Crates.io | partial-io |
lib.rs | partial-io |
version | 0.5.4 |
source | src |
created_at | 2017-05-26 02:38:57.069571 |
updated_at | 2022-09-28 01:54:17.986279 |
description | Helpers to test partial, interrupted and would-block I/O operations, with support for property-based testing through proptest and quickcheck. |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/sunshowers-code/partial-io |
max_upload_size | |
id | 16001 |
size | 98,759 |
Helpers for testing I/O behavior with partial, interrupted and blocking reads and writes.
This library provides:
PartialRead
and PartialWrite
, which wrap existing Read
and
Write
implementations and allow specifying arbitrary behavior on the
next read
, write
or flush
call.futures03
and tokio1
features, PartialAsyncRead
and
PartialAsyncWrite
to wrap existing AsyncRead
and AsyncWrite
implementations. These implementations are task-aware, so they will know
how to pause and unpause tasks if they return a WouldBlock
error.proptest1
(proptest) and quickcheck1
(quickcheck) features,
generation of random sequences of operations for property-based testing. See the
proptest_types
and quickcheck_types
documentation for more.A Read
or Write
wrapper is conceptually simple but can be difficult to
get right, especially if the wrapper has an internal buffer. Common
issues include:
With the AsyncRead
and AsyncWrite
provided by futures03
and tokio1
:
read_to_end
or write_all
within the wrapper might be partly
successful but then error out. These functions will return the error
without informing the caller of how much was read or written. Wrappers
with an internal buffer will want to advance their state corresponding
to the partial success, so they can't use read_to_end
or write_all
(example fix).Poll::Pending
up, but that shouldn't leave
them in an invalid state.These situations can be hard to think about and hard to test.
partial-io
can help in two ways:
partial-io
can help
you write a test.quickcheck1
feature enabled, partial-io
can also help shake
out bugs in your wrapper. See quickcheck_types
for more.use std::io::{self, Cursor, Read};
use partial_io::{PartialOp, PartialRead};
let data = b"Hello, world!".to_vec();
let cursor = Cursor::new(data); // Cursor<Vec<u8>> implements io::Read
let ops = vec![PartialOp::Limited(7), PartialOp::Err(io::ErrorKind::Interrupted)];
let mut partial_read = PartialRead::new(cursor, ops);
let mut out = vec![0; 256];
// The first read will read 7 bytes.
assert_eq!(partial_read.read(&mut out).unwrap(), 7);
assert_eq!(&out[..7], b"Hello, ");
// The second read will fail with ErrorKind::Interrupted.
assert_eq!(partial_read.read(&mut out[7..]).unwrap_err().kind(), io::ErrorKind::Interrupted);
// The iterator has run out of operations, so it no longer truncates reads.
assert_eq!(partial_read.read(&mut out[7..]).unwrap(), 6);
assert_eq!(&out[..13], b"Hello, world!");
For a real-world example, see the tests in zstd-rs
.
The minimum supported Rust version (MSRV) is 1.56.
While a crate is pre-release status (0.x.x) it may have its MSRV bumped in a patch release. Once a crate has reached 1.x, any MSRV bump will be accompanied with a new minor version.
See the CONTRIBUTING file for how to help out.
This project is available under the MIT license.