in its bounds. | 
|  | // | 
|  | // To this end, we use an RAII guard (to protect against panics) which updates | 
|  | // the length of the string when it is dropped. This guard initially truncates | 
|  | // the string to the prior length and only after we've validated that the | 
|  | // new contents are valid UTF-8 do we allow it to set a longer length. | 
|  | // | 
|  | // The unsafety in this function is twofold: | 
|  | // | 
|  | // 1. We're looking at the raw bytes of `buf`, so we take on the burden of UTF-8 | 
|  | //    checks. | 
|  | // 2. We're passing a raw buffer to the function `f`, and it is expected that | 
|  | //    the function only *appends* bytes to the buffer. We'll get undefined | 
|  | //    behavior if existing bytes are overwritten to have non-UTF-8 data. | 
|  | pub(crate) unsafe fn append_to_string<F>(buf: &mut String, f: F) -> Result<usize> | 
|  | where | 
|  | F: FnOnce(&mut Vec<u8>) -> Result<usize>, | 
|  | { | 
|  | let mut g = Guard { len: buf.len(), buf: unsafe { buf.as_mut_vec() } }; | 
|  | let ret = f(g.buf); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // SAFETY: the caller promises to only append data to `buf` | 
|  | let appended = unsafe { g.buf.get_unchecked(g.len..) }; | 
|  | if str::from_utf8(appended).is_err() { | 
|  | ret.and_then(|_| Err(Error::INVALID_UTF8)) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | g.len = g.buf.len(); | 
|  | ret | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Here we must serve many masters with conflicting goals: | 
|  | // | 
|  | // - avoid allocating unless necessary | 
|  | // - avoid overallocating if we know the exact size (#89165) | 
|  | // - avoid passing large buffers to readers that always initialize the free capacity if they perform short reads (#23815, #23820) | 
|  | // - pass large buffers to readers that do not initialize the spare capacity. this can amortize per-call overheads | 
|  | // - and finally pass not-too-small and not-too-large buffers to Windows read APIs because they manage to suffer from both problems | 
|  | //   at the same time, i.e. small reads suffer from syscall overhead, all reads incur costs proportional to buffer size (#110650) | 
|  | // | 
|  | pub(crate) fn default_read_to_end<R: Read + ?Sized>( | 
|  | r: &mut R, | 
|  | buf: &mut Vec<u8>, | 
|  | size_hint: Option<usize>, | 
|  | ) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | let start_len = buf.len(); | 
|  | let start_cap = buf.capacity(); | 
|  | // Optionally limit the maximum bytes read on each iteration. | 
|  | // This adds an arbitrary fiddle factor to allow for more data than we expect. | 
|  | let mut max_read_size = size_hint | 
|  | .and_then(|s| s.checked_add(1024)?.checked_next_multiple_of(DEFAULT_BUF_SIZE)) | 
|  | .unwrap_or(DEFAULT_BUF_SIZE); | 
|  |  | 
|  | let mut initialized = 0; // Extra initialized bytes from previous loop iteration | 
|  |  | 
|  | const PROBE_SIZE: usize = 32; | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn small_probe_read<R: Read + ?Sized>(r: &mut R, buf: &mut Vec<u8>) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | let mut probe = [0u8; PROBE_SIZE]; | 
|  |  | 
|  | loop { | 
|  | match r.read(&mut probe) { | 
|  | Ok(n) => { | 
|  | // there is no way to recover from allocation failure here | 
|  | // because the data has already been read. | 
|  | buf.extend_from_slice(&probe[..n]); | 
|  | return Ok(n); | 
|  | } | 
|  | Err(ref e) if e.is_interrupted() => continue, | 
|  | Err(e) => return Err(e), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // avoid inflating empty/small vecs before we have determined that there's anything to read | 
|  | if (size_hint.is_none() || size_hint == Some(0)) && buf.capacity() - buf.len() < PROBE_SIZE { | 
|  | let read = small_probe_read(r, buf)?; | 
|  |  | 
|  | if read == 0 { | 
|  | return Ok(0); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | let mut consecutive_short_reads = 0; | 
|  |  | 
|  | loop { | 
|  | if buf.len() == buf.capacity() && buf.capacity() == start_cap { | 
|  | // The buffer might be an exact fit. Let's read into a probe buffer | 
|  | // and see if it returns `Ok(0)`. If so, we've avoided an | 
|  | // unnecessary doubling of the capacity. But if not, append the | 
|  | // probe buffer to the primary buffer and let its capacity grow. | 
|  | let read = small_probe_read(r, buf)?; | 
|  |  | 
|  | if read == 0 { | 
|  | return Ok(buf.len() - start_len); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if buf.len() == buf.capacity() { | 
|  | // buf is full, need more space | 
|  | buf.try_reserve(PROBE_SIZE)?; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | let mut spare = buf.spare_capacity_mut(); | 
|  | let buf_len = cmp::min(spare.len(), max_read_size); | 
|  | spare = &mut spare[..buf_len]; | 
|  | let mut read_buf: BorrowedBuf<'_> = spare.into(); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // SAFETY: These bytes were initialized but not filled in the previous loop | 
|  | unsafe { | 
|  | read_buf.set_init(initialized); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | let mut cursor = read_buf.unfilled(); | 
|  | let result = loop { | 
|  | match r.read_buf(cursor.reborrow()) { | 
|  | Err(e) if e.is_interrupted() => continue, | 
|  | // Do not stop now in case of error: we might have received both data | 
|  | // and an error | 
|  | res => break res, | 
|  | } | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | let unfilled_but_initialized = cursor.init_mut().len(); | 
|  | let bytes_read = cursor.written(); | 
|  | let was_fully_initialized = read_buf.init_len() == buf_len; | 
|  |  | 
|  | // SAFETY: BorrowedBuf's invariants mean this much memory is initialized. | 
|  | unsafe { | 
|  | let new_len = bytes_read + buf.len(); | 
|  | buf.set_len(new_len); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Now that all data is pushed to the vector, we can fail without data loss | 
|  | result?; | 
|  |  | 
|  | if bytes_read == 0 { | 
|  | return Ok(buf.len() - start_len); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if bytes_read < buf_len { | 
|  | consecutive_short_reads += 1; | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | consecutive_short_reads = 0; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // store how much was initialized but not filled | 
|  | initialized = unfilled_but_initialized; | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Use heuristics to determine the max read size if no initial size hint was provided | 
|  | if size_hint.is_none() { | 
|  | // The reader is returning short reads but it doesn't call ensure_init(). | 
|  | // In that case we no longer need to restrict read sizes to avoid | 
|  | // initialization costs. | 
|  | // When reading from disk we usually don't get any short reads except at EOF. | 
|  | // So we wait for at least 2 short reads before uncapping the read buffer; | 
|  | // this helps with the Windows issue. | 
|  | if !was_fully_initialized && consecutive_short_reads > 1 { | 
|  | max_read_size = usize::MAX; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // we have passed a larger buffer than previously and the | 
|  | // reader still hasn't returned a short read | 
|  | if buf_len >= max_read_size && bytes_read == buf_len { | 
|  | max_read_size = max_read_size.saturating_mul(2); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub(crate) fn default_read_to_string<R: Read + ?Sized>( | 
|  | r: &mut R, | 
|  | buf: &mut String, | 
|  | size_hint: Option<usize>, | 
|  | ) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | // Note that we do *not* call `r.read_to_end()` here. We are passing | 
|  | // `&mut Vec<u8>` (the raw contents of `buf`) into the `read_to_end` | 
|  | // method to fill it up. An arbitrary implementation could overwrite the | 
|  | // entire contents of the vector, not just append to it (which is what | 
|  | // we are expecting). | 
|  | // | 
|  | // To prevent extraneously checking the UTF-8-ness of the entire buffer | 
|  | // we pass it to our hardcoded `default_read_to_end` implementation which | 
|  | // we know is guaranteed to only read data into the end of the buffer. | 
|  | unsafe { append_to_string(buf, |b| default_read_to_end(r, b, size_hint)) } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub(crate) fn default_read_vectored<F>(read: F, bufs: &mut [IoSliceMut<'_>]) -> Result<usize> | 
|  | where | 
|  | F: FnOnce(&mut [u8]) -> Result<usize>, | 
|  | { | 
|  | let buf = bufs.iter_mut().find(|b| !b.is_empty()).map_or(&mut [][..], |b| &mut **b); | 
|  | read(buf) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub(crate) fn default_write_vectored<F>(write: F, bufs: &[IoSlice<'_>]) -> Result<usize> | 
|  | where | 
|  | F: FnOnce(&[u8]) -> Result<usize>, | 
|  | { | 
|  | let buf = bufs.iter().find(|b| !b.is_empty()).map_or(&[][..], |b| &**b); | 
|  | write(buf) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub(crate) fn default_read_exact<R: Read + ?Sized>(this: &mut R, mut buf: &mut [u8]) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | while !buf.is_empty() { | 
|  | match this.read(buf) { | 
|  | Ok(0) => break, | 
|  | Ok(n) => { | 
|  | buf = &mut buf[n..]; | 
|  | } | 
|  | Err(ref e) if e.is_interrupted() => {} | 
|  | Err(e) => return Err(e), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | if !buf.is_empty() { Err(Error::READ_EXACT_EOF) } else { Ok(()) } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub(crate) fn default_read_buf<F>(read: F, mut cursor: BorrowedCursor<'_>) -> Result<()> | 
|  | where | 
|  | F: FnOnce(&mut [u8]) -> Result<usize>, | 
|  | { | 
|  | let n = read(cursor.ensure_init().init_mut())?; | 
|  | cursor.advance(n); | 
|  | Ok(()) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub(crate) fn default_read_buf_exact<R: Read + ?Sized>( | 
|  | this: &mut R, | 
|  | mut cursor: BorrowedCursor<'_>, | 
|  | ) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | while cursor.capacity() > 0 { | 
|  | let prev_written = cursor.written(); | 
|  | match this.read_buf(cursor.reborrow()) { | 
|  | Ok(()) => {} | 
|  | Err(e) if e.is_interrupted() => continue, | 
|  | Err(e) => return Err(e), | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if cursor.written() == prev_written { | 
|  | return Err(Error::READ_EXACT_EOF); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | Ok(()) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub(crate) fn default_write_fmt<W: Write + ?Sized>( | 
|  | this: &mut W, | 
|  | args: fmt::Arguments<'_>, | 
|  | ) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | // Create a shim which translates a `Write` to a `fmt::Write` and saves off | 
|  | // I/O errors, instead of discarding them. | 
|  | struct Adapter<'a, T: ?Sized + 'a> { | 
|  | inner: &'a mut T, | 
|  | error: Result<()>, | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<T: Write + ?Sized> fmt::Write for Adapter<'_, T> { | 
|  | fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> fmt::Result { | 
|  | match self.inner.write_all(s.as_bytes()) { | 
|  | Ok(()) => Ok(()), | 
|  | Err(e) => { | 
|  | self.error = Err(e); | 
|  | Err(fmt::Error) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | let mut output = Adapter { inner: this, error: Ok(()) }; | 
|  | match fmt::write(&mut output, args) { | 
|  | Ok(()) => Ok(()), | 
|  | Err(..) => { | 
|  | // Check whether the error came from the underlying `Write`. | 
|  | if output.error.is_err() { | 
|  | output.error | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | // This shouldn't happen: the underlying stream did not error, | 
|  | // but somehow the formatter still errored? | 
|  | panic!( | 
|  | "a formatting trait implementation returned an error when the underlying stream did not" | 
|  | ); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// The `Read` trait allows for reading bytes from a source. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Implementors of the `Read` trait are called 'readers'. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Readers are defined by one required method, [`read()`]. Each call to [`read()`] | 
|  | /// will attempt to pull bytes from this source into a provided buffer. A | 
|  | /// number of other methods are implemented in terms of [`read()`], giving | 
|  | /// implementors a number of ways to read bytes while only needing to implement | 
|  | /// a single method. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Readers are intended to be composable with one another. Many implementors | 
|  | /// throughout [`std::io`] take and provide types which implement the `Read` | 
|  | /// trait. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Please note that each call to [`read()`] may involve a system call, and | 
|  | /// therefore, using something that implements [`BufRead`], such as | 
|  | /// [`BufReader`], will be more efficient. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Repeated calls to the reader use the same cursor, so for example | 
|  | /// calling `read_to_end` twice on a [`File`] will only return the file's | 
|  | /// contents once. It's recommended to first call `rewind()` in that case. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]s implement `Read`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = [0; 10]; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // read up to 10 bytes | 
|  | ///     f.read(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = Vec::new(); | 
|  | ///     // read the whole file | 
|  | ///     f.read_to_end(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // read into a String, so that you don't need to do the conversion. | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = String::new(); | 
|  | ///     f.read_to_string(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // and more! See the other methods for more details. | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Read from [`&str`] because [`&[u8]`][prim@slice] implements `Read`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// # use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut b = "This string will be read".as_bytes(); | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = [0; 10]; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // read up to 10 bytes | 
|  | ///     b.read(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // etc... it works exactly as a File does! | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`read()`]: Read::read | 
|  | /// [`&str`]: prim@str | 
|  | /// [`std::io`]: self | 
|  | /// [`File`]: crate::fs::File | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | #[doc(notable_trait)] | 
|  | #[cfg_attr(not(test), rustc_diagnostic_item = "IoRead")] | 
|  | pub trait Read { | 
|  | /// Pull some bytes from this source into the specified buffer, returning | 
