Add some more comments and spacings

This commit is contained in:
Ben S 2015-05-16 16:10:58 +01:00
parent 1bb7a4e47e
commit fcc864eb67
2 changed files with 101 additions and 13 deletions

View File

@ -1,3 +1,5 @@
//! Files, and methods and fields to access their metadata.
use std::ascii::AsciiExt;
use std::env::current_dir;
use std::fs;
@ -14,6 +16,7 @@ use feature::Attribute;
use self::fields as f;
/// A **File** is a wrapper around one of Rust's Path objects, along with
/// associated data about the file.
///
@ -22,18 +25,48 @@ use self::fields as f;
/// information queried at least once, so it makes sense to do all this at the
/// start and hold on to all the information.
pub struct File<'dir> {
/// This file's name, as a UTF-8 encoded String.
pub name: String,
pub dir: Option<&'dir Dir>,
/// The file's name's extension, if present, extracted from the name. This
/// is queried a lot, so it's worth being cached.
pub ext: Option<String>,
/// The path that begat this file. Even though the file's name is
/// extracted, the path needs to be kept around, as certain operations
/// involve looking up the file's absolute location (such as the Git
/// status, or searching for compiled files).
pub path: PathBuf,
/// A cached `metadata` call for this file. This is queried multiple
/// times, and is *not* cached by the OS, as it could easily change
/// between invocations - but exa is so short-lived it's better to just
/// cache it.
pub stat: fs::Metadata,
/// List of this file's extended attributes. These are only loaded if the
/// `xattr` feature is in use.
pub xattrs: Vec<Attribute>,
/// A reference to the directory that contains this file, if present.
///
/// Filenames that get passed in on the command-line directly will have no
/// parent directory reference - although they technically have one on the
/// filesystem, we'll never need to look at it, so it'll be `None`.
/// However, *directories* that get passed in will produce files that
/// contain a reference to it, which is used in certain operations (such
/// as looking up a file's Git status).
pub dir: Option<&'dir Dir>,
/// If this `File` is also a directory, then this field is the same file
/// as a `Dir`.
pub this: Option<Dir>,
}
impl<'dir> File<'dir> {
/// Create a new File object from the given Path, inside the given Dir, if
/// appropriate. Paths specified directly on the command-line have no Dirs.
/// Create a new `File` object from the given `Path`, inside the given
/// `Dir`, if appropriate.
///
/// This uses `symlink_metadata` instead of `metadata`, which doesn't
/// follow symbolic links.
@ -66,37 +99,62 @@ impl<'dir> File<'dir> {
}
}
/// Whether this file is a directory on the filesystem.
pub fn is_directory(&self) -> bool {
self.stat.is_dir()
}
/// Whether this file is a regular file on the filesystem - that is, not a
/// directory, a link, or anything else treated specially.
pub fn is_file(&self) -> bool {
self.stat.is_file()
}
/// Whether this file is both a regular file *and* executable for the
/// current user. Executable files have different semantics than
/// executable directories, and so should be highlighted differently.
pub fn is_executable_file(&self) -> bool {
let bit = unix::fs::USER_EXECUTE;
self.is_file() && (self.stat.permissions().mode() & bit) == bit
}
/// Whether this file is a symlink on the filesystem.
pub fn is_link(&self) -> bool {
self.stat.file_type().is_symlink()
}
/// Whether this file is a named pipe on the filesystem.
pub fn is_pipe(&self) -> bool {
false // TODO: Still waiting on this one...
}
/// Whether this file is a dotfile or not.
/// Whether this file is a dotfile, based on its name. In Unix, file names
/// beginning with a dot represent system or configuration files, and
/// should be hidden by default.
pub fn is_dotfile(&self) -> bool {
self.name.starts_with(".")
}
/// Constructs the 'path prefix' of this file, which is the portion of the
/// path up to, but not including, the file name.
///
/// This gets used when displaying the path a symlink points to. In
/// certain cases, it may return an empty-length string. Examples:
///
/// - `code/exa/file.rs` has `code/exa/` as its prefix, including the
/// trailing slash.
/// - `code/exa` has just `code/` as its prefix.
/// - `code` has the empty string as its prefix.
/// - `/` also has the empty string as its prefix. It does not have a
/// trailing slash, as the slash constitutes the 'name' of this file.
pub fn path_prefix(&self) -> String {
let path_bytes: Vec<Component> = self.path.components().collect();
let mut path_prefix = String::new();
// TODO: I'm not sure if it's even possible for a file to have
// an empty set of components...
if !path_bytes.is_empty() {
// Use init() to add all but the last component of the
// path to the prefix. init() panics when given an
// empty list, hence the check.
@ -157,11 +215,13 @@ impl<'dir> File<'dir> {
}
}
/// This file's number of hard links as a coloured string.
/// This file's number of hard links.
///
/// This is important, because a file with multiple links is uncommon,
/// while you can come across directories and other types with multiple
/// links much more often.
/// It also reports whether this is both a regular file, and a file with
/// multiple links. This is important, because a file with multiple links
/// is uncommon, while you can come across directories and other types
/// with multiple links much more often. Thus, it should get highlighted
/// more attentively.
pub fn links(&self) -> f::Links {
let count = self.stat.as_raw().nlink();
@ -171,10 +231,14 @@ impl<'dir> File<'dir> {
}
}
/// This file's inode.
pub fn inode(&self) -> f::Inode {
f::Inode(self.stat.as_raw().ino())
}
/// This file's number of filesystem blocks.
///
/// (Not the size of each block, which we don't actually report on)
pub fn blocks(&self) -> f::Blocks {
if self.is_file() || self.is_link() {
f::Blocks::Some(self.stat.as_raw().blocks())
@ -184,20 +248,21 @@ impl<'dir> File<'dir> {
}
}
/// The ID of the user that own this file.
pub fn user(&self) -> f::User {
f::User(self.stat.as_raw().uid())
}
/// The ID of the group that owns this file.
pub fn group(&self) -> f::Group {
f::Group(self.stat.as_raw().gid())
}
/// This file's size, formatted using the given way, as a coloured string.
/// This file's size, if it's a regular file.
///
/// For directories, no size is given. Although they do have a size on
/// some filesystems, I've never looked at one of those numbers and gained
/// any information from it, so by emitting "-" instead, the table is less
/// cluttered with numbers.
/// any information from it. So it's going to be hidden instead.
pub fn size(&self) -> f::Size {
if self.is_directory() {
f::Size::None
@ -207,6 +272,7 @@ impl<'dir> File<'dir> {
}
}
/// One of this file's timestamps, as a number in seconds.
pub fn timestamp(&self, time_type: TimeType) -> f::Time {
let time_in_seconds = match time_type {
TimeType::FileAccessed => self.stat.as_raw().atime(),
@ -217,8 +283,9 @@ impl<'dir> File<'dir> {
f::Time(time_in_seconds)
}
/// This file's type, represented by a coloured character.
/// This file's 'type'.
///
/// This is used in the leftmost column of the permissions column.
/// Although the file type can usually be guessed from the colour of the
/// file, `ls` puts this character there, so people will expect it.
fn type_char(&self) -> f::Type {
@ -239,6 +306,7 @@ impl<'dir> File<'dir> {
}
}
/// This file's permissions, with flags for each bit.
pub fn permissions(&self) -> f::Permissions {
let bits = self.stat.permissions().mode();
let has_bit = |bit| { bits & bit == bit };
@ -293,6 +361,9 @@ impl<'dir> File<'dir> {
}
}
/// Whether this file's extension is any of the strings that get passed in.
///
/// This will always return `false` if the file has no extension.
pub fn extension_is_one_of(&self, choices: &[&str]) -> bool {
match self.ext {
Some(ref ext) => choices.contains(&&ext[..]),
@ -300,10 +371,18 @@ impl<'dir> File<'dir> {
}
}
/// Whether this file's name, including extension, is any of the strings
/// that get passed in.
pub fn name_is_one_of(&self, choices: &[&str]) -> bool {
choices.contains(&&self.name[..])
}
/// This file's Git status as two flags: one for staged changes, and the
/// other for unstaged changes.
///
/// This requires looking at the `git` field of this file's parent
/// directory, so will not work if this file has just been passed in on
/// the command line.
pub fn git_status(&self) -> f::Git {
match self.dir {
None => f::Git { staged: f::GitStatus::NotModified, unstaged: f::GitStatus::NotModified },
@ -344,6 +423,12 @@ fn ext(name: &str) -> Option<String> {
name.rfind('.').map(|p| name[p+1..].to_ascii_lowercase())
}
/// Wrapper types for the values returned from `File` objects.
///
/// The methods of `File` don't return formatted strings; neither do they
/// return raw numbers representing timestamps or user IDs. Instead, they will
/// return an object in this `fields` module. These objects are later rendered
/// into formatted strings in the `output/details` module.
pub mod fields {
use std::os::unix::raw::{blkcnt_t, gid_t, ino_t, nlink_t, time_t, uid_t};

View File

@ -48,6 +48,8 @@ pub struct Details {
/// Whether to show each file's extended attributes.
pub xattr: bool,
/// The colours to use to display information in the table, including the
/// colour of the tree view symbols.
pub colours: Colours,
}
@ -130,6 +132,7 @@ struct Table {
}
impl Table {
/// Create a new, empty Table object, setting the caching fields to their
/// empty states.
fn with_options(colours: Colours, columns: Vec<Column>) -> Table {
@ -320,7 +323,7 @@ impl Table {
};
let style = if self.users.get_current_uid() == user.0 { self.colours.users.user_you }
else { self.colours.users.user_someone_else };
else { self.colours.users.user_someone_else };
Cell::paint(style, &*user_name)
}