1 //===- llvm/Support/PathV1.h - Path Operating System Concept ----*- C++ -*-===// 2 // 3 // The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure 4 // 5 // This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source 6 // License. See LICENSE.TXT for details. 7 // 8 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// 9 // 10 // This file declares the llvm::sys::Path class. 11 // 12 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// 13 14 #ifndef LLVM_SYSTEM_PATH_H 15 #define LLVM_SYSTEM_PATH_H 16 17 #include "llvm/ADT/StringRef.h" 18 #include "llvm/Support/Compiler.h" 19 #include "llvm/Support/TimeValue.h" 20 #include <set> 21 #include <string> 22 #include <vector> 23 24 #define LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(replacement) \ 25 "PathV1 has been deprecated and will be removed as soon as all LLVM and" \ 26 " Clang clients have been moved over to PathV2. Please use `" #replacement \ 27 "` from PathV2 instead." 28 29 namespace llvm { 30 namespace sys { 31 32 /// This structure provides basic file system information about a file. It 33 /// is patterned after the stat(2) Unix operating system call but made 34 /// platform independent and eliminates many of the unix-specific fields. 35 /// However, to support llvm-ar, the mode, user, and group fields are 36 /// retained. These pertain to unix security and may not have a meaningful 37 /// value on non-Unix platforms. However, the other fields should 38 /// always be applicable on all platforms. The structure is filled in by 39 /// the PathWithStatus class. 40 /// @brief File status structure 41 class FileStatus { 42 public: 43 uint64_t fileSize; ///< Size of the file in bytes 44 TimeValue modTime; ///< Time of file's modification 45 uint32_t mode; ///< Mode of the file, if applicable 46 uint32_t user; ///< User ID of owner, if applicable 47 uint32_t group; ///< Group ID of owner, if applicable 48 uint64_t uniqueID; ///< A number to uniquely ID this file 49 bool isDir : 1; ///< True if this is a directory. 50 bool isFile : 1; ///< True if this is a file. 51 52 FileStatus() : fileSize(0), modTime(0,0), mode(0777), user(999), 53 group(999), uniqueID(0), isDir(false), isFile(false) { } 54 55 TimeValue getTimestamp() const { return modTime; } 56 uint64_t getSize() const { return fileSize; } 57 uint32_t getMode() const { return mode; } 58 uint32_t getUser() const { return user; } 59 uint32_t getGroup() const { return group; } 60 uint64_t getUniqueID() const { return uniqueID; } 61 }; 62 63 /// This class provides an abstraction for the path to a file or directory 64 /// in the operating system's filesystem and provides various basic operations 65 /// on it. Note that this class only represents the name of a path to a file 66 /// or directory which may or may not be valid for a given machine's file 67 /// system. The class is patterned after the java.io.File class with various 68 /// extensions and several omissions (not relevant to LLVM). A Path object 69 /// ensures that the path it encapsulates is syntactically valid for the 70 /// operating system it is running on but does not ensure correctness for 71 /// any particular file system. That is, a syntactically valid path might 72 /// specify path components that do not exist in the file system and using 73 /// such a Path to act on the file system could produce errors. There is one 74 /// invalid Path value which is permitted: the empty path. The class should 75 /// never allow a syntactically invalid non-empty path name to be assigned. 76 /// Empty paths are required in order to indicate an error result in some 77 /// situations. If the path is empty, the isValid operation will return 78 /// false. All operations will fail if isValid is false. Operations that 79 /// change the path will either return false if it would cause a syntactically 80 /// invalid path name (in which case the Path object is left unchanged) or 81 /// throw an std::string exception indicating the error. The methods are 82 /// grouped into four basic categories: Path Accessors (provide information 83 /// about the path without accessing disk), Disk Accessors (provide 84 /// information about the underlying file or directory), Path Mutators 85 /// (change the path information, not the disk), and Disk Mutators (change 86 /// the disk file/directory referenced by the path). The Disk Mutator methods 87 /// all have the word "disk" embedded in their method name to reinforce the 88 /// notion that the operation modifies the file system. 89 /// @since 1.4 90 /// @brief An abstraction for operating system paths. 