|  | /// how many bytes were read. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function does not provide any guarantees about whether it blocks | 
|  | /// waiting for data, but if an object needs to block for a read and cannot, | 
|  | /// it will typically signal this via an [`Err`] return value. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If the return value of this method is [`Ok(n)`], then implementations must | 
|  | /// guarantee that `0 <= n <= buf.len()`. A nonzero `n` value indicates | 
|  | /// that the buffer `buf` has been filled in with `n` bytes of data from this | 
|  | /// source. If `n` is `0`, then it can indicate one of two scenarios: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// 1. This reader has reached its "end of file" and will likely no longer | 
|  | ///    be able to produce bytes. Note that this does not mean that the | 
|  | ///    reader will *always* no longer be able to produce bytes. As an example, | 
|  | ///    on Linux, this method will call the `recv` syscall for a [`TcpStream`], | 
|  | ///    where returning zero indicates the connection was shut down correctly. While | 
|  | ///    for [`File`], it is possible to reach the end of file and get zero as result, | 
|  | ///    but if more data is appended to the file, future calls to `read` will return | 
|  | ///    more data. | 
|  | /// 2. The buffer specified was 0 bytes in length. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// It is not an error if the returned value `n` is smaller than the buffer size, | 
|  | /// even when the reader is not at the end of the stream yet. | 
|  | /// This may happen for example because fewer bytes are actually available right now | 
|  | /// (e. g. being close to end-of-file) or because read() was interrupted by a signal. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// As this trait is safe to implement, callers in unsafe code cannot rely on | 
|  | /// `n <= buf.len()` for safety. | 
|  | /// Extra care needs to be taken when `unsafe` functions are used to access the read bytes. | 
|  | /// Callers have to ensure that no unchecked out-of-bounds accesses are possible even if | 
|  | /// `n > buf.len()`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// *Implementations* of this method can make no assumptions about the contents of `buf` when | 
|  | /// this function is called. It is recommended that implementations only write data to `buf` | 
|  | /// instead of reading its contents. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Correspondingly, however, *callers* of this method in unsafe code must not assume | 
|  | /// any guarantees about how the implementation uses `buf`. The trait is safe to implement, | 
|  | /// so it is possible that the code that's supposed to write to the buffer might also read | 
|  | /// from it. It is your responsibility to make sure that `buf` is initialized | 
|  | /// before calling `read`. Calling `read` with an uninitialized `buf` (of the kind one | 
|  | /// obtains via [`MaybeUninit<T>`]) is not safe, and can lead to undefined behavior. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`MaybeUninit<T>`]: crate::mem::MaybeUninit | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If this function encounters any form of I/O or other error, an error | 
|  | /// variant will be returned. If an error is returned then it must be | 
|  | /// guaranteed that no bytes were read. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// An error of the [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] kind is non-fatal and the read | 
|  | /// operation should be retried if there is nothing else to do. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]s implement `Read`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`Ok(n)`]: Ok | 
|  | /// [`File`]: crate::fs::File | 
|  | /// [`TcpStream`]: crate::net::TcpStream | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = [0; 10]; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // read up to 10 bytes | 
|  | ///     let n = f.read(&mut buffer[..])?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     println!("The bytes: {:?}", &buffer[..n]); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn read(&mut self, buf: &mut [u8]) -> Result<usize>; | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Like `read`, except that it reads into a slice of buffers. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Data is copied to fill each buffer in order, with the final buffer | 
|  | /// written to possibly being only partially filled. This method must | 
|  | /// behave equivalently to a single call to `read` with concatenated | 
|  | /// buffers. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The default implementation calls `read` with either the first nonempty | 
|  | /// buffer provided, or an empty one if none exists. | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec", since = "1.36.0")] | 
|  | fn read_vectored(&mut self, bufs: &mut [IoSliceMut<'_>]) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | default_read_vectored(|b| self.read(b), bufs) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Determines if this `Read`er has an efficient `read_vectored` | 
|  | /// implementation. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If a `Read`er does not override the default `read_vectored` | 
|  | /// implementation, code using it may want to avoid the method all together | 
|  | /// and coalesce writes into a single buffer for higher performance. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The default implementation returns `false`. | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "can_vector", issue = "69941")] | 
|  | fn is_read_vectored(&self) -> bool { | 
|  | false | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Reads all bytes until EOF in this source, placing them into `buf`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// All bytes read from this source will be appended to the specified buffer | 
|  | /// `buf`. This function will continuously call [`read()`] to append more data to | 
|  | /// `buf` until [`read()`] returns either [`Ok(0)`] or an error of | 
|  | /// non-[`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] kind. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If successful, this function will return the total number of bytes read. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If this function encounters an error of the kind | 
|  | /// [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] then the error is ignored and the operation | 
|  | /// will continue. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If any other read error is encountered then this function immediately | 
|  | /// returns. Any bytes which have already been read will be appended to | 
|  | /// `buf`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]s implement `Read`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`read()`]: Read::read | 
|  | /// [`Ok(0)`]: Ok | 
|  | /// [`File`]: crate::fs::File | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = Vec::new(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // read the whole file | 
|  | ///     f.read_to_end(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// (See also the [`std::fs::read`] convenience function for reading from a | 
|  | /// file.) | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`std::fs::read`]: crate::fs::read | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ## Implementing `read_to_end` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// When implementing the `io::Read` trait, it is recommended to allocate | 
|  | /// memory using [`Vec::try_reserve`]. However, this behavior is not guaranteed | 
|  | /// by all implementations, and `read_to_end` may not handle out-of-memory | 
|  | /// situations gracefully. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// # use std::io::{self, BufRead}; | 
|  | /// # struct Example { example_datasource: io::Empty } impl Example { | 
|  | /// # fn get_some_data_for_the_example(&self) -> &'static [u8] { &[] } | 
|  | /// fn read_to_end(&mut self, dest_vec: &mut Vec<u8>) -> io::Result<usize> { | 
|  | ///     let initial_vec_len = dest_vec.len(); | 
|  | ///     loop { | 
|  | ///         let src_buf = self.example_datasource.fill_buf()?; | 
|  | ///         if src_buf.is_empty() { | 
|  | ///             break; | 
|  | ///         } | 
|  | ///         dest_vec.try_reserve(src_buf.len())?; | 
|  | ///         dest_vec.extend_from_slice(src_buf); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///         // Any irreversible side effects should happen after `try_reserve` succeeds, | 
|  | ///         // to avoid losing data on allocation error. | 
|  | ///         let read = src_buf.len(); | 
|  | ///         self.example_datasource.consume(read); | 
|  | ///     } | 
|  | ///     Ok(dest_vec.len() - initial_vec_len) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// # } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Usage Notes | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// `read_to_end` attempts to read a source until EOF, but many sources are continuous streams | 
|  | /// that do not send EOF. In these cases, `read_to_end` will block indefinitely. Standard input | 
|  | /// is one such stream which may be finite if piped, but is typically continuous. For example, | 
|  | /// `cat file | my-rust-program` will correctly terminate with an `EOF` upon closure of cat. | 
|  | /// Reading user input or running programs that remain open indefinitely will never terminate | 
|  | /// the stream with `EOF` (e.g. `yes | my-rust-program`). | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Using `.lines()` with a [`BufReader`] or using [`read`] can provide a better solution | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///[`read`]: Read::read | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`Vec::try_reserve`]: crate::vec::Vec::try_reserve | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn read_to_end(&mut self, buf: &mut Vec<u8>) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | default_read_to_end(self, buf, None) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Reads all bytes until EOF in this source, appending them to `buf`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If successful, this function returns the number of bytes which were read | 
|  | /// and appended to `buf`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If the data in this stream is *not* valid UTF-8 then an error is | 
|  | /// returned and `buf` is unchanged. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// See [`read_to_end`] for other error semantics. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`read_to_end`]: Read::read_to_end | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]s implement `Read`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]: crate::fs::File | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = String::new(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     f.read_to_string(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// (See also the [`std::fs::read_to_string`] convenience function for | 
|  | /// reading from a file.) | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Usage Notes | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// `read_to_string` attempts to read a source until EOF, but many sources are continuous streams | 
|  | /// that do not send EOF. In these cases, `read_to_string` will block indefinitely. Standard input | 
|  | /// is one such stream which may be finite if piped, but is typically continuous. For example, | 
|  | /// `cat file | my-rust-program` will correctly terminate with an `EOF` upon closure of cat. | 
|  | /// Reading user input or running programs that remain open indefinitely will never terminate | 
|  | /// the stream with `EOF` (e.g. `yes | my-rust-program`). | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Using `.lines()` with a [`BufReader`] or using [`read`] can provide a better solution | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///[`read`]: Read::read | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`std::fs::read_to_string`]: crate::fs::read_to_string | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn read_to_string(&mut self, buf: &mut String) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | default_read_to_string(self, buf, None) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Reads the exact number of bytes required to fill `buf`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function reads as many bytes as necessary to completely fill the | 
|  | /// specified buffer `buf`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// *Implementations* of this method can make no assumptions about the contents of `buf` when | 
|  | /// this function is called. It is recommended that implementations only write data to `buf` | 
|  | /// instead of reading its contents. The documentation on [`read`] has a more detailed | 
|  | /// explanation of this subject. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If this function encounters an error of the kind | 
|  | /// [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] then the error is ignored and the operation | 
|  | /// will continue. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If this function encounters an "end of file" before completely filling | 
|  | /// the buffer, it returns an error of the kind [`ErrorKind::UnexpectedEof`]. | 
|  | /// The contents of `buf` are unspecified in this case. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If any other read error is encountered then this function immediately | 
|  | /// returns. The contents of `buf` are unspecified in this case. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If this function returns an error, it is unspecified how many bytes it | 
|  | /// has read, but it will never read more than would be necessary to | 
|  | /// completely fill the buffer. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]s implement `Read`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`read`]: Read::read | 
|  | /// [`File`]: crate::fs::File | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = [0; 10]; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // read exactly 10 bytes | 
|  | ///     f.read_exact(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "read_exact", since = "1.6.0")] | 
|  | fn read_exact(&mut self, buf: &mut [u8]) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | default_read_exact(self, buf) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Pull some bytes from this source into the specified buffer. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This is equivalent to the [`read`](Read::read) method, except that it is passed a [`BorrowedCursor`] rather than `[u8]` to allow use | 
