401 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
401 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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/* $Id: fileutils.hg,v 1.3 2004/01/22 18:38:12 murrayc Exp $ */
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/* Copyright (C) 2002 The gtkmm Development Team
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*
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* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
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* modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public
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* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
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* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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*
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* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
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* Library General Public License for more details.
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*
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* You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
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* License along with this library; if not, write to the Free
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* Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
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*/
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_DEFS(glibmm,glib)
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#ifndef DOXYGEN_SHOULD_SKIP_THIS
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extern "C" { typedef struct _GDir GDir; }
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#endif
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#include <iterator>
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#include <string>
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#include <glibmmconfig.h>
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#include <glibmm/error.h>
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GLIBMM_USING_STD(input_iterator_tag)
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GLIBMM_USING_STD(string)
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namespace Glib
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{
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_WRAP_ENUM(FileTest, GFileTest, NO_GTYPE)
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/** @defgroup FileUtils File Utilities
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* Various file-related classes and functions.
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*/
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/** Exception class for file-related errors.
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* @ingroup FileUtils
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*/
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_WRAP_GERROR(FileError, GFileError, G_FILE_ERROR, NO_GTYPE,
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s#^EXIST$#EXISTS#,
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s#^ISDIR$#IS_DIRECTORY#,
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s#^ACCES$#ACCESS_DENIED#,
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s#^NAMETOOLONG$#NAME_TOO_LONG#,
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s#^NOENT$#NO_SUCH_ENTITY#,
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s#^NOTDIR$#NOT_DIRECTORY#,
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s#^NXIO$#NO_SUCH_DEVICE#,
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s#^NODEV$#NOT_DEVICE#,
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s#^ROFS$#READONLY_FILESYSTEM#,
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s#^TXTBSY$#TEXT_FILE_BUSY#,
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s#^FAULT$#FAULTY_ADDRESS#,
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s#^LOOP$#SYMLINK_LOOP#,
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s#^NOSPC$#NO_SPACE_LEFT#,
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s#^NOMEM$#NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY#,
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s#^MFILE$#TOO_MANY_OPEN_FILES#,
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s#^NFILE$#FILE_TABLE_OVERFLOW#,
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s#^BADF$#BAD_FILE_DESCRIPTOR#,
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s#^INVAL$#INVALID_ARGUMENT#,
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s#^PIPE$#BROKEN_PIPE#,
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s#^AGAIN$#TRYAGAIN#,
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s#^INTR$#INTERRUPTED#,
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s#^IO$#IO_ERROR#,
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s#^PERM$#NOT_OWNER#
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)
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/** @enum FileError::Code
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* Values corresponding to <tt>errno</tt> codes returned from file operations
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* on UNIX.
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* Unlike <tt>errno</tt> codes, FileError::Code values are available on all
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* systems, even Windows. The exact meaning of each code depends on what sort
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* of file operation you were performing; the UNIX documentation gives more
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* details. The following error code descriptions come from the GNU C Library
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* manual, and are under the copyright of that manual.
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*
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* It's not very portable to make detailed assumptions about exactly which
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* errors will be returned from a given operation. Some errors don't occur on
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* some systems, etc., sometimes there are subtle differences in when a system
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* will report a given error, etc.
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::EXISTS
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* <tt>(EEXIST)</tt> Operation not permitted; only the owner of the file (or
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* other resource) or processes with special privileges can perform the operation.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::IS_DIRECTORY
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* <tt>(EISDIR)</tt> File is a directory; you cannot open a directory for writing,
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* or create or remove hard links to it.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::ACCESS_DENIED
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* <tt>(EACCES)</tt> Permission denied; the file permissions do not allow the
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* attempted operation.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::NAME_TOO_LONG
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* <tt>(ENAMETOOLONG)</tt> Filename too long.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::NO_SUCH_ENTITY
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* <tt>(ENOENT)</tt> No such file or directory. This is a "file doesn't exist"
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* error for ordinary files that are referenced in contexts where they are expected
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* to already exist.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::NOT_DIRECTORY
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* <tt>(ENOTDIR)</tt> A file that isn't a directory was specified when a directory
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* is required.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::NO_SUCH_DEVICE
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* <tt>(ENXIO)</tt> No such device or address. The system tried to use the device
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* represented by a file you specified, and it couldn't find the device. This can
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* mean that the device file was installed incorrectly, or that the physical device
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* is missing or not correctly attached to the computer.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::NOT_DEVICE
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* <tt>(ENODEV)</tt> This file is of a type that doesn't support mapping.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::READONLY_FILESYSTEM
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* <tt>(EROFS)</tt> The directory containing the new link can't be modified
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* because it's on a read-only file system.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::TEXT_FILE_BUSY
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* <tt>(ETXTBSY)</tt> Text file busy.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::FAULTY_ADDRESS
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* <tt>(EFAULT)</tt> You passed in a pointer to bad memory. (Glib won't
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* reliably return this, don't pass in pointers to bad memory.)