91 class Path { 92 /// @name Constructors 93 /// @{ 94 public: 95 /// Construct a path to the root directory of the file system. The root 96 /// directory is a top level directory above which there are no more 97 /// directories. For example, on UNIX, the root directory is /. On Windows 98 /// it is file:///. Other operating systems may have different notions of 99 /// what the root directory is or none at all. In that case, a consistent 100 /// default root directory will be used. 101 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED(static Path GetRootDirectory(), 102 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(NOTHING)); 103 104 /// Construct a path to a unique temporary directory that is created in 105 /// a "standard" place for the operating system. The directory is 106 /// guaranteed to be created on exit from this function. If the directory 107 /// cannot be created, the function will throw an exception. 108 /// @returns an invalid path (empty) on error 109 /// @param ErrMsg Optional place for an error message if an error occurs 110 /// @brief Construct a path to an new, unique, existing temporary 111 /// directory. 112 static Path GetTemporaryDirectory(std::string* ErrMsg = 0); 113 114 /// Construct a vector of sys::Path that contains the "standard" system 115 /// library paths suitable for linking into programs. 116 /// @brief Construct a path to the system library directory 117 static void GetSystemLibraryPaths(std::vector<sys::Path>& Paths); 118 119 /// Construct a vector of sys::Path that contains the "standard" bitcode 120 /// library paths suitable for linking into an llvm program. This function 121 /// *must* return the value of LLVM_LIB_SEARCH_PATH as well as the value 122 /// of LLVM_LIBDIR. It also must provide the System library paths as 123 /// returned by GetSystemLibraryPaths. 124 /// @see GetSystemLibraryPaths 125 /// @brief Construct a list of directories in which bitcode could be 126 /// found. 127 static void GetBitcodeLibraryPaths(std::vector<sys::Path>& Paths); 128 129 /// Find the path to a library using its short name. Use the system 130 /// dependent library paths to locate the library. 131 /// @brief Find a library. 132 static Path FindLibrary(std::string& short_name); 133 134 /// Construct a path to the default LLVM configuration directory. The 135 /// implementation must ensure that this is a well-known (same on many 136 /// systems) directory in which llvm configuration files exist. For 137 /// example, on Unix, the /etc/llvm directory has been selected. 138 /// @brief Construct a path to the default LLVM configuration directory 139 static Path GetLLVMDefaultConfigDir(); 140 141 /// Construct a path to the LLVM installed configuration directory. The 142 /// implementation must ensure that this refers to the "etc" directory of 143 /// the LLVM installation. This is the location where configuration files 144 /// will be located for a particular installation of LLVM on a machine. 145 /// @brief Construct a path to the LLVM installed configuration directory 146 static Path GetLLVMConfigDir(); 147 148 /// Construct a path to the current user's home directory. The 149 /// implementation must use an operating system specific mechanism for 150 /// determining the user's home directory. For example, the environment 151 /// variable "HOME" could be used on Unix. If a given operating system 152 /// does not have the concept of a user's home directory, this static 153 /// constructor must provide the same result as GetRootDirectory. 154 /// @brief Construct a path to the current user's "home" directory 155 static Path GetUserHomeDirectory(); 156 157 /// Construct a path to the current directory for the current process. 158 /// @returns The current working directory. 159 /// @brief Returns the current working directory. 160 static Path GetCurrentDirectory(); 161 162 /// Return the suffix commonly used on file names that contain an 163 /// executable. 164 /// @returns The executable file suffix for the current platform. 165 /// @brief Return the executable file suffix. 166 static StringRef GetEXESuffix(); 167 168 /// Return the suffix commonly used on file names that contain a shared 169 /// object, shared archive, or dynamic link library. Such files are 170 /// linked at runtime into a process and their code images are shared 171 /// between processes. 172 /// @returns The dynamic link library suffix for the current platform. 173 /// @brief Return the dynamic link library suffix. 