|  | /// with uninitialized buffers. The new data will be appended to any existing contents of `buf`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The default implementation delegates to `read`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This method makes it possible to return both data and an error but it is advised against. | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "read_buf", issue = "78485")] | 
|  | fn read_buf(&mut self, buf: BorrowedCursor<'_>) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | default_read_buf(|b| self.read(b), buf) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Reads the exact number of bytes required to fill `cursor`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This is similar to the [`read_exact`](Read::read_exact) method, except | 
|  | /// that it is passed a [`BorrowedCursor`] rather than `[u8]` to allow use | 
|  | /// with uninitialized buffers. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If this function encounters an error of the kind [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] | 
|  | /// then the error is ignored and the operation will continue. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If this function encounters an "end of file" before completely filling | 
|  | /// the buffer, it returns an error of the kind [`ErrorKind::UnexpectedEof`]. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If any other read error is encountered then this function immediately | 
|  | /// returns. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If this function returns an error, all bytes read will be appended to `cursor`. | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "read_buf", issue = "78485")] | 
|  | fn read_buf_exact(&mut self, cursor: BorrowedCursor<'_>) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | default_read_buf_exact(self, cursor) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Creates a "by reference" adapter for this instance of `Read`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The returned adapter also implements `Read` and will simply borrow this | 
|  | /// current reader. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]s implement `Read`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]: crate::fs::File | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::Read; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = Vec::new(); | 
|  | ///     let mut other_buffer = Vec::new(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     { | 
|  | ///         let reference = f.by_ref(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///         // read at most 5 bytes | 
|  | ///         reference.take(5).read_to_end(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     } // drop our &mut reference so we can use f again | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // original file still usable, read the rest | 
|  | ///     f.read_to_end(&mut other_buffer)?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn by_ref(&mut self) -> &mut Self | 
|  | where | 
|  | Self: Sized, | 
|  | { | 
|  | self | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Transforms this `Read` instance to an [`Iterator`] over its bytes. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The returned type implements [`Iterator`] where the [`Item`] is | 
|  | /// <code>[Result]<[u8], [io::Error]></code>. | 
|  | /// The yielded item is [`Ok`] if a byte was successfully read and [`Err`] | 
|  | /// otherwise. EOF is mapped to returning [`None`] from this iterator. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The default implementation calls `read` for each byte, | 
|  | /// which can be very inefficient for data that's not in memory, | 
|  | /// such as [`File`]. Consider using a [`BufReader`] in such cases. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]s implement `Read`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`Item`]: Iterator::Item | 
|  | /// [`File`]: crate::fs::File "fs::File" | 
|  | /// [Result]: crate::result::Result "Result" | 
|  | /// [io::Error]: self::Error "io::Error" | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::io::BufReader; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let f = BufReader::new(File::open("foo.txt")?); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     for byte in f.bytes() { | 
|  | ///         println!("{}", byte?); | 
|  | ///     } | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn bytes(self) -> Bytes<Self> | 
|  | where | 
|  | Self: Sized, | 
|  | { | 
|  | Bytes { inner: self } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Creates an adapter which will chain this stream with another. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The returned `Read` instance will first read all bytes from this object | 
|  | /// until EOF is encountered. Afterwards the output is equivalent to the | 
|  | /// output of `next`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]s implement `Read`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]: crate::fs::File | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let f1 = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let f2 = File::open("bar.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let mut handle = f1.chain(f2); | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = String::new(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // read the value into a String. We could use any Read method here, | 
|  | ///     // this is just one example. | 
|  | ///     handle.read_to_string(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn chain<R: Read>(self, next: R) -> Chain<Self, R> | 
|  | where | 
|  | Self: Sized, | 
|  | { | 
|  | Chain { first: self, second: next, done_first: false } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Creates an adapter which will read at most `limit` bytes from it. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function returns a new instance of `Read` which will read at most | 
|  | /// `limit` bytes, after which it will always return EOF ([`Ok(0)`]). Any | 
|  | /// read errors will not count towards the number of bytes read and future | 
|  | /// calls to [`read()`] may succeed. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]s implement `Read`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]: crate::fs::File | 
|  | /// [`Ok(0)`]: Ok | 
|  | /// [`read()`]: Read::read | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = [0; 5]; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // read at most five bytes | 
|  | ///     let mut handle = f.take(5); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     handle.read(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn take(self, limit: u64) -> Take<Self> | 
|  | where | 
|  | Self: Sized, | 
|  | { | 
|  | Take { inner: self, len: limit, limit } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Reads all bytes from a [reader][Read] into a new [`String`]. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This is a convenience function for [`Read::read_to_string`]. Using this | 
|  | /// function avoids having to create a variable first and provides more type | 
|  | /// safety since you can only get the buffer out if there were no errors. (If you | 
|  | /// use [`Read::read_to_string`] you have to remember to check whether the read | 
|  | /// succeeded because otherwise your buffer will be empty or only partially full.) | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Performance | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The downside of this function's increased ease of use and type safety is | 
|  | /// that it gives you less control over performance. For example, you can't | 
|  | /// pre-allocate memory like you can using [`String::with_capacity`] and | 
|  | /// [`Read::read_to_string`]. Also, you can't re-use the buffer if an error | 
|  | /// occurs while reading. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// In many cases, this function's performance will be adequate and the ease of use | 
|  | /// and type safety tradeoffs will be worth it. However, there are cases where you | 
|  | /// need more control over performance, and in those cases you should definitely use | 
|  | /// [`Read::read_to_string`] directly. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Note that in some special cases, such as when reading files, this function will | 
|  | /// pre-allocate memory based on the size of the input it is reading. In those | 
|  | /// cases, the performance should be as good as if you had used | 
|  | /// [`Read::read_to_string`] with a manually pre-allocated buffer. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function forces you to handle errors because the output (the `String`) | 
|  | /// is wrapped in a [`Result`]. See [`Read::read_to_string`] for the errors | 
|  | /// that can occur. If any error occurs, you will get an [`Err`], so you | 
|  | /// don't have to worry about your buffer being empty or partially full. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// # use std::io; | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let stdin = io::read_to_string(io::stdin())?; | 
|  | ///     println!("Stdin was:"); | 
|  | ///     println!("{stdin}"); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Usage Notes | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// `read_to_string` attempts to read a source until EOF, but many sources are continuous streams | 
|  | /// that do not send EOF. In these cases, `read_to_string` will block indefinitely. Standard input | 
|  | /// is one such stream which may be finite if piped, but is typically continuous. For example, | 
|  | /// `cat file | my-rust-program` will correctly terminate with an `EOF` upon closure of cat. | 
|  | /// Reading user input or running programs that remain open indefinitely will never terminate | 
|  | /// the stream with `EOF` (e.g. `yes | my-rust-program`). | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Using `.lines()` with a [`BufReader`] or using [`read`] can provide a better solution | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///[`read`]: Read::read | 
|  | /// | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "io_read_to_string", since = "1.65.0")] | 
|  | pub fn read_to_string<R: Read>(mut reader: R) -> Result<String> { | 
|  | let mut buf = String::new(); | 
|  | reader.read_to_string(&mut buf)?; | 
|  | Ok(buf) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// A buffer type used with `Read::read_vectored`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// It is semantically a wrapper around a `&mut [u8]`, but is guaranteed to be | 
|  | /// ABI compatible with the `iovec` type on Unix platforms and `WSABUF` on | 
|  | /// Windows. | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec", since = "1.36.0")] | 
|  | #[repr(transparent)] | 
|  | pub struct IoSliceMut<'a>(sys::io::IoSliceMut<'a>); | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec_send_sync", since = "1.44.0")] | 
|  | unsafe impl<'a> Send for IoSliceMut<'a> {} | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec_send_sync", since = "1.44.0")] | 
|  | unsafe impl<'a> Sync for IoSliceMut<'a> {} | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec", since = "1.36.0")] | 
|  | impl<'a> fmt::Debug for IoSliceMut<'a> { | 
|  | fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { | 
|  | fmt::Debug::fmt(self.0.as_slice(), fmt) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<'a> IoSliceMut<'a> { | 
|  | /// Creates a new `IoSliceMut` wrapping a byte slice. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Panics | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Panics on Windows if the slice is larger than 4GB. | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec", since = "1.36.0")] | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn new(buf: &'a mut [u8]) -> IoSliceMut<'a> { | 
|  | IoSliceMut(sys::io::IoSliceMut::new(buf)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Advance the internal cursor of the slice. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Also see [`IoSliceMut::advance_slices`] to advance the cursors of | 
|  | /// multiple buffers. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Panics | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Panics when trying to advance beyond the end of the slice. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// use std::io::IoSliceMut; | 
|  | /// use std::ops::Deref; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut data = [1; 8]; | 
|  | /// let mut buf = IoSliceMut::new(&mut data); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // Mark 3 bytes as read. | 
|  | /// buf.advance(3); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(buf.deref(), [1; 5].as_ref()); | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "io_slice_advance", since = "1.81.0")] | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn advance(&mut self, n: usize) { | 
|  | self.0.advance(n) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Advance a slice of slices. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Shrinks the slice to remove any `IoSliceMut`s that are fully advanced over. | 
|  | /// If the cursor ends up in the middle of an `IoSliceMut`, it is modified | 
|  | /// to start at that cursor. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// For example, if we have a slice of two 8-byte `IoSliceMut`s, and we advance by 10 bytes, | 
|  | /// the result will only include the second `IoSliceMut`, advanced by 2 bytes. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Panics | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Panics when trying to advance beyond the end of the slices. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// use std::io::IoSliceMut; | 
|  | /// use std::ops::Deref; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut buf1 = [1; 8]; | 
|  | /// let mut buf2 = [2; 16]; | 
|  | /// let mut buf3 = [3; 8]; | 
|  | /// let mut bufs = &mut [ | 
|  | ///     IoSliceMut::new(&mut buf1), | 
|  | ///     IoSliceMut::new(&mut buf2), | 
|  | ///     IoSliceMut::new(&mut buf3), | 
|  | /// ][..]; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // Mark 10 bytes as read. | 
|  | /// IoSliceMut::advance_slices(&mut bufs, 10); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(bufs[0].deref(), [2; 14].as_ref()); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(bufs[1].deref(), [3; 8].as_ref()); | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "io_slice_advance", since = "1.81.0")] | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn advance_slices(bufs: &mut &mut [IoSliceMut<'a>], n: usize) { | 
|  | // Number of buffers to remove. | 