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::SYMLINK_LOOP
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* <tt>(ELOOP)</tt> Too many levels of symbolic links were encountered in
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* looking up a file name. This often indicates a cycle of symbolic links.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::NO_SPACE_LEFT
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* <tt>(ENOSPC)</tt> No space left on device; write operation on a file failed
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* because the disk is full.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY
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* <tt>(ENOMEM)</tt> No memory available. The system cannot allocate more
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* virtual memory because its capacity is full.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::TOO_MANY_OPEN_FILES
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* <tt>(EMFILE)</tt> The current process has too many files open and can't
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* open any more. Duplicate descriptors do count toward this limit.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::FILE_TABLE_OVERFLOW
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* <tt>(ENFILE)</tt> There are too many distinct file openings in the
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* entire system.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::BAD_FILE_DESCRIPTOR
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* <tt>(EBADF)</tt> Bad file descriptor; for example, I/O on a descriptor
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* that has been closed or reading from a descriptor open only for writing
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* (or vice versa).
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::INVALID_ARGUMENT
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* <tt>(EINVAL)</tt> Invalid argument. This is used to indicate various kinds
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* of problems with passing the wrong argument to a library function.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::BROKEN_PIPE
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* <tt>(EPIPE)</tt> Broken pipe; there is no process reading from the other
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* end of a pipe. Every library function that returns this error code also
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* generates a <tt>SIGPIPE</tt> signal; this signal terminates the program
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* if not handled or blocked. Thus, your program will never actually see
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* this code unless it has handled or blocked <tt>SIGPIPE</tt>.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::TRYAGAIN
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* <tt>(EAGAIN)</tt> Resource temporarily unavailable; the call might work
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* if you try again later.
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* We used TRYAGAIN instead of TRY_AGAIN, because that is a defined as a macro by a Unix header.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::INTERRUPTED
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* <tt>(EINTR)</tt> Interrupted function call; an asynchronous signal occurred
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* and prevented completion of the call. When this happens, you should try
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* the call again.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::IO_ERROR
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* <tt>(EIO)</tt> Input/output error; usually used for physical read or write
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* errors. I.e. the disk or other physical device hardware is returning errors.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::NOT_OWNER
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* <tt>(EPERM)</tt> Operation not permitted; only the owner of the file (or other
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* resource) or processes with special privileges can perform the operation.
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* <br><br>
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*/
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/** @var FileError::Code FileError::FAILED
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* Does not correspond to a UNIX error code; this is the standard "failed for
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* unspecified reason" error code present in all Glib::Error error code
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* enumerations. Returned if no specific code applies.
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*/
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class Dir;
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/** The iterator type of Glib::Dir.
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* @ingroup FileUtils
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*/
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class DirIterator
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{
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public:
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typedef std::input_iterator_tag iterator_category;
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typedef std::string value_type;
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typedef int difference_type;
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typedef value_type reference;
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typedef void pointer;
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DirIterator();
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#ifndef DOXYGEN_SHOULD_SKIP_THIS
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DirIterator(GDir* gobject, const char* current);
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#endif
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std::string operator*() const;
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DirIterator& operator++();
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/** @note DirIterator has input iterator semantics, which means real
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* postfix increment is impossible. The return type is @c void to
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* prevent surprising behaviour.
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*/
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void operator++(int);
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bool operator==(const DirIterator& rhs) const;
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bool operator!=(const DirIterator& rhs) const;
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private:
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GDir* gobject_;
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const char* current_;
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};
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/** Utility class representing an open directory.
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* @ingroup FileUtils
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* It's highly recommended to use the iterator interface. With iterators,
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* reading an entire directory into a STL container is really easy:
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* @code
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* Glib::Dir dir (directory_path);
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* std::list<std::string> entries (dir.begin(), dir.end());
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* @endcode
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* @note The encoding of the directory entries isn't necessarily UTF-8.
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* Use Glib::filename_to_utf8() if you need to display them.
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*/
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class Dir
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{
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public:
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typedef DirIterator iterator;
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typedef DirIterator const_iterator;
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/** Opens a directory for reading. The names of the files in the
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* directory can then be retrieved using read_name().
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* @param path The path to the directory you are interested in.