174 static StringRef GetDLLSuffix(); 175 176 /// GetMainExecutable - Return the path to the main executable, given the 177 /// value of argv[0] from program startup and the address of main itself. 178 /// In extremis, this function may fail and return an empty path. 179 static Path GetMainExecutable(const char *argv0, void *MainAddr); 180 181 /// This is one of the very few ways in which a path can be constructed 182 /// with a syntactically invalid name. The only *legal* invalid name is an 183 /// empty one. Other invalid names are not permitted. Empty paths are 184 /// provided so that they can be used to indicate null or error results in 185 /// other lib/System functionality. 186 /// @brief Construct an empty (and invalid) path. 187 Path() : path() {} 188 Path(const Path &that) : path(that.path) {} 189 190 /// This constructor will accept a char* or std::string as a path. No 191 /// checking is done on this path to determine if it is valid. To 192 /// determine validity of the path, use the isValid method. 193 /// @param p The path to assign. 194 /// @brief Construct a Path from a string. 195 explicit Path(StringRef p); 196 197 /// This constructor will accept a character range as a path. No checking 198 /// is done on this path to determine if it is valid. To determine 199 /// validity of the path, use the isValid method. 200 /// @param StrStart A pointer to the first character of the path name 201 /// @param StrLen The length of the path name at StrStart 202 /// @brief Construct a Path from a string. 203 Path(const char *StrStart, unsigned StrLen); 204 205 /// @} 206 /// @name Operators 207 /// @{ 208 public: 209 /// Makes a copy of \p that to \p this. 210 /// @returns \p this 211 /// @brief Assignment Operator 212 Path &operator=(const Path &that) { 213 path = that.path; 214 return *this; 215 } 216 217 /// Makes a copy of \p that to \p this. 218 /// @param that A StringRef denoting the path 219 /// @returns \p this 220 /// @brief Assignment Operator 221 Path &operator=(StringRef that); 222 223 /// Compares \p this Path with \p that Path for equality. 224 /// @returns true if \p this and \p that refer to the same thing. 225 /// @brief Equality Operator 226 bool operator==(const Path &that) const; 227 228 /// Compares \p this Path with \p that Path for inequality. 229 /// @returns true if \p this and \p that refer to different things. 230 /// @brief Inequality Operator 231 bool operator!=(const Path &that) const { return !(*this == that); } 232 233 /// Determines if \p this Path is less than \p that Path. This is required 234 /// so that Path objects can be placed into ordered collections (e.g. 235 /// std::map). The comparison is done lexicographically as defined by 236 /// the std::string::compare method. 237 /// @returns true if \p this path is lexicographically less than \p that. 238 /// @brief Less Than Operator 239 bool operator<(const Path& that) const; 240 241 /// @} 242 /// @name Path Accessors 243 /// @{ 244 public: 245 /// This function will use an operating system specific algorithm to 246 /// determine if the current value of \p this is a syntactically valid 247 /// path name for the operating system. The path name does not need to 248 /// exist, validity is simply syntactical. Empty paths are always invalid. 249 /// @returns true iff the path name is syntactically legal for the 250 /// host operating system. 251 /// @brief Determine if a path is syntactically valid or not. 252 bool isValid() const; 253 254 /// This function determines if the contents of the path name are empty. 255 /// That is, the path name has a zero length. This does NOT determine if 256 /// if the file is empty. To get the length of the file itself, Use the 257 /// PathWithStatus::getFileStatus() method and then the getSize() method 258 /// on the returned FileStatus object. 259 /// @returns true iff the path is empty. 260 /// @brief Determines if the path name is empty (invalid). 261 bool isEmpty() const { return path.empty(); } 262 263 /// This function returns the last component of the path name. The last 264 /// component is the file or directory name occurring after the last 265 /// directory separator. If no directory separator is present, the entire 266 /// path name is returned (i.e. same as toString). 267 /// @returns StringRef containing the last component of the path name. 268 /// @brief Returns the last component of the path name. 269 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED( 270 StringRef getLast() const, 271 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(path::filename)); 272 273 /// This function strips off the path and suffix of the file or directory 274 /// name and returns just the basename. For example /a/foo.bar would cause 275 /// this function to return "foo". 