|  | let mut remove = 0; | 
|  | // Remaining length before reaching n. | 
|  | let mut left = n; | 
|  | for buf in bufs.iter() { | 
|  | if let Some(remainder) = left.checked_sub(buf.len()) { | 
|  | left = remainder; | 
|  | remove += 1; | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | break; | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | *bufs = &mut take(bufs)[remove..]; | 
|  | if bufs.is_empty() { | 
|  | assert!(left == 0, "advancing io slices beyond their length"); | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | bufs[0].advance(left); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Get the underlying bytes as a mutable slice with the original lifetime. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// #![feature(io_slice_as_bytes)] | 
|  | /// use std::io::IoSliceMut; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut data = *b"abcdef"; | 
|  | /// let io_slice = IoSliceMut::new(&mut data); | 
|  | /// io_slice.into_slice()[0] = b'A'; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(&data, b"Abcdef"); | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "io_slice_as_bytes", issue = "132818")] | 
|  | pub const fn into_slice(self) -> &'a mut [u8] { | 
|  | self.0.into_slice() | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec", since = "1.36.0")] | 
|  | impl<'a> Deref for IoSliceMut<'a> { | 
|  | type Target = [u8]; | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn deref(&self) -> &[u8] { | 
|  | self.0.as_slice() | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec", since = "1.36.0")] | 
|  | impl<'a> DerefMut for IoSliceMut<'a> { | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [u8] { | 
|  | self.0.as_mut_slice() | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// A buffer type used with `Write::write_vectored`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// It is semantically a wrapper around a `&[u8]`, but is guaranteed to be | 
|  | /// ABI compatible with the `iovec` type on Unix platforms and `WSABUF` on | 
|  | /// Windows. | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec", since = "1.36.0")] | 
|  | #[derive(Copy, Clone)] | 
|  | #[repr(transparent)] | 
|  | pub struct IoSlice<'a>(sys::io::IoSlice<'a>); | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec_send_sync", since = "1.44.0")] | 
|  | unsafe impl<'a> Send for IoSlice<'a> {} | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec_send_sync", since = "1.44.0")] | 
|  | unsafe impl<'a> Sync for IoSlice<'a> {} | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec", since = "1.36.0")] | 
|  | impl<'a> fmt::Debug for IoSlice<'a> { | 
|  | fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { | 
|  | fmt::Debug::fmt(self.0.as_slice(), fmt) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<'a> IoSlice<'a> { | 
|  | /// Creates a new `IoSlice` wrapping a byte slice. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Panics | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Panics on Windows if the slice is larger than 4GB. | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec", since = "1.36.0")] | 
|  | #[must_use] | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn new(buf: &'a [u8]) -> IoSlice<'a> { | 
|  | IoSlice(sys::io::IoSlice::new(buf)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Advance the internal cursor of the slice. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Also see [`IoSlice::advance_slices`] to advance the cursors of multiple | 
|  | /// buffers. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Panics | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Panics when trying to advance beyond the end of the slice. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// use std::io::IoSlice; | 
|  | /// use std::ops::Deref; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let data = [1; 8]; | 
|  | /// let mut buf = IoSlice::new(&data); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // Mark 3 bytes as read. | 
|  | /// buf.advance(3); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(buf.deref(), [1; 5].as_ref()); | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "io_slice_advance", since = "1.81.0")] | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn advance(&mut self, n: usize) { | 
|  | self.0.advance(n) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Advance a slice of slices. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Shrinks the slice to remove any `IoSlice`s that are fully advanced over. | 
|  | /// If the cursor ends up in the middle of an `IoSlice`, it is modified | 
|  | /// to start at that cursor. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// For example, if we have a slice of two 8-byte `IoSlice`s, and we advance by 10 bytes, | 
|  | /// the result will only include the second `IoSlice`, advanced by 2 bytes. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Panics | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Panics when trying to advance beyond the end of the slices. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// use std::io::IoSlice; | 
|  | /// use std::ops::Deref; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let buf1 = [1; 8]; | 
|  | /// let buf2 = [2; 16]; | 
|  | /// let buf3 = [3; 8]; | 
|  | /// let mut bufs = &mut [ | 
|  | ///     IoSlice::new(&buf1), | 
|  | ///     IoSlice::new(&buf2), | 
|  | ///     IoSlice::new(&buf3), | 
|  | /// ][..]; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // Mark 10 bytes as written. | 
|  | /// IoSlice::advance_slices(&mut bufs, 10); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(bufs[0].deref(), [2; 14].as_ref()); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(bufs[1].deref(), [3; 8].as_ref()); | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "io_slice_advance", since = "1.81.0")] | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn advance_slices(bufs: &mut &mut [IoSlice<'a>], n: usize) { | 
|  | // Number of buffers to remove. | 
|  | let mut remove = 0; | 
|  | // Remaining length before reaching n. This prevents overflow | 
|  | // that could happen if the length of slices in `bufs` were instead | 
|  | // accumulated. Those slice may be aliased and, if they are large | 
|  | // enough, their added length may overflow a `usize`. | 
|  | let mut left = n; | 
|  | for buf in bufs.iter() { | 
|  | if let Some(remainder) = left.checked_sub(buf.len()) { | 
|  | left = remainder; | 
|  | remove += 1; | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | break; | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | *bufs = &mut take(bufs)[remove..]; | 
|  | if bufs.is_empty() { | 
|  | assert!(left == 0, "advancing io slices beyond their length"); | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | bufs[0].advance(left); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Get the underlying bytes as a slice with the original lifetime. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This doesn't borrow from `self`, so is less restrictive than calling | 
|  | /// `.deref()`, which does. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// #![feature(io_slice_as_bytes)] | 
|  | /// use std::io::IoSlice; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let data = b"abcdef"; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut io_slice = IoSlice::new(data); | 
|  | /// let tail = &io_slice.as_slice()[3..]; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // This works because `tail` doesn't borrow `io_slice` | 
|  | /// io_slice = IoSlice::new(tail); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(io_slice.as_slice(), b"def"); | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "io_slice_as_bytes", issue = "132818")] | 
|  | pub const fn as_slice(self) -> &'a [u8] { | 
|  | self.0.as_slice() | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec", since = "1.36.0")] | 
|  | impl<'a> Deref for IoSlice<'a> { | 
|  | type Target = [u8]; | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn deref(&self) -> &[u8] { | 
|  | self.0.as_slice() | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// A trait for objects which are byte-oriented sinks. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Implementors of the `Write` trait are sometimes called 'writers'. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Writers are defined by two required methods, [`write`] and [`flush`]: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// * The [`write`] method will attempt to write some data into the object, | 
|  | ///   returning how many bytes were successfully written. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// * The [`flush`] method is useful for adapters and explicit buffers | 
|  | ///   themselves for ensuring that all buffered data has been pushed out to the | 
|  | ///   'true sink'. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Writers are intended to be composable with one another. Many implementors | 
|  | /// throughout [`std::io`] take and provide types which implement the `Write` | 
|  | /// trait. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`write`]: Write::write | 
|  | /// [`flush`]: Write::flush | 
|  | /// [`std::io`]: self | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let data = b"some bytes"; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let mut pos = 0; | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = File::create("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     while pos < data.len() { | 
|  | ///         let bytes_written = buffer.write(&data[pos..])?; | 
|  | ///         pos += bytes_written; | 
|  | ///     } | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The trait also provides convenience methods like [`write_all`], which calls | 
|  | /// `write` in a loop until its entire input has been written. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`write_all`]: Write::write_all | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | #[doc(notable_trait)] | 
|  | #[cfg_attr(not(test), rustc_diagnostic_item = "IoWrite")] | 
|  | pub trait Write { | 
|  | /// Writes a buffer into this writer, returning how many bytes were written. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function will attempt to write the entire contents of `buf`, but | 
|  | /// the entire write might not succeed, or the write may also generate an | 
|  | /// error. Typically, a call to `write` represents one attempt to write to | 
|  | /// any wrapped object. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Calls to `write` are not guaranteed to block waiting for data to be | 
|  | /// written, and a write which would otherwise block can be indicated through | 
|  | /// an [`Err`] variant. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If this method consumed `n > 0` bytes of `buf` it must return [`Ok(n)`]. | 
|  | /// If the return value is `Ok(n)` then `n` must satisfy `n <= buf.len()`. | 
|  | /// A return value of `Ok(0)` typically means that the underlying object is | 
|  | /// no longer able to accept bytes and will likely not be able to in the | 
|  | /// future as well, or that the buffer provided is empty. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Each call to `write` may generate an I/O error indicating that the | 
|  | /// operation could not be completed. If an error is returned then no bytes | 
|  | /// in the buffer were written to this writer. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// It is **not** considered an error if the entire buffer could not be | 
|  | /// written to this writer. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// An error of the [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] kind is non-fatal and the | 
|  | /// write operation should be retried if there is nothing else to do. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = File::create("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // Writes some prefix of the byte string, not necessarily all of it. | 
|  | ///     buffer.write(b"some bytes")?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`Ok(n)`]: Ok | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn write(&mut self, buf: &[u8]) -> Result<usize>; | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Like [`write`], except that it writes from a slice of buffers. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Data is copied from each buffer in order, with the final buffer | 
|  | /// read from possibly being only partially consumed. This method must | 
|  | /// behave as a call to [`write`] with the buffers concatenated would. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The default implementation calls [`write`] with either the first nonempty | 
|  | /// buffer provided, or an empty one if none exists. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io::IoSlice; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let data1 = [1; 8]; | 
|  | ///     let data2 = [15; 8]; | 
|  | ///     let io_slice1 = IoSlice::new(&data1); | 
|  | ///     let io_slice2 = IoSlice::new(&data2); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = File::create("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // Writes some prefix of the byte string, not necessarily all of it. | 
|  | ///     buffer.write_vectored(&[io_slice1, io_slice2])?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`write`]: Write::write | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "iovec", since = "1.36.0")] | 
|  | fn write_vectored(&mut self, bufs: &[IoSlice<'_>]) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | default_write_vectored(|b| self.write(b), bufs) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Determines if this `Write`r has an efficient [`write_vectored`] | 
|  | /// implementation. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If a `Write`r does not override the default [`write_vectored`] | 
|  | /// implementation, code using it may want to avoid the method all together | 
|  | /// and coalesce writes into a single buffer for higher performance. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The default implementation returns `false`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`write_vectored`]: Write::write_vectored | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "can_vector", issue = "69941")] | 
|  | fn is_write_vectored(&self) -> bool { | 
|  | false | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Flushes this output stream, ensuring that all intermediately buffered | 
|  | /// contents reach their destination. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// It is considered an error if not all bytes could be written due to | 
|  | /// I/O errors or EOF being reached. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::io::BufWriter; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = BufWriter::new(File::create("foo.txt")?); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     buffer.write_all(b"some bytes")?; | 
