exa/src/fs/dir.rs

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use std::io::{self, Result as IOResult};
use std::fs;
use std::path::{Path, PathBuf};
use std::slice::Iter as SliceIter;
use fs::feature::Git;
use fs::{File, fields};
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/// A **Dir** provides a cached list of the file paths in a directory that's
/// being listed.
///
/// This object gets passed to the Files themselves, in order for them to
/// check the existence of surrounding files, then highlight themselves
/// accordingly. (See `File#get_source_files`)
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pub struct Dir {
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/// A vector of the files that have been read from this directory.
contents: Vec<PathBuf>,
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/// The path that was read.
Parallelise the details view! This commit removes the threadpool in `main.rs` that stats each command-line argument separately, and replaces it with a *scoped* threadpool in `options/details.rs` that builds the table in parallel! Running this on my machine halves the execution time when tree-ing my entire home directory (which isn't exactly a common occurrence, but it's the only way to give exa a large running time) The statting will be added back in parallel at a later stage. This was facilitated by the previous changes to recursion that made it easier to deal with. There's a lot of large sweeping architectural changes. Here's a smattering of them: - In `main.rs`, the files are now passed around as vectors of files rather than array slices of files. This is because `File`s aren't `Clone`, and the `Vec` is necessary to give away ownership of the files at the appropriate point. - In the details view, files are now sorted *all* the time, rather than obeying the command-line order. As they're run in parallel, they have no guaranteed order anyway, so we *have* to sort them again. (I'm not sure if this should be the intended behaviour or not!) This means that the `Details` struct has to have the filter *all* the time, not only while recursing, so it's been moved out of the `recurse` field. - We use `scoped_threadpool` over `threadpool`, a recent addition. It's only safely used on Nightly, which we're using anyway, so that's OK! - Removed a bunch of out-of-date comments. This also fixes #77, mainly by accident :)
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pub path: PathBuf,
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/// Holds a `Git` object if scanning for Git repositories is switched on,
/// and this directory happens to contain one.
git: Option<Git>,
}
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impl Dir {
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/// Create a new Dir object filled with all the files in the directory
/// pointed to by the given path. Fails if the directory can't be read, or
/// isn't actually a directory, or if there's an IO error that occurs
/// while scanning.
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pub fn read_dir(path: &Path, git: bool) -> IOResult<Dir> {
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let reader = fs::read_dir(path)?;
let contents = try!(reader.map(|e| e.map(|e| e.path())).collect());
Ok(Dir {
contents: contents,
path: path.to_path_buf(),
git: if git { Git::scan(path).ok() } else { None },
})
}
/// Produce an iterator of IO results of trying to read all the files in
/// this directory.
pub fn files<'dir>(&'dir self) -> Files<'dir> {
Files {
inner: self.contents.iter(),
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dir: self,
}
}
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/// Whether this directory contains a file with the given path.
pub fn contains(&self, path: &Path) -> bool {
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self.contents.iter().any(|p| p.as_path() == path)
}
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/// Append a path onto the path specified by this directory.
pub fn join(&self, child: &Path) -> PathBuf {
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self.path.join(child)
}
/// Return whether there's a Git repository on or above this directory.
pub fn has_git_repo(&self) -> bool {
self.git.is_some()
}
/// Get a string describing the Git status of the given file.
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pub fn git_status(&self, path: &Path, prefix_lookup: bool) -> fields::Git {
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match (&self.git, prefix_lookup) {
(&Some(ref git), false) => git.status(path),
(&Some(ref git), true) => git.dir_status(path),
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(&None, _) => fields::Git::empty()
}
}
}
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/// Iterator over reading the contents of a directory as `File` objects.
pub struct Files<'dir> {
inner: SliceIter<'dir, PathBuf>,
dir: &'dir Dir,
}
impl<'dir> Iterator for Files<'dir> {
type Item = Result<File<'dir>, (PathBuf, io::Error)>;
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item> {
self.inner.next().map(|path| File::from_path(path, Some(self.dir)).map_err(|t| (path.clone(), t)))
}
}