276 /// @returns StringRef containing the basename of the path 277 /// @brief Get the base name of the path 278 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED(StringRef getBasename() const, 279 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(path::stem)); 280 281 /// This function strips off the suffix of the path beginning with the 282 /// path separator ('/' on Unix, '\' on Windows) and returns the result. 283 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED(StringRef getDirname() const, 284 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(path::parent_path)); 285 286 /// This function strips off the path and basename(up to and 287 /// including the last dot) of the file or directory name and 288 /// returns just the suffix. For example /a/foo.bar would cause 289 /// this function to return "bar". 290 /// @returns StringRef containing the suffix of the path 291 /// @brief Get the suffix of the path 292 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED(StringRef getSuffix() const, 293 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(path::extension)); 294 295 /// Obtain a 'C' string for the path name. 296 /// @returns a 'C' string containing the path name. 297 /// @brief Returns the path as a C string. 298 const char *c_str() const { return path.c_str(); } 299 const std::string &str() const { return path; } 300 301 302 /// size - Return the length in bytes of this path name. 303 size_t size() const { return path.size(); } 304 305 /// empty - Returns true if the path is empty. 306 unsigned empty() const { return path.empty(); } 307 308 /// @} 309 /// @name Disk Accessors 310 /// @{ 311 public: 312 /// This function determines if the path name is absolute, as opposed to 313 /// relative. 314 /// @brief Determine if the path is absolute. 315 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED( 316 bool isAbsolute() const, 317 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(path::is_absolute)); 318 319 /// This function determines if the path name is absolute, as opposed to 320 /// relative. 321 /// @brief Determine if the path is absolute. 322 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED( 323 static bool isAbsolute(const char *NameStart, unsigned NameLen), 324 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(path::is_absolute)); 325 326 /// This function opens the file associated with the path name provided by 327 /// the Path object and reads its magic number. If the magic number at the 328 /// start of the file matches \p magic, true is returned. In all other 329 /// cases (file not found, file not accessible, etc.) it returns false. 330 /// @returns true if the magic number of the file matches \p magic. 331 /// @brief Determine if file has a specific magic number 332 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED(bool hasMagicNumber(StringRef magic) const, 333 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(fs::has_magic)); 334 335 /// This function retrieves the first \p len bytes of the file associated 336 /// with \p this. These bytes are returned as the "magic number" in the 337 /// \p Magic parameter. 338 /// @returns true if the Path is a file and the magic number is retrieved, 339 /// false otherwise. 340 /// @brief Get the file's magic number. 341 bool getMagicNumber(std::string& Magic, unsigned len) const; 342 343 /// This function determines if the path name in the object references an 344 /// archive file by looking at its magic number. 345 /// @returns true if the file starts with the magic number for an archive 346 /// file. 347 /// @brief Determine if the path references an archive file. 348 bool isArchive() const; 349 350 /// This function determines if the path name in the object references an 351 /// LLVM Bitcode file by looking at its magic number. 352 /// @returns true if the file starts with the magic number for LLVM 353 /// bitcode files. 354 /// @brief Determine if the path references a bitcode file. 355 bool isBitcodeFile() const; 356 357 /// This function determines if the path name in the object references a 358 /// native Dynamic Library (shared library, shared object) by looking at 359 /// the file's magic number. The Path object must reference a file, not a 360 /// directory. 361 /// @returns true if the file starts with the magic number for a native 362 /// shared library. 363 /// @brief Determine if the path references a dynamic library. 