|  | ///     buffer.flush()?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn flush(&mut self) -> Result<()>; | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Attempts to write an entire buffer into this writer. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This method will continuously call [`write`] until there is no more data | 
|  | /// to be written or an error of non-[`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] kind is | 
|  | /// returned. This method will not return until the entire buffer has been | 
|  | /// successfully written or such an error occurs. The first error that is | 
|  | /// not of [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] kind generated from this method will be | 
|  | /// returned. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If the buffer contains no data, this will never call [`write`]. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function will return the first error of | 
|  | /// non-[`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] kind that [`write`] returns. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`write`]: Write::write | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = File::create("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     buffer.write_all(b"some bytes")?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn write_all(&mut self, mut buf: &[u8]) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | while !buf.is_empty() { | 
|  | match self.write(buf) { | 
|  | Ok(0) => { | 
|  | return Err(Error::WRITE_ALL_EOF); | 
|  | } | 
|  | Ok(n) => buf = &buf[n..], | 
|  | Err(ref e) if e.is_interrupted() => {} | 
|  | Err(e) => return Err(e), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | Ok(()) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Attempts to write multiple buffers into this writer. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This method will continuously call [`write_vectored`] until there is no | 
|  | /// more data to be written or an error of non-[`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] | 
|  | /// kind is returned. This method will not return until all buffers have | 
|  | /// been successfully written or such an error occurs. The first error that | 
|  | /// is not of [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] kind generated from this method | 
|  | /// will be returned. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If the buffer contains no data, this will never call [`write_vectored`]. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Notes | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Unlike [`write_vectored`], this takes a *mutable* reference to | 
|  | /// a slice of [`IoSlice`]s, not an immutable one. That's because we need to | 
|  | /// modify the slice to keep track of the bytes already written. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Once this function returns, the contents of `bufs` are unspecified, as | 
|  | /// this depends on how many calls to [`write_vectored`] were necessary. It is | 
|  | /// best to understand this function as taking ownership of `bufs` and to | 
|  | /// not use `bufs` afterwards. The underlying buffers, to which the | 
|  | /// [`IoSlice`]s point (but not the [`IoSlice`]s themselves), are unchanged and | 
|  | /// can be reused. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`write_vectored`]: Write::write_vectored | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// #![feature(write_all_vectored)] | 
|  | /// # fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// use std::io::{Write, IoSlice}; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut writer = Vec::new(); | 
|  | /// let bufs = &mut [ | 
|  | ///     IoSlice::new(&[1]), | 
|  | ///     IoSlice::new(&[2, 3]), | 
|  | ///     IoSlice::new(&[4, 5, 6]), | 
|  | /// ]; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// writer.write_all_vectored(bufs)?; | 
|  | /// // Note: the contents of `bufs` is now undefined, see the Notes section. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(writer, &[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]); | 
|  | /// # Ok(()) } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "write_all_vectored", issue = "70436")] | 
|  | fn write_all_vectored(&mut self, mut bufs: &mut [IoSlice<'_>]) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | // Guarantee that bufs is empty if it contains no data, | 
|  | // to avoid calling write_vectored if there is no data to be written. | 
|  | IoSlice::advance_slices(&mut bufs, 0); | 
|  | while !bufs.is_empty() { | 
|  | match self.write_vectored(bufs) { | 
|  | Ok(0) => { | 
|  | return Err(Error::WRITE_ALL_EOF); | 
|  | } | 
|  | Ok(n) => IoSlice::advance_slices(&mut bufs, n), | 
|  | Err(ref e) if e.is_interrupted() => {} | 
|  | Err(e) => return Err(e), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | Ok(()) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Writes a formatted string into this writer, returning any error | 
|  | /// encountered. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This method is primarily used to interface with the | 
|  | /// [`format_args!()`] macro, and it is rare that this should | 
|  | /// explicitly be called. The [`write!()`] macro should be favored to | 
|  | /// invoke this method instead. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function internally uses the [`write_all`] method on | 
|  | /// this trait and hence will continuously write data so long as no errors | 
|  | /// are received. This also means that partial writes are not indicated in | 
|  | /// this signature. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`write_all`]: Write::write_all | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function will return any I/O error reported while formatting. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = File::create("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // this call | 
|  | ///     write!(buffer, "{:.*}", 2, 1.234567)?; | 
|  | ///     // turns into this: | 
|  | ///     buffer.write_fmt(format_args!("{:.*}", 2, 1.234567))?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn write_fmt(&mut self, args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | if let Some(s) = args.as_statically_known_str() { | 
|  | self.write_all(s.as_bytes()) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | default_write_fmt(self, args) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Creates a "by reference" adapter for this instance of `Write`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The returned adapter also implements `Write` and will simply borrow this | 
|  | /// current writer. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io::Write; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = File::create("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let reference = buffer.by_ref(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // we can use reference just like our original buffer | 
|  | ///     reference.write_all(b"some bytes")?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn by_ref(&mut self) -> &mut Self | 
|  | where | 
|  | Self: Sized, | 
|  | { | 
|  | self | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// The `Seek` trait provides a cursor which can be moved within a stream of | 
|  | /// bytes. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The stream typically has a fixed size, allowing seeking relative to either | 
|  | /// end or the current offset. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]s implement `Seek`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]: crate::fs::File | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// use std::io::SeekFrom; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // move the cursor 42 bytes from the start of the file | 
|  | ///     f.seek(SeekFrom::Start(42))?; | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | #[cfg_attr(not(test), rustc_diagnostic_item = "IoSeek")] | 
|  | pub trait Seek { | 
|  | /// Seek to an offset, in bytes, in a stream. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// A seek beyond the end of a stream is allowed, but behavior is defined | 
|  | /// by the implementation. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If the seek operation completed successfully, | 
|  | /// this method returns the new position from the start of the stream. | 
|  | /// That position can be used later with [`SeekFrom::Start`]. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Seeking can fail, for example because it might involve flushing a buffer. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Seeking to a negative offset is considered an error. | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn seek(&mut self, pos: SeekFrom) -> Result<u64>; | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Rewind to the beginning of a stream. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This is a convenience method, equivalent to `seek(SeekFrom::Start(0))`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Rewinding can fail, for example because it might involve flushing a buffer. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Example | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io::{Read, Seek, Write}; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::OpenOptions; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut f = OpenOptions::new() | 
|  | ///     .write(true) | 
|  | ///     .read(true) | 
|  | ///     .create(true) | 
|  | ///     .open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let hello = "Hello!\n"; | 
|  | /// write!(f, "{hello}")?; | 
|  | /// f.rewind()?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut buf = String::new(); | 
|  | /// f.read_to_string(&mut buf)?; | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(&buf, hello); | 
|  | /// # std::io::Result::Ok(()) | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "seek_rewind", since = "1.55.0")] | 
|  | fn rewind(&mut self) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | self.seek(SeekFrom::Start(0))?; | 
|  | Ok(()) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns the length of this stream (in bytes). | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The default implementation uses up to three seek operations. If this | 
|  | /// method returns successfully, the seek position is unchanged (i.e. the | 
|  | /// position before calling this method is the same as afterwards). | 
|  | /// However, if this method returns an error, the seek position is | 
|  | /// unspecified. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If you need to obtain the length of *many* streams and you don't care | 
|  | /// about the seek position afterwards, you can reduce the number of seek | 
|  | /// operations by simply calling `seek(SeekFrom::End(0))` and using its | 
|  | /// return value (it is also the stream length). | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Note that length of a stream can change over time (for example, when | 
|  | /// data is appended to a file). So calling this method multiple times does | 
|  | /// not necessarily return the same length each time. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Example | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// #![feature(seek_stream_len)] | 
|  | /// use std::{ | 
|  | ///     io::{self, Seek}, | 
|  | ///     fs::File, | 
|  | /// }; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let len = f.stream_len()?; | 
|  | ///     println!("The file is currently {len} bytes long"); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "seek_stream_len", issue = "59359")] | 
|  | fn stream_len(&mut self) -> Result<u64> { | 
|  | stream_len_default(self) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns the current seek position from the start of the stream. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This is equivalent to `self.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0))`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Example | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::{ | 
|  | ///     io::{self, BufRead, BufReader, Seek}, | 
|  | ///     fs::File, | 
|  | /// }; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut f = BufReader::new(File::open("foo.txt")?); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let before = f.stream_position()?; | 
|  | ///     f.read_line(&mut String::new())?; | 
|  | ///     let after = f.stream_position()?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     println!("The first line was {} bytes long", after - before); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "seek_convenience", since = "1.51.0")] | 
|  | fn stream_position(&mut self) -> Result<u64> { | 
|  | self.seek(SeekFrom::Current(0)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Seeks relative to the current position. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This is equivalent to `self.seek(SeekFrom::Current(offset))` but | 
|  | /// doesn't return the new position which can allow some implementations | 
|  | /// such as [`BufReader`] to perform more efficient seeks. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Example | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::{ | 
|  | ///     io::{self, Seek}, | 
|  | ///     fs::File, | 
|  | /// }; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     f.seek_relative(10)?; | 
|  | ///     assert_eq!(f.stream_position()?, 10); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`BufReader`]: crate::io::BufReader | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "seek_seek_relative", since = "1.80.0")] | 
|  | fn seek_relative(&mut self, offset: i64) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | self.seek(SeekFrom::Current(offset))?; | 
|  | Ok(()) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub(crate) fn stream_len_default<T: Seek + ?Sized>(self_: &mut T) -> Result<u64> { | 
|  | let old_pos = self_.stream_position()?; | 
|  | let len = self_.seek(SeekFrom::End(0))?; | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Avoid seeking a third time when we were already at the end of the | 
|  | // stream. The branch is usually way cheaper than a seek operation. | 
|  | if old_pos != len { | 
|  | self_.seek(SeekFrom::Start(old_pos))?; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | Ok(len) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Enumeration of possible methods to seek within an I/O object. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// It is used by the [`Seek`] trait. | 
|  | #[derive(Copy, PartialEq, Eq, Clone, Debug)] | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | #[cfg_attr(not(test), rustc_diagnostic_item = "SeekFrom")] | 