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* @throw Glib::FileError
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*/
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explicit Dir(const std::string& path);
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#ifndef DOXYGEN_SHOULD_SKIP_THIS
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explicit Dir(GDir* gobject);
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#endif
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/** Closes the directory and deallocates all related resources.
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*/
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~Dir();
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/** Retrieves the name of the next entry in the directory.
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* The <tt>'.'</tt> and <tt>'..'</tt> entries are omitted.
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* @return The entry's name or <tt>""</tt> if there are no more entries.
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* @see begin(), end()
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*/
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std::string read_name();
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/** Resets the directory. The next call to
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* read_name() will return the first entry again.
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*/
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void rewind();
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/** Closes the directory and deallocates all related resources.
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* Note that close() is implicitely called by ~Dir(). Thus you don't
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* need to call close() yourself unless you want to close the directory
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* before the destructor runs.
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*/
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void close();
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/** Get the begin of an input iterator sequence.
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* @return An input iterator pointing to the first directory entry.
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*/
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DirIterator begin();
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/** Get the end of an input iterator sequence.
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* @return An input iterator pointing behind the last directory entry.
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*/
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DirIterator end();
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private:
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GDir* gobject_;
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// noncopyable
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Dir(const Dir&);
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Dir& operator=(const Dir&);
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};
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/** Returns @c true if any of the tests in the bitfield @a test are true.
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* @ingroup FileUtils
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* For example, <tt>(Glib::FILE_TEST_EXISTS | Glib::FILE_TEST_IS_DIR)</tt> will
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* return @c true if the file exists; the check whether it's a directory
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* doesn't matter since the existence test is true. With the current set of
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* available tests, there's no point passing in more than one test at a time.
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*
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* Apart from <tt>Glib::FILE_TEST_IS_SYMLINK</tt> all tests follow symbolic
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* links, so for a symbolic link to a regular file file_test() will return
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* @c true for both <tt>Glib::FILE_TEST_IS_SYMLINK</tt> and
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* <tt>Glib::FILE_TEST_IS_REGULAR</tt>.
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*
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* @note For a dangling symbolic link file_test() will return @c true for
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* <tt>Glib::FILE_TEST_IS_SYMLINK</tt> and @c false for all other flags.
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*
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* @param filename A filename to test.
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* @param test Bitfield of Glib::FileTest flags.
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* @return Whether a test was true.
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*/
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bool file_test(const std::string& filename, FileTest test);
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/** Opens a temporary file.
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* @ingroup FileUtils
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* See the %mkstemp() documentation on most UNIX-like systems. This is a
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* portability wrapper, which simply calls %mkstemp() on systems that have
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* it, and implements it in GLib otherwise.
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* @param filename_template A string that should match the rules for
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* %mkstemp(), i.e. end in <tt>"XXXXXX"</tt>. The <tt>X</tt> string
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* will be modified to form the name of a file that didn't exist.
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* @return A file handle (as from open()) to the file opened for reading
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* and writing. The file is opened in binary mode on platforms where there
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* is a difference. The file handle should be closed with close(). In
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* case of errors, <tt>-1</tt> is returned.
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*/
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int mkstemp(std::string& filename_template);
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/** Opens a file for writing in the preferred directory for temporary files
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* (as returned by Glib::get_tmp_dir()).
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* @ingroup FileUtils
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* @a prefix should a basename template; it'll be suffixed by 6 characters
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* in order to form a unique filename. No directory components are allowed.
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*
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* The actual name used is returned in @a name_used.
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*
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* @param prefix Template for file name, basename only.
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* @retval name_used The actual name used.
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* @return A file handle (as from <tt>open()</tt>) to the file opened for reading
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* and writing. The file is opened in binary mode on platforms where there is a
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* difference. The file handle should be closed with <tt>close()</tt>.
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* @throw Glib::FileError
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*/
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int file_open_tmp(std::string& name_used, const std::string& prefix);
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/** Opens a file for writing in the preferred directory for temporary files
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* (as returned by Glib::get_tmp_dir()).
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* @ingroup FileUtils
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* This function works like file_open_tmp(std::string&, const std::string&)
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* but uses a default basename prefix.
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*
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* @retval name_used The actual name used.
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* @return A file handle (as from <tt>open()</tt>) to the file opened for reading
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* and writing. The file is opened in binary mode on platforms where there is a
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* difference. The file handle should be closed with <tt>close()</tt>.
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* @throw Glib::FileError
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*/
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int file_open_tmp(std::string& name_used);
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/** Reads an entire file into a string, with good error checking.
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* @ingroup FileUtils
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* @param filename A file to read contents from.
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* @return The file contents.
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* @throw Glib::FileError
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*/
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std::string file_get_contents(const std::string& filename);
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} // namespace Glib
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