364 bool isDynamicLibrary() const; 365 366 /// This function determines if the path name in the object references a 367 /// native object file by looking at it's magic number. The term object 368 /// file is defined as "an organized collection of separate, named 369 /// sequences of binary data." This covers the obvious file formats such 370 /// as COFF and ELF, but it also includes llvm ir bitcode, archives, 371 /// libraries, etc... 372 /// @returns true if the file starts with the magic number for an object 373 /// file. 374 /// @brief Determine if the path references an object file. 375 bool isObjectFile() const; 376 377 /// This function determines if the path name references an existing file 378 /// or directory in the file system. 379 /// @returns true if the pathname references an existing file or 380 /// directory. 381 /// @brief Determines if the path is a file or directory in 382 /// the file system. 383 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED(bool exists() const, 384 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(fs::exists)); 385 386 /// This function determines if the path name references an 387 /// existing directory. 388 /// @returns true if the pathname references an existing directory. 389 /// @brief Determines if the path is a directory in the file system. 390 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED(bool isDirectory() const, 391 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(fs::is_directory)); 392 393 /// This function determines if the path name references an 394 /// existing symbolic link. 395 /// @returns true if the pathname references an existing symlink. 396 /// @brief Determines if the path is a symlink in the file system. 397 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED(bool isSymLink() const, 398 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(fs::is_symlink)); 399 400 /// This function determines if the path name references a readable file 401 /// or directory in the file system. This function checks for 402 /// the existence and readability (by the current program) of the file 403 /// or directory. 404 /// @returns true if the pathname references a readable file. 405 /// @brief Determines if the path is a readable file or directory 406 /// in the file system. 407 bool canRead() const; 408 409 /// This function determines if the path name references a writable file 410 /// or directory in the file system. This function checks for the 411 /// existence and writability (by the current program) of the file or 412 /// directory. 413 /// @returns true if the pathname references a writable file. 414 /// @brief Determines if the path is a writable file or directory 415 /// in the file system. 416 bool canWrite() const; 417 418 /// This function checks that what we're trying to work only on a regular 419 /// file. Check for things like /dev/null, any block special file, or 420 /// other things that aren't "regular" regular files. 421 /// @returns true if the file is S_ISREG. 422 /// @brief Determines if the file is a regular file 423 bool isRegularFile() const; 424 425 /// This function determines if the path name references an executable 426 /// file in the file system. This function checks for the existence and 427 /// executability (by the current program) of the file. 428 /// @returns true if the pathname references an executable file. 429 /// @brief Determines if the path is an executable file in the file 430 /// system. 431 bool canExecute() const; 432 433 /// This function builds a list of paths that are the names of the 434 /// files and directories in a directory. 435 /// @returns true if an error occurs, true otherwise 436 /// @brief Build a list of directory's contents. 437 bool getDirectoryContents( 438 std::set<Path> &paths, ///< The resulting list of file & directory names 439 std::string* ErrMsg ///< Optional place to return an error message. 440 ) const; 441 442 /// @} 443 /// @name Path Mutators 444 /// @{ 445 public: 446 /// The path name is cleared and becomes empty. This is an invalid 447 /// path name but is the *only* invalid path name. This is provided 448 /// so that path objects can be used to indicate the lack of a 449 /// valid path being found. 450 /// @brief Make the path empty. 451 void clear() { path.clear(); } 452 453 /// This method sets the Path object to \p unverified_path. This can fail 454 /// if the \p unverified_path does not pass the syntactic checks of the 455 /// isValid() method. If verification fails, the Path object remains 456 /// unchanged and false is returned. Otherwise true is returned and the 457 /// Path object takes on the path value of \p unverified_path 458 /// @returns true if the path was set, false otherwise. 