|  | pub enum SeekFrom { | 
|  | /// Sets the offset to the provided number of bytes. | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | Start(#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] u64), | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Sets the offset to the size of this object plus the specified number of | 
|  | /// bytes. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// It is possible to seek beyond the end of an object, but it's an error to | 
|  | /// seek before byte 0. | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | End(#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] i64), | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Sets the offset to the current position plus the specified number of | 
|  | /// bytes. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// It is possible to seek beyond the end of an object, but it's an error to | 
|  | /// seek before byte 0. | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | Current(#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] i64), | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn read_until<R: BufRead + ?Sized>(r: &mut R, delim: u8, buf: &mut Vec<u8>) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | let mut read = 0; | 
|  | loop { | 
|  | let (done, used) = { | 
|  | let available = match r.fill_buf() { | 
|  | Ok(n) => n, | 
|  | Err(ref e) if e.is_interrupted() => continue, | 
|  | Err(e) => return Err(e), | 
|  | }; | 
|  | match memchr::memchr(delim, available) { | 
|  | Some(i) => { | 
|  | buf.extend_from_slice(&available[..=i]); | 
|  | (true, i + 1) | 
|  | } | 
|  | None => { | 
|  | buf.extend_from_slice(available); | 
|  | (false, available.len()) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | }; | 
|  | r.consume(used); | 
|  | read += used; | 
|  | if done || used == 0 { | 
|  | return Ok(read); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn skip_until<R: BufRead + ?Sized>(r: &mut R, delim: u8) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | let mut read = 0; | 
|  | loop { | 
|  | let (done, used) = { | 
|  | let available = match r.fill_buf() { | 
|  | Ok(n) => n, | 
|  | Err(ref e) if e.kind() == ErrorKind::Interrupted => continue, | 
|  | Err(e) => return Err(e), | 
|  | }; | 
|  | match memchr::memchr(delim, available) { | 
|  | Some(i) => (true, i + 1), | 
|  | None => (false, available.len()), | 
|  | } | 
|  | }; | 
|  | r.consume(used); | 
|  | read += used; | 
|  | if done || used == 0 { | 
|  | return Ok(read); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// A `BufRead` is a type of `Read`er which has an internal buffer, allowing it | 
|  | /// to perform extra ways of reading. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// For example, reading line-by-line is inefficient without using a buffer, so | 
|  | /// if you want to read by line, you'll need `BufRead`, which includes a | 
|  | /// [`read_line`] method as well as a [`lines`] iterator. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// A locked standard input implements `BufRead`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let stdin = io::stdin(); | 
|  | /// for line in stdin.lock().lines() { | 
|  | ///     println!("{}", line?); | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// # std::io::Result::Ok(()) | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If you have something that implements [`Read`], you can use the [`BufReader` | 
|  | /// type][`BufReader`] to turn it into a `BufRead`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// For example, [`File`] implements [`Read`], but not `BufRead`. | 
|  | /// [`BufReader`] to the rescue! | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`File`]: crate::fs::File | 
|  | /// [`read_line`]: BufRead::read_line | 
|  | /// [`lines`]: BufRead::lines | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io::{self, BufReader}; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let f = BufReader::new(f); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     for line in f.lines() { | 
|  | ///         let line = line?; | 
|  | ///         println!("{line}"); | 
|  | ///     } | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | #[cfg_attr(not(test), rustc_diagnostic_item = "IoBufRead")] | 
|  | pub trait BufRead: Read { | 
|  | /// Returns the contents of the internal buffer, filling it with more data, via `Read` methods, if empty. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This is a lower-level method and is meant to be used together with [`consume`], | 
|  | /// which can be used to mark bytes that should not be returned by subsequent calls to `read`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`consume`]: BufRead::consume | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Returns an empty buffer when the stream has reached EOF. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function will return an I/O error if a `Read` method was called, but returned an error. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// A locked standard input implements `BufRead`: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let stdin = io::stdin(); | 
|  | /// let mut stdin = stdin.lock(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let buffer = stdin.fill_buf()?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // work with buffer | 
|  | /// println!("{buffer:?}"); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // mark the bytes we worked with as read | 
|  | /// let length = buffer.len(); | 
|  | /// stdin.consume(length); | 
|  | /// # std::io::Result::Ok(()) | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn fill_buf(&mut self) -> Result<&[u8]>; | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Marks the given `amount` of additional bytes from the internal buffer as having been read. | 
|  | /// Subsequent calls to `read` only return bytes that have not been marked as read. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This is a lower-level method and is meant to be used together with [`fill_buf`], | 
|  | /// which can be used to fill the internal buffer via `Read` methods. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// It is a logic error if `amount` exceeds the number of unread bytes in the internal buffer, which is returned by [`fill_buf`]. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Since `consume()` is meant to be used with [`fill_buf`], | 
|  | /// that method's example includes an example of `consume()`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`fill_buf`]: BufRead::fill_buf | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn consume(&mut self, amount: usize); | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Checks if there is any data left to be `read`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function may fill the buffer to check for data, | 
|  | /// so this function returns `Result<bool>`, not `bool`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The default implementation calls `fill_buf` and checks that the | 
|  | /// returned slice is empty (which means that there is no data left, | 
|  | /// since EOF is reached). | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function will return an I/O error if a `Read` method was called, but returned an error. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// #![feature(buf_read_has_data_left)] | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let stdin = io::stdin(); | 
|  | /// let mut stdin = stdin.lock(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// while stdin.has_data_left()? { | 
|  | ///     let mut line = String::new(); | 
|  | ///     stdin.read_line(&mut line)?; | 
|  | ///     // work with line | 
|  | ///     println!("{line:?}"); | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// # std::io::Result::Ok(()) | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "buf_read_has_data_left", reason = "recently added", issue = "86423")] | 
|  | fn has_data_left(&mut self) -> Result<bool> { | 
|  | self.fill_buf().map(|b| !b.is_empty()) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Reads all bytes into `buf` until the delimiter `byte` or EOF is reached. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function will read bytes from the underlying stream until the | 
|  | /// delimiter or EOF is found. Once found, all bytes up to, and including, | 
|  | /// the delimiter (if found) will be appended to `buf`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If successful, this function will return the total number of bytes read. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function is blocking and should be used carefully: it is possible for | 
|  | /// an attacker to continuously send bytes without ever sending the delimiter | 
|  | /// or EOF. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function will ignore all instances of [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] and | 
|  | /// will otherwise return any errors returned by [`fill_buf`]. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If an I/O error is encountered then all bytes read so far will be | 
|  | /// present in `buf` and its length will have been adjusted appropriately. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`fill_buf`]: BufRead::fill_buf | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`std::io::Cursor`][`Cursor`] is a type that implements `BufRead`. In | 
|  | /// this example, we use [`Cursor`] to read all the bytes in a byte slice | 
|  | /// in hyphen delimited segments: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// use std::io::{self, BufRead}; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut cursor = io::Cursor::new(b"lorem-ipsum"); | 
|  | /// let mut buf = vec![]; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // cursor is at 'l' | 
|  | /// let num_bytes = cursor.read_until(b'-', &mut buf) | 
|  | ///     .expect("reading from cursor won't fail"); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(num_bytes, 6); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(buf, b"lorem-"); | 
|  | /// buf.clear(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // cursor is at 'i' | 
|  | /// let num_bytes = cursor.read_until(b'-', &mut buf) | 
|  | ///     .expect("reading from cursor won't fail"); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(num_bytes, 5); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(buf, b"ipsum"); | 
|  | /// buf.clear(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // cursor is at EOF | 
|  | /// let num_bytes = cursor.read_until(b'-', &mut buf) | 
|  | ///     .expect("reading from cursor won't fail"); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(num_bytes, 0); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(buf, b""); | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn read_until(&mut self, byte: u8, buf: &mut Vec<u8>) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | read_until(self, byte, buf) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Skips all bytes until the delimiter `byte` or EOF is reached. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function will read (and discard) bytes from the underlying stream until the | 
|  | /// delimiter or EOF is found. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If successful, this function will return the total number of bytes read, | 
|  | /// including the delimiter byte if found. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This is useful for efficiently skipping data such as NUL-terminated strings | 
|  | /// in binary file formats without buffering. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function is blocking and should be used carefully: it is possible for | 
|  | /// an attacker to continuously send bytes without ever sending the delimiter | 
|  | /// or EOF. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function will ignore all instances of [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] and | 
|  | /// will otherwise return any errors returned by [`fill_buf`]. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If an I/O error is encountered then all bytes read so far will be | 
|  | /// present in `buf` and its length will have been adjusted appropriately. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`fill_buf`]: BufRead::fill_buf | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`std::io::Cursor`][`Cursor`] is a type that implements `BufRead`. In | 
|  | /// this example, we use [`Cursor`] to read some NUL-terminated information | 
|  | /// about Ferris from a binary string, skipping the fun fact: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// use std::io::{self, BufRead}; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut cursor = io::Cursor::new(b"Ferris\0Likes long walks on the beach\0Crustacean\0!"); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // read name | 
|  | /// let mut name = Vec::new(); | 
|  | /// let num_bytes = cursor.read_until(b'\0', &mut name) | 
|  | ///     .expect("reading from cursor won't fail"); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(num_bytes, 7); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(name, b"Ferris\0"); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // skip fun fact | 
|  | /// let num_bytes = cursor.skip_until(b'\0') | 
|  | ///     .expect("reading from cursor won't fail"); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(num_bytes, 30); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // read animal type | 
|  | /// let mut animal = Vec::new(); | 
|  | /// let num_bytes = cursor.read_until(b'\0', &mut animal) | 
|  | ///     .expect("reading from cursor won't fail"); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(num_bytes, 11); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(animal, b"Crustacean\0"); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // reach EOF | 
|  | /// let num_bytes = cursor.skip_until(b'\0') | 
|  | ///     .expect("reading from cursor won't fail"); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(num_bytes, 1); | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "bufread_skip_until", since = "1.83.0")] | 
|  | fn skip_until(&mut self, byte: u8) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | skip_until(self, byte) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Reads all bytes until a newline (the `0xA` byte) is reached, and append | 
|  | /// them to the provided `String` buffer. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Previous content of the buffer will be preserved. To avoid appending to | 
|  | /// the buffer, you need to [`clear`] it first. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function will read bytes from the underlying stream until the | 
