go/src/os/file_unix.go

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// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// +build darwin dragonfly freebsd linux nacl netbsd openbsd solaris
package os
import (
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
"internal/poll"
"runtime"
"syscall"
)
// fixLongPath is a noop on non-Windows platforms.
func fixLongPath(path string) string {
return path
}
func rename(oldname, newname string) error {
fi, err := Lstat(newname)
if err == nil && fi.IsDir() {
// if we cannot stat oldname we should
// return that error in favor of EEXIST
fi, err = Lstat(oldname)
if err != nil {
if pErr, ok := err.(*PathError); ok {
err = pErr.Err
}
return &LinkError{"rename", oldname, newname, err}
}
return &LinkError{"rename", oldname, newname, syscall.EEXIST}
}
err = syscall.Rename(oldname, newname)
if err != nil {
return &LinkError{"rename", oldname, newname, err}
}
return nil
}
// file is the real representation of *File.
// The extra level of indirection ensures that no clients of os
// can overwrite this data, which could cause the finalizer
// to close the wrong file descriptor.
type file struct {
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
pfd poll.FD
name string
dirinfo *dirInfo // nil unless directory being read
nonblock bool // whether we set nonblocking mode
}
// Fd returns the integer Unix file descriptor referencing the open file.
// The file descriptor is valid only until f.Close is called or f is garbage collected.
func (f *File) Fd() uintptr {
if f == nil {
return ^(uintptr(0))
}
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
// If we put the file descriptor into nonblocking mode,
// then set it to blocking mode before we return it,
// because historically we have always returned a descriptor
// opened in blocking mode. The File will continue to work,
// but any blocking operation will tie up a thread.
if f.nonblock {
syscall.SetNonblock(f.pfd.Sysfd, false)
}
return uintptr(f.pfd.Sysfd)
}
// NewFile returns a new File with the given file descriptor and
// name. The returned value will be nil if fd is not a valid file
// descriptor.
func NewFile(fd uintptr, name string) *File {
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
return newFile(fd, name, false)
}
// newFile is like NewFile, but if pollable is true it tries to add the
// file to the runtime poller.
func newFile(fd uintptr, name string, pollable bool) *File {
fdi := int(fd)
if fdi < 0 {
return nil
}
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
f := &File{&file{
pfd: poll.FD{
Sysfd: fdi,
IsStream: true,
ZeroReadIsEOF: true,
},
name: name,
}}
// Don't try to use kqueue with regular files on FreeBSD.
// It crashes the system unpredictably while running all.bash.
// Issue 19093.
if runtime.GOOS == "freebsd" {
pollable = false
}
if err := f.pfd.Init("file", pollable); err != nil {
// An error here indicates a failure to register
// with the netpoll system. That can happen for
// a file descriptor that is not supported by
// epoll/kqueue; for example, disk files on
// GNU/Linux systems. We assume that any real error
// will show up in later I/O.
} else if pollable {
// We successfully registered with netpoll, so put
// the file into nonblocking mode.
if err := syscall.SetNonblock(fdi, true); err == nil {
f.nonblock = true
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
}
}
runtime.SetFinalizer(f.file, (*file).close)
return f
}
// Auxiliary information if the File describes a directory
type dirInfo struct {
buf []byte // buffer for directory I/O
nbuf int // length of buf; return value from Getdirentries
bufp int // location of next record in buf.
}
// epipecheck raises SIGPIPE if we get an EPIPE error on standard
// output or standard error. See the SIGPIPE docs in os/signal, and
// issue 11845.
func epipecheck(file *File, e error) {
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
if e == syscall.EPIPE && (file.pfd.Sysfd == 1 || file.pfd.Sysfd == 2) {
sigpipe()
}
}
// DevNull is the name of the operating system's ``null device.''
// On Unix-like systems, it is "/dev/null"; on Windows, "NUL".
const DevNull = "/dev/null"
// OpenFile is the generalized open call; most users will use Open
// or Create instead. It opens the named file with specified flag
// (O_RDONLY etc.) and perm, (0666 etc.) if applicable. If successful,
// methods on the returned File can be used for I/O.
// If there is an error, it will be of type *PathError.
func OpenFile(name string, flag int, perm FileMode) (*File, error) {
chmod := false
if !supportsCreateWithStickyBit && flag&O_CREATE != 0 && perm&ModeSticky != 0 {
if _, err := Stat(name); IsNotExist(err) {
chmod = true
}
}
var r int
for {
var e error
r, e = syscall.Open(name, flag|syscall.O_CLOEXEC, syscallMode(perm))
if e == nil {
break
}
// On OS X, sigaction(2) doesn't guarantee that SA_RESTART will cause
// open(2) to be restarted for regular files. This is easy to reproduce on
// fuse file systems (see http://golang.org/issue/11180).
if runtime.GOOS == "darwin" && e == syscall.EINTR {
continue
}
return nil, &PathError{"open", name, e}
}
// open(2) itself won't handle the sticky bit on *BSD and Solaris
if chmod {
Chmod(name, perm)
}
// There's a race here with fork/exec, which we are
// content to live with. See ../syscall/exec_unix.go.
if !supportsCloseOnExec {
syscall.CloseOnExec(r)
}
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
return newFile(uintptr(r), name, true), nil
}
// Close closes the File, rendering it unusable for I/O.