459 /// @param unverified_path The path to be set in Path object. 460 /// @brief Set a full path from a StringRef 461 bool set(StringRef unverified_path); 462 463 /// One path component is removed from the Path. If only one component is 464 /// present in the path, the Path object becomes empty. If the Path object 465 /// is empty, no change is made. 466 /// @returns false if the path component could not be removed. 467 /// @brief Removes the last directory component of the Path. 468 bool eraseComponent(); 469 470 /// The \p component is added to the end of the Path if it is a legal 471 /// name for the operating system. A directory separator will be added if 472 /// needed. 473 /// @returns false if the path component could not be added. 474 /// @brief Appends one path component to the Path. 475 bool appendComponent(StringRef component); 476 477 /// A period and the \p suffix are appended to the end of the pathname. 478 /// When the \p suffix is empty, no action is performed. 479 /// @brief Adds a period and the \p suffix to the end of the pathname. 480 void appendSuffix(StringRef suffix); 481 482 /// The suffix of the filename is erased. The suffix begins with and 483 /// includes the last . character in the filename after the last directory 484 /// separator and extends until the end of the name. If no . character is 485 /// after the last directory separator, then the file name is left 486 /// unchanged (i.e. it was already without a suffix) but the function 487 /// returns false. 488 /// @returns false if there was no suffix to remove, true otherwise. 489 /// @brief Remove the suffix from a path name. 490 bool eraseSuffix(); 491 492 /// The current Path name is made unique in the file system. Upon return, 493 /// the Path will have been changed to make a unique file in the file 494 /// system or it will not have been changed if the current path name is 495 /// already unique. 496 /// @throws std::string if an unrecoverable error occurs. 497 /// @brief Make the current path name unique in the file system. 498 bool makeUnique( bool reuse_current /*= true*/, std::string* ErrMsg ); 499 500 /// The current Path name is made absolute by prepending the 501 /// current working directory if necessary. 502 LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED( 503 void makeAbsolute(), 504 LLVM_PATH_DEPRECATED_MSG(fs::make_absolute)); 505 506 /// @} 507 /// @name Disk Mutators 508 /// @{ 509 public: 510 /// This method attempts to make the file referenced by the Path object 511 /// available for reading so that the canRead() method will return true. 512 /// @brief Make the file readable; 513 bool makeReadableOnDisk(std::string* ErrMsg = 0); 514 515 /// This method attempts to make the file referenced by the Path object 516 /// available for writing so that the canWrite() method will return true. 517 /// @brief Make the file writable; 518 bool makeWriteableOnDisk(std::string* ErrMsg = 0); 519 520 /// This method attempts to make the file referenced by the Path object 521 /// available for execution so that the canExecute() method will return 522 /// true. 523 /// @brief Make the file readable; 524 bool makeExecutableOnDisk(std::string* ErrMsg = 0); 525 526 /// This method allows the last modified time stamp and permission bits 527 /// to be set on the disk object referenced by the Path. 528 /// @throws std::string if an error occurs. 529 /// @returns true on error. 530 /// @brief Set the status information. 531 bool setStatusInfoOnDisk(const FileStatus &SI, 532 std::string *ErrStr = 0) const; 533 534 /// This method attempts to create a directory in the file system with the 535 /// same name as the Path object. The \p create_parents parameter controls 536 /// whether intermediate directories are created or not. if \p 537 /// create_parents is true, then an attempt will be made to create all 538 /// intermediate directories, as needed. If \p create_parents is false, 539 /// then only the final directory component of the Path name will be 540 /// created. The created directory will have no entries. 541 /// @returns true if the directory could not be created, false otherwise 542 /// @brief Create the directory this Path refers to. 543 bool createDirectoryOnDisk( 544 bool create_parents = false, ///< Determines whether non-existent 545 ///< directory components other than the last one (the "parents") 546 ///< are created or not. 547 std::string* ErrMsg = 0 ///< Optional place to put error messages. 