|  | /// newline delimiter (the `0xA` byte) or EOF is found. Once found, all bytes | 
|  | /// up to, and including, the delimiter (if found) will be appended to | 
|  | /// `buf`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If successful, this function will return the total number of bytes read. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// If this function returns [`Ok(0)`], the stream has reached EOF. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function is blocking and should be used carefully: it is possible for | 
|  | /// an attacker to continuously send bytes without ever sending a newline | 
|  | /// or EOF. You can use [`take`] to limit the maximum number of bytes read. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`Ok(0)`]: Ok | 
|  | /// [`clear`]: String::clear | 
|  | /// [`take`]: crate::io::Read::take | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function has the same error semantics as [`read_until`] and will | 
|  | /// also return an error if the read bytes are not valid UTF-8. If an I/O | 
|  | /// error is encountered then `buf` may contain some bytes already read in | 
|  | /// the event that all data read so far was valid UTF-8. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`read_until`]: BufRead::read_until | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`std::io::Cursor`][`Cursor`] is a type that implements `BufRead`. In | 
|  | /// this example, we use [`Cursor`] to read all the lines in a byte slice: | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// use std::io::{self, BufRead}; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut cursor = io::Cursor::new(b"foo\nbar"); | 
|  | /// let mut buf = String::new(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // cursor is at 'f' | 
|  | /// let num_bytes = cursor.read_line(&mut buf) | 
|  | ///     .expect("reading from cursor won't fail"); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(num_bytes, 4); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(buf, "foo\n"); | 
|  | /// buf.clear(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // cursor is at 'b' | 
|  | /// let num_bytes = cursor.read_line(&mut buf) | 
|  | ///     .expect("reading from cursor won't fail"); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(num_bytes, 3); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(buf, "bar"); | 
|  | /// buf.clear(); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// // cursor is at EOF | 
|  | /// let num_bytes = cursor.read_line(&mut buf) | 
|  | ///     .expect("reading from cursor won't fail"); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(num_bytes, 0); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(buf, ""); | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn read_line(&mut self, buf: &mut String) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | // Note that we are not calling the `.read_until` method here, but | 
|  | // rather our hardcoded implementation. For more details as to why, see | 
|  | // the comments in `default_read_to_string`. | 
|  | unsafe { append_to_string(buf, |b| read_until(self, b'\n', b)) } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns an iterator over the contents of this reader split on the byte | 
|  | /// `byte`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The iterator returned from this function will return instances of | 
|  | /// <code>[io::Result]<[Vec]\<u8>></code>. Each vector returned will *not* have | 
|  | /// the delimiter byte at the end. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function will yield errors whenever [`read_until`] would have | 
|  | /// also yielded an error. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [io::Result]: self::Result "io::Result" | 
|  | /// [`read_until`]: BufRead::read_until | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`std::io::Cursor`][`Cursor`] is a type that implements `BufRead`. In | 
|  | /// this example, we use [`Cursor`] to iterate over all hyphen delimited | 
|  | /// segments in a byte slice | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// use std::io::{self, BufRead}; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let cursor = io::Cursor::new(b"lorem-ipsum-dolor"); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut split_iter = cursor.split(b'-').map(|l| l.unwrap()); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(split_iter.next(), Some(b"lorem".to_vec())); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(split_iter.next(), Some(b"ipsum".to_vec())); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(split_iter.next(), Some(b"dolor".to_vec())); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(split_iter.next(), None); | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn split(self, byte: u8) -> Split<Self> | 
|  | where | 
|  | Self: Sized, | 
|  | { | 
|  | Split { buf: self, delim: byte } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns an iterator over the lines of this reader. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// The iterator returned from this function will yield instances of | 
|  | /// <code>[io::Result]<[String]></code>. Each string returned will *not* have a newline | 
|  | /// byte (the `0xA` byte) or `CRLF` (`0xD`, `0xA` bytes) at the end. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [io::Result]: self::Result "io::Result" | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`std::io::Cursor`][`Cursor`] is a type that implements `BufRead`. In | 
|  | /// this example, we use [`Cursor`] to iterate over all the lines in a byte | 
|  | /// slice. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// use std::io::{self, BufRead}; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let cursor = io::Cursor::new(b"lorem\nipsum\r\ndolor"); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// let mut lines_iter = cursor.lines().map(|l| l.unwrap()); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(lines_iter.next(), Some(String::from("lorem"))); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(lines_iter.next(), Some(String::from("ipsum"))); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(lines_iter.next(), Some(String::from("dolor"))); | 
|  | /// assert_eq!(lines_iter.next(), None); | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Errors | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Each line of the iterator has the same error semantics as [`BufRead::read_line`]. | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | fn lines(self) -> Lines<Self> | 
|  | where | 
|  | Self: Sized, | 
|  | { | 
|  | Lines { buf: self } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Adapter to chain together two readers. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This struct is generally created by calling [`chain`] on a reader. | 
|  | /// Please see the documentation of [`chain`] for more details. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`chain`]: Read::chain | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | #[derive(Debug)] | 
|  | pub struct Chain<T, U> { | 
|  | first: T, | 
|  | second: U, | 
|  | done_first: bool, | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<T, U> Chain<T, U> { | 
|  | /// Consumes the `Chain`, returning the wrapped readers. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut foo_file = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let mut bar_file = File::open("bar.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let chain = foo_file.chain(bar_file); | 
|  | ///     let (foo_file, bar_file) = chain.into_inner(); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "more_io_inner_methods", since = "1.20.0")] | 
|  | pub fn into_inner(self) -> (T, U) { | 
|  | (self.first, self.second) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Gets references to the underlying readers in this `Chain`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Care should be taken to avoid modifying the internal I/O state of the | 
|  | /// underlying readers as doing so may corrupt the internal state of this | 
|  | /// `Chain`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut foo_file = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let mut bar_file = File::open("bar.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let chain = foo_file.chain(bar_file); | 
|  | ///     let (foo_file, bar_file) = chain.get_ref(); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "more_io_inner_methods", since = "1.20.0")] | 
|  | pub fn get_ref(&self) -> (&T, &U) { | 
|  | (&self.first, &self.second) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Gets mutable references to the underlying readers in this `Chain`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Care should be taken to avoid modifying the internal I/O state of the | 
|  | /// underlying readers as doing so may corrupt the internal state of this | 
|  | /// `Chain`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut foo_file = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | ///     let mut bar_file = File::open("bar.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let mut chain = foo_file.chain(bar_file); | 
|  | ///     let (foo_file, bar_file) = chain.get_mut(); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "more_io_inner_methods", since = "1.20.0")] | 
|  | pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> (&mut T, &mut U) { | 
|  | (&mut self.first, &mut self.second) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | impl<T: Read, U: Read> Read for Chain<T, U> { | 
|  | fn read(&mut self, buf: &mut [u8]) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | if !self.done_first { | 
|  | match self.first.read(buf)? { | 
|  | 0 if !buf.is_empty() => self.done_first = true, | 
|  | n => return Ok(n), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | self.second.read(buf) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn read_vectored(&mut self, bufs: &mut [IoSliceMut<'_>]) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | if !self.done_first { | 
|  | match self.first.read_vectored(bufs)? { | 
|  | 0 if bufs.iter().any(|b| !b.is_empty()) => self.done_first = true, | 
|  | n => return Ok(n), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | self.second.read_vectored(bufs) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn is_read_vectored(&self) -> bool { | 
|  | self.first.is_read_vectored() || self.second.is_read_vectored() | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn read_to_end(&mut self, buf: &mut Vec<u8>) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | let mut read = 0; | 
|  | if !self.done_first { | 
|  | read += self.first.read_to_end(buf)?; | 
|  | self.done_first = true; | 
|  | } | 
|  | read += self.second.read_to_end(buf)?; | 
|  | Ok(read) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // We don't override `read_to_string` here because an UTF-8 sequence could | 
|  | // be split between the two parts of the chain | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn read_buf(&mut self, mut buf: BorrowedCursor<'_>) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | if buf.capacity() == 0 { | 
|  | return Ok(()); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if !self.done_first { | 
|  | let old_len = buf.written(); | 
|  | self.first.read_buf(buf.reborrow())?; | 
|  |  | 
|  | if buf.written() != old_len { | 
|  | return Ok(()); | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | self.done_first = true; | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | self.second.read_buf(buf) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "chain_bufread", since = "1.9.0")] | 
|  | impl<T: BufRead, U: BufRead> BufRead for Chain<T, U> { | 
|  | fn fill_buf(&mut self) -> Result<&[u8]> { | 
|  | if !self.done_first { | 
|  | match self.first.fill_buf()? { | 
|  | buf if buf.is_empty() => self.done_first = true, | 
|  | buf => return Ok(buf), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | self.second.fill_buf() | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn consume(&mut self, amt: usize) { | 
|  | if !self.done_first { self.first.consume(amt) } else { self.second.consume(amt) } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn read_until(&mut self, byte: u8, buf: &mut Vec<u8>) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | let mut read = 0; | 
|  | if !self.done_first { | 
|  | let n = self.first.read_until(byte, buf)?; | 
|  | read += n; | 
|  |  | 
|  | match buf.last() { | 
|  | Some(b) if *b == byte && n != 0 => return Ok(read), | 
|  | _ => self.done_first = true, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | read += self.second.read_until(byte, buf)?; | 
|  | Ok(read) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // We don't override `read_line` here because an UTF-8 sequence could be | 
|  | // split between the two parts of the chain | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<T, U> SizeHint for Chain<T, U> { | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn lower_bound(&self) -> usize { | 
|  | SizeHint::lower_bound(&self.first) + SizeHint::lower_bound(&self.second) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn upper_bound(&self) -> Option<usize> { | 
|  | match (SizeHint::upper_bound(&self.first), SizeHint::upper_bound(&self.second)) { | 
|  | (Some(first), Some(second)) => first.checked_add(second), | 
|  | _ => None, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Reader adapter which limits the bytes read from an underlying reader. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This struct is generally created by calling [`take`] on a reader. | 
|  | /// Please see the documentation of [`take`] for more details. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`take`]: Read::take | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | #[derive(Debug)] | 
|  | pub struct Take<T> { | 
|  | inner: T, | 
|  | len: u64, | 
|  | limit: u64, | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<T> Take<T> { | 
|  | /// Returns the number of bytes that can be read before this instance will | 
|  | /// return EOF. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Note | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This instance may reach `EOF` after reading fewer bytes than indicated by | 
|  | /// this method if the underlying [`Read`] instance reaches EOF. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // read at most five bytes | 
|  | ///     let handle = f.take(5); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     println!("limit: {}", handle.limit()); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | pub fn limit(&self) -> u64 { | 
|  | self.limit | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns the number of bytes read so far. | 