// It returns an error, if any.
func (f *File) Close() error {
if f == nil {
return ErrInvalid
}
return f.file.close()
}
func (file *file) close() error {
if file == nil {
return syscall.EINVAL
}
var err error
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
if e := file.pfd.Close(); e != nil {
if e == poll.ErrFileClosing {
e = ErrClosed
}
err = &PathError{"close", file.name, e}
}
// no need for a finalizer anymore
runtime.SetFinalizer(file, nil)
return err
}
// read reads up to len(b) bytes from the File.
// It returns the number of bytes read and an error, if any.
func (f *File) read(b []byte) (n int, err error) {
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
n, err = f.pfd.Read(b)
runtime.KeepAlive(f)
return n, err
}
// pread reads len(b) bytes from the File starting at byte offset off.
// It returns the number of bytes read and the error, if any.
// EOF is signaled by a zero count with err set to nil.
func (f *File) pread(b []byte, off int64) (n int, err error) {
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
n, err = f.pfd.Pread(b, off)
runtime.KeepAlive(f)
return n, err
}
// write writes len(b) bytes to the File.
// It returns the number of bytes written and an error, if any.
func (f *File) write(b []byte) (n int, err error) {
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
n, err = f.pfd.Write(b)
runtime.KeepAlive(f)
return n, err
}
// pwrite writes len(b) bytes to the File starting at byte offset off.
// It returns the number of bytes written and an error, if any.
func (f *File) pwrite(b []byte, off int64) (n int, err error) {
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
n, err = f.pfd.Pwrite(b, off)
runtime.KeepAlive(f)
return n, err
}
// seek sets the offset for the next Read or Write on file to offset, interpreted
// according to whence: 0 means relative to the origin of the file, 1 means
// relative to the current offset, and 2 means relative to the end.
// It returns the new offset and an error, if any.
func (f *File) seek(offset int64, whence int) (ret int64, err error) {
os: use poller for file I/O This changes the os package to use the runtime poller for file I/O where possible. When a system call blocks on a pollable descriptor, the goroutine will be blocked on the poller but the thread will be released to run other goroutines. When using a non-pollable descriptor, the os package will continue to use thread-blocking system calls as before. For example, on GNU/Linux, the runtime poller uses epoll. epoll does not support ordinary disk files, so they will continue to use blocking I/O as before. The poller will be used for pipes. Since this means that the poller is used for many more programs, this modifies the runtime to only block waiting for the poller if there is some goroutine that is waiting on the poller. Otherwise, there is no point, as the poller will never make any goroutine ready. This preserves the runtime's current simple deadlock detection. This seems to crash FreeBSD systems, so it is disabled on FreeBSD. This is issue 19093. Using the poller on Windows requires opening the file with FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED. We should only do that if we can remove that flag if the program calls the Fd method. This is issue 19098. Update #6817. Update #7903. Update #15021. Update #18507. Update #19093. Update #19098. Change-Id: Ia5197dcefa7c6fbcca97d19a6f8621b2abcbb1fe Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/36800 Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2017-02-10 15:17:38 -08:00
ret, err = f.pfd.Seek(offset, whence)
runtime.KeepAlive(f)
return ret, err
}
// Truncate changes the size of the named file.
// If the file is a symbolic link, it changes the size of the link's target.
// If there is an error, it will be of type *PathError.
func Truncate(name string, size int64) error {
if e := syscall.Truncate(name, size); e != nil {
return &PathError{"truncate", name, e}
}
return nil
}
// Remove removes the named file or directory.
// If there is an error, it will be of type *PathError.
func Remove(name string) error {
// System call interface forces us to know
// whether name is a file or directory.
// Try both: it is cheaper on average than
// doing a Stat plus the right one.
e := syscall.Unlink(name)
if e == nil {
return nil
}
e1 := syscall.Rmdir(name)
if e1 == nil {
return nil
}
// Both failed: figure out which error to return.
// OS X and Linux differ on whether unlink(dir)
// returns EISDIR, so can't use that. However,
// both agree that rmdir(file) returns ENOTDIR,
// so we can use that to decide which error is real.
// Rmdir might also return ENOTDIR if given a bad
// file path, like /etc/passwd/foo, but in that case,
// both errors will be ENOTDIR, so it's okay to
// use the error from unlink.
if e1 != syscall.ENOTDIR {
e = e1
}
return &PathError{"remove", name, e}
}
// TempDir returns the default directory to use for temporary files.
func TempDir() string {
dir := Getenv("TMPDIR")
if dir == "" {
if runtime.GOOS == "android" {
dir = "/data/local/tmp"
} else {
dir = "/tmp"
}
}
return dir
}
// Link creates newname as a hard link to the oldname file.
// If there is an error, it will be of type *LinkError.
func Link(oldname, newname string) error {
e := syscall.Link(oldname, newname)
if e != nil {
return &LinkError{"link", oldname, newname, e}
}
return nil
}
// Symlink creates newname as a symbolic link to oldname.
// If there is an error, it will be of type *LinkError.
func Symlink(oldname, newname string) error {
e := syscall.Symlink(oldname, newname)
if e != nil {
return &LinkError{"symlink", oldname, newname, e}
}
return nil
}