548 ); 549 550 /// This method attempts to create a file in the file system with the same 551 /// name as the Path object. The intermediate directories must all exist 552 /// at the time this method is called. Use createDirectoriesOnDisk to 553 /// accomplish that. The created file will be empty upon return from this 554 /// function. 555 /// @returns true if the file could not be created, false otherwise. 556 /// @brief Create the file this Path refers to. 557 bool createFileOnDisk( 558 std::string* ErrMsg = 0 ///< Optional place to put error messages. 559 ); 560 561 /// This is like createFile except that it creates a temporary file. A 562 /// unique temporary file name is generated based on the contents of 563 /// \p this before the call. The new name is assigned to \p this and the 564 /// file is created. Note that this will both change the Path object 565 /// *and* create the corresponding file. This function will ensure that 566 /// the newly generated temporary file name is unique in the file system. 567 /// @returns true if the file couldn't be created, false otherwise. 568 /// @brief Create a unique temporary file 569 bool createTemporaryFileOnDisk( 570 bool reuse_current = false, ///< When set to true, this parameter 571 ///< indicates that if the current file name does not exist then 572 ///< it will be used without modification. 573 std::string* ErrMsg = 0 ///< Optional place to put error messages 574 ); 575 576 /// This method renames the file referenced by \p this as \p newName. The 577 /// file referenced by \p this must exist. The file referenced by 578 /// \p newName does not need to exist. 579 /// @returns true on error, false otherwise 580 /// @brief Rename one file as another. 581 bool renamePathOnDisk(const Path& newName, std::string* ErrMsg); 582 583 /// This method attempts to destroy the file or directory named by the 584 /// last component of the Path. If the Path refers to a directory and the 585 /// \p destroy_contents is false, an attempt will be made to remove just 586 /// the directory (the final Path component). If \p destroy_contents is 587 /// true, an attempt will be made to remove the entire contents of the 588 /// directory, recursively. If the Path refers to a file, the 589 /// \p destroy_contents parameter is ignored. 590 /// @param destroy_contents Indicates whether the contents of a destroyed 591 /// @param Err An optional string to receive an error message. 592 /// directory should also be destroyed (recursively). 593 /// @returns false if the file/directory was destroyed, true on error. 594 /// @brief Removes the file or directory from the filesystem. 595 bool eraseFromDisk(bool destroy_contents = false, 596 std::string *Err = 0) const; 597 598 599 /// MapInFilePages - This is a low level system API to map in the file 600 /// that is currently opened as FD into the current processes' address 601 /// space for read only access. This function may return null on failure 602 /// or if the system cannot provide the following constraints: 603 /// 1) The pages must be valid after the FD is closed, until 604 /// UnMapFilePages is called. 605 /// 2) Any padding after the end of the file must be zero filled, if 606 /// present. 607 /// 3) The pages must be contiguous. 608 /// 609 /// This API is not intended for general use, clients should use 610 /// MemoryBuffer::getFile instead. 611 static const char *MapInFilePages(int FD, size_t FileSize, 612 off_t Offset); 613 614 /// UnMapFilePages - Free pages mapped into the current process by 615 /// MapInFilePages. 616 /// 617 /// This API is not intended for general use, clients should use 618 /// MemoryBuffer::getFile instead. 619 static void UnMapFilePages(const char *Base, size_t FileSize); 620 621 /// @} 622 /// @name Data 623 /// @{ 624 protected: 625 // Our win32 implementation relies on this string being mutable. 626 mutable std::string path; ///< Storage for the path name. 627 628 629 /// @} 630 }; 631 632 /// This class is identical to Path class except it allows you to obtain the 633 /// file status of the Path as well. The reason for the distinction is one of 634 /// efficiency. First, the file status requires additional space and the space 635 /// is incorporated directly into PathWithStatus without an additional malloc. 636 /// Second, obtaining status information is an expensive operation on most 637 /// operating systems so we want to be careful and explicit about where we 638 /// allow this operation in LLVM. 639 /// @brief Path with file status class. 640 class PathWithStatus : public Path { 641 /// @name Constructors 642 /// @{ 643 public: 644 /// @brief Default constructor 645 PathWithStatus() : Path(), status(), fsIsValid(false) {} 646 647 /// @brief Copy constructor 648 PathWithStatus(const PathWithStatus &that) 649 : Path(static_cast<const Path&>(that)), status(that.status), 650 fsIsValid(that.fsIsValid) {} 651 652 /// This constructor allows construction from a Path object 653 /// @brief Path constructor 654 PathWithStatus(const Path &other) 655 : Path(other), status(), fsIsValid(false) {} 656 657 /// This constructor will accept a char* or std::string as a path. No 658 /// checking is done on this path to determine if it is valid. To 659 /// determine validity of the path, use the isValid method. 660 /// @brief Construct a Path from a string. 661 explicit PathWithStatus( 662 StringRef p ///< The path to assign. 663 ) : Path(p), status(), fsIsValid(false) {} 664 665 /// This constructor will accept a character range as a path. No checking 666 /// is done on this path to determine if it is valid. To determine 667 /// validity of the path, use the isValid method. 668 /// @brief Construct a Path from a string. 669 explicit PathWithStatus( 670 const char *StrStart, ///< Pointer to the first character of the path 671 unsigned StrLen ///< Length of the path. 672 ) : Path(StrStart, StrLen), status(), fsIsValid(false) {} 673 674 /// Makes a copy of \p that to \p this. 675 /// @returns \p this 676 /// @brief Assignment Operator 677 PathWithStatus &operator=(const PathWithStatus &that) { 678 static_cast<Path&>(*this) = static_cast<const Path&>(that); 679 status = that.status; 680 fsIsValid = that.fsIsValid; 681 return *this; 682 } 683 684 /// Makes a copy of \p that to \p this. 685 /// @returns \p this 686 /// @brief Assignment Operator 687 PathWithStatus &operator=(const Path &that) { 688 static_cast<Path&>(*this) = static_cast<const Path&>(that); 689 fsIsValid = false; 690 return *this; 691 } 692 693 /// @} 694 /// @name Methods 695 /// @{ 696 public: 697 /// This function returns status information about the file. The type of 698 /// path (file or directory) is updated to reflect the actual contents 699 /// of the file system. 700 /// @returns 0 on failure, with Error explaining why (if non-zero) 701 /// @returns a pointer to a FileStatus structure on success. 702 /// @brief Get file status. 703 const FileStatus *getFileStatus( 704 bool forceUpdate = false, ///< Force an update from the file system 705 std::string *Error = 0 ///< Optional place to return an error msg. 706 ) const; 707 708 /// @} 709 /// @name Data 710 /// @{ 711 private: 712 mutable FileStatus status; ///< Status information. 713 mutable bool fsIsValid; ///< Whether we've obtained it or not 714 715 /// @} 716 }; 717 718 /// This enumeration delineates the kinds of files that LLVM knows about. 719 enum LLVMFileType { 720 Unknown_FileType = 0, ///< Unrecognized file 721 Bitcode_FileType, ///< Bitcode file 722 Archive_FileType, ///< ar style archive file 723 ELF_Relocatable_FileType, ///< ELF Relocatable object file 724 ELF_Executable_FileType, ///< ELF Executable image 725 ELF_SharedObject_FileType, ///< ELF dynamically linked shared lib 726 ELF_Core_FileType, ///< ELF core image 727 Mach_O_Object_FileType, ///< Mach-O Object file 728 Mach_O_Executable_FileType, ///< Mach-O Executable 729 Mach_O_FixedVirtualMemorySharedLib_FileType, ///< Mach-O Shared Lib, FVM 730 Mach_O_Core_FileType, ///< Mach-O Core File 731 Mach_O_PreloadExecutable_FileType, ///< Mach-O Preloaded Executable 732 Mach_O_DynamicallyLinkedSharedLib_FileType, ///< Mach-O dynlinked shared lib 733 Mach_O_DynamicLinker_FileType, ///< The Mach-O dynamic linker 734 Mach_O_Bundle_FileType, ///< Mach-O Bundle file 735 Mach_O_DynamicallyLinkedSharedLibStub_FileType, ///< Mach-O Shared lib stub 736 Mach_O_DSYMCompanion_FileType, ///< Mach-O dSYM companion file 737 COFF_FileType ///< COFF object file or lib 738 }; 739 740 /// This utility function allows any memory block to be examined in order 741 /// to determine its file type. 742 LLVMFileType IdentifyFileType(const char*magic, unsigned length); 743 744 /// This function can be used to copy the file specified by Src to the 745 /// file specified by Dest. If an error occurs, Dest is removed. 746 /// @returns true if an error occurs, false otherwise 747 /// @brief Copy one file to another. 748 bool CopyFile(const Path& Dest, const Path& Src, std::string* ErrMsg); 749 750 /// This is the OS-specific path separator: a colon on Unix or a semicolon 751 /// on Windows. 752 extern const char PathSeparator; 753 } 754 755 } 756 757 #endif 758