|  | #[unstable(feature = "seek_io_take_position", issue = "97227")] | 
|  | pub fn position(&self) -> u64 { | 
|  | self.len - self.limit | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Sets the number of bytes that can be read before this instance will | 
|  | /// return EOF. This is the same as constructing a new `Take` instance, so | 
|  | /// the amount of bytes read and the previous limit value don't matter when | 
|  | /// calling this method. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let f = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     // read at most five bytes | 
|  | ///     let mut handle = f.take(5); | 
|  | ///     handle.set_limit(10); | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     assert_eq!(handle.limit(), 10); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "take_set_limit", since = "1.27.0")] | 
|  | pub fn set_limit(&mut self, limit: u64) { | 
|  | self.len = limit; | 
|  | self.limit = limit; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Consumes the `Take`, returning the wrapped reader. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut file = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = [0; 5]; | 
|  | ///     let mut handle = file.take(5); | 
|  | ///     handle.read(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let file = handle.into_inner(); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "io_take_into_inner", since = "1.15.0")] | 
|  | pub fn into_inner(self) -> T { | 
|  | self.inner | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Gets a reference to the underlying reader. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Care should be taken to avoid modifying the internal I/O state of the | 
|  | /// underlying reader as doing so may corrupt the internal limit of this | 
|  | /// `Take`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut file = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = [0; 5]; | 
|  | ///     let mut handle = file.take(5); | 
|  | ///     handle.read(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let file = handle.get_ref(); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "more_io_inner_methods", since = "1.20.0")] | 
|  | pub fn get_ref(&self) -> &T { | 
|  | &self.inner | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Gets a mutable reference to the underlying reader. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Care should be taken to avoid modifying the internal I/O state of the | 
|  | /// underlying reader as doing so may corrupt the internal limit of this | 
|  | /// `Take`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// ```no_run | 
|  | /// use std::io; | 
|  | /// use std::io::prelude::*; | 
|  | /// use std::fs::File; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// fn main() -> io::Result<()> { | 
|  | ///     let mut file = File::open("foo.txt")?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let mut buffer = [0; 5]; | 
|  | ///     let mut handle = file.take(5); | 
|  | ///     handle.read(&mut buffer)?; | 
|  | /// | 
|  | ///     let file = handle.get_mut(); | 
|  | ///     Ok(()) | 
|  | /// } | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "more_io_inner_methods", since = "1.20.0")] | 
|  | pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T { | 
|  | &mut self.inner | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | impl<T: Read> Read for Take<T> { | 
|  | fn read(&mut self, buf: &mut [u8]) -> Result<usize> { | 
|  | // Don't call into inner reader at all at EOF because it may still block | 
|  | if self.limit == 0 { | 
|  | return Ok(0); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | let max = cmp::min(buf.len() as u64, self.limit) as usize; | 
|  | let n = self.inner.read(&mut buf[..max])?; | 
|  | assert!(n as u64 <= self.limit, "number of read bytes exceeds limit"); | 
|  | self.limit -= n as u64; | 
|  | Ok(n) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn read_buf(&mut self, mut buf: BorrowedCursor<'_>) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | // Don't call into inner reader at all at EOF because it may still block | 
|  | if self.limit == 0 { | 
|  | return Ok(()); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if self.limit < buf.capacity() as u64 { | 
|  | // The condition above guarantees that `self.limit` fits in `usize`. | 
|  | let limit = self.limit as usize; | 
|  |  | 
|  | let extra_init = cmp::min(limit, buf.init_mut().len()); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // SAFETY: no uninit data is written to ibuf | 
|  | let ibuf = unsafe { &mut buf.as_mut()[..limit] }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | let mut sliced_buf: BorrowedBuf<'_> = ibuf.into(); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // SAFETY: extra_init bytes of ibuf are known to be initialized | 
|  | unsafe { | 
|  | sliced_buf.set_init(extra_init); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | let mut cursor = sliced_buf.unfilled(); | 
|  | let result = self.inner.read_buf(cursor.reborrow()); | 
|  |  | 
|  | let new_init = cursor.init_mut().len(); | 
|  | let filled = sliced_buf.len(); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // cursor / sliced_buf / ibuf must drop here | 
|  |  | 
|  | unsafe { | 
|  | // SAFETY: filled bytes have been filled and therefore initialized | 
|  | buf.advance_unchecked(filled); | 
|  | // SAFETY: new_init bytes of buf's unfilled buffer have been initialized | 
|  | buf.set_init(new_init); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | self.limit -= filled as u64; | 
|  |  | 
|  | result | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | let written = buf.written(); | 
|  | let result = self.inner.read_buf(buf.reborrow()); | 
|  | self.limit -= (buf.written() - written) as u64; | 
|  | result | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | impl<T: BufRead> BufRead for Take<T> { | 
|  | fn fill_buf(&mut self) -> Result<&[u8]> { | 
|  | // Don't call into inner reader at all at EOF because it may still block | 
|  | if self.limit == 0 { | 
|  | return Ok(&[]); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | let buf = self.inner.fill_buf()?; | 
|  | let cap = cmp::min(buf.len() as u64, self.limit) as usize; | 
|  | Ok(&buf[..cap]) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn consume(&mut self, amt: usize) { | 
|  | // Don't let callers reset the limit by passing an overlarge value | 
|  | let amt = cmp::min(amt as u64, self.limit) as usize; | 
|  | self.limit -= amt as u64; | 
|  | self.inner.consume(amt); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<T> SizeHint for Take<T> { | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn lower_bound(&self) -> usize { | 
|  | cmp::min(SizeHint::lower_bound(&self.inner) as u64, self.limit) as usize | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn upper_bound(&self) -> Option<usize> { | 
|  | match SizeHint::upper_bound(&self.inner) { | 
|  | Some(upper_bound) => Some(cmp::min(upper_bound as u64, self.limit) as usize), | 
|  | None => self.limit.try_into().ok(), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "seek_io_take", since = "1.89.0")] | 
|  | impl<T: Seek> Seek for Take<T> { | 
|  | fn seek(&mut self, pos: SeekFrom) -> Result<u64> { | 
|  | let new_position = match pos { | 
|  | SeekFrom::Start(v) => Some(v), | 
|  | SeekFrom::Current(v) => self.position().checked_add_signed(v), | 
|  | SeekFrom::End(v) => self.len.checked_add_signed(v), | 
|  | }; | 
|  | let new_position = match new_position { | 
|  | Some(v) if v <= self.len => v, | 
|  | _ => return Err(ErrorKind::InvalidInput.into()), | 
|  | }; | 
|  | while new_position != self.position() { | 
|  | if let Some(offset) = new_position.checked_signed_diff(self.position()) { | 
|  | self.inner.seek_relative(offset)?; | 
|  | self.limit = self.limit.wrapping_sub(offset as u64); | 
|  | break; | 
|  | } | 
|  | let offset = if new_position > self.position() { i64::MAX } else { i64::MIN }; | 
|  | self.inner.seek_relative(offset)?; | 
|  | self.limit = self.limit.wrapping_sub(offset as u64); | 
|  | } | 
|  | Ok(new_position) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn stream_len(&mut self) -> Result<u64> { | 
|  | Ok(self.len) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn stream_position(&mut self) -> Result<u64> { | 
|  | Ok(self.position()) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn seek_relative(&mut self, offset: i64) -> Result<()> { | 
|  | if !self.position().checked_add_signed(offset).is_some_and(|p| p <= self.len) { | 
|  | return Err(ErrorKind::InvalidInput.into()); | 
|  | } | 
|  | self.inner.seek_relative(offset)?; | 
|  | self.limit = self.limit.wrapping_sub(offset as u64); | 
|  | Ok(()) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// An iterator over `u8` values of a reader. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This struct is generally created by calling [`bytes`] on a reader. | 
|  | /// Please see the documentation of [`bytes`] for more details. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`bytes`]: Read::bytes | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | #[derive(Debug)] | 
|  | pub struct Bytes<R> { | 
|  | inner: R, | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | impl<R: Read> Iterator for Bytes<R> { | 
|  | type Item = Result<u8>; | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Not `#[inline]`. This function gets inlined even without it, but having | 
|  | // the inline annotation can result in worse code generation. See #116785. | 
|  | fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Result<u8>> { | 
|  | SpecReadByte::spec_read_byte(&mut self.inner) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) { | 
|  | SizeHint::size_hint(&self.inner) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// For the specialization of `Bytes::next`. | 
|  | trait SpecReadByte { | 
|  | fn spec_read_byte(&mut self) -> Option<Result<u8>>; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<R> SpecReadByte for R | 
|  | where | 
|  | Self: Read, | 
|  | { | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | default fn spec_read_byte(&mut self) -> Option<Result<u8>> { | 
|  | inlined_slow_read_byte(self) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Reads a single byte in a slow, generic way. This is used by the default | 
|  | /// `spec_read_byte`. | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn inlined_slow_read_byte<R: Read>(reader: &mut R) -> Option<Result<u8>> { | 
|  | let mut byte = 0; | 
|  | loop { | 
|  | return match reader.read(slice::from_mut(&mut byte)) { | 
|  | Ok(0) => None, | 
|  | Ok(..) => Some(Ok(byte)), | 
|  | Err(ref e) if e.is_interrupted() => continue, | 
|  | Err(e) => Some(Err(e)), | 
|  | }; | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Used by `BufReader::spec_read_byte`, for which the `inline(never)` is | 
|  | // important. | 
|  | #[inline(never)] | 
|  | fn uninlined_slow_read_byte<R: Read>(reader: &mut R) -> Option<Result<u8>> { | 
|  | inlined_slow_read_byte(reader) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | trait SizeHint { | 
|  | fn lower_bound(&self) -> usize; | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn upper_bound(&self) -> Option<usize>; | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) { | 
|  | (self.lower_bound(), self.upper_bound()) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<T: ?Sized> SizeHint for T { | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | default fn lower_bound(&self) -> usize { | 
|  | 0 | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | default fn upper_bound(&self) -> Option<usize> { | 
|  | None | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<T> SizeHint for &mut T { | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn lower_bound(&self) -> usize { | 
|  | SizeHint::lower_bound(*self) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn upper_bound(&self) -> Option<usize> { | 
|  | SizeHint::upper_bound(*self) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<T> SizeHint for Box<T> { | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn lower_bound(&self) -> usize { | 
|  | SizeHint::lower_bound(&**self) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn upper_bound(&self) -> Option<usize> { | 
|  | SizeHint::upper_bound(&**self) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl SizeHint for &[u8] { | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn lower_bound(&self) -> usize { | 
|  | self.len() | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | fn upper_bound(&self) -> Option<usize> { | 
|  | Some(self.len()) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// An iterator over the contents of an instance of `BufRead` split on a | 
|  | /// particular byte. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This struct is generally created by calling [`split`] on a `BufRead`. | 
|  | /// Please see the documentation of [`split`] for more details. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`split`]: BufRead::split | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | #[derive(Debug)] | 
|  | pub struct Split<B> { | 
|  | buf: B, | 
|  | delim: u8, | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | impl<B: BufRead> Iterator for Split<B> { | 
|  | type Item = Result<Vec<u8>>; | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Result<Vec<u8>>> { | 
|  | let mut buf = Vec::new(); | 
|  | match self.buf.read_until(self.delim, &mut buf) { | 
|  | Ok(0) => None, | 
|  | Ok(_n) => { | 
|  | if buf[buf.len() - 1] == self.delim { | 
|  | buf.pop(); | 
|  | } | 
|  | Some(Ok(buf)) | 
|  | } | 
|  | Err(e) => Some(Err(e)), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// An iterator over the lines of an instance of `BufRead`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This struct is generally created by calling [`lines`] on a `BufRead`. | 
|  | /// Please see the documentation of [`lines`] for more details. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [`lines`]: BufRead::lines | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | #[derive(Debug)] | 
|  | #[cfg_attr(not(test), rustc_diagnostic_item = "IoLines")] | 
|  | pub struct Lines<B> { | 
|  | buf: B, | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] | 
|  | impl<B: BufRead> Iterator for Lines<B> { | 
|  | type Item = Result<String>; | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Result<String>> { | 
|  | let mut buf = String::new(); | 
|  | match self.buf.read_line(&mut buf) { | 
|  | Ok(0) => None, | 
|  | Ok(_n) => { | 
|  | if buf.ends_with('\n') { | 
|  | buf.pop(); | 
|  | if buf.ends_with('\r') { | 
|  | buf.pop(); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | Some(Ok(buf)) | 
|  | } | 
|  | Err(e) => Some(Err(e)), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } |