paths-as-strings

Crates.iopaths-as-strings
lib.rspaths-as-strings
version0.1.1
sourcesrc
created_at2019-02-14 21:39:13.559469
updated_at2019-02-14 21:49:07.232596
descriptionpaths_as_strings is a small crate with two public free-functions for unambiguously and universally encoding Paths as UTF-8 strings, and then decoding them back into Paths.
homepagehttps://github.com/PhilipDaniels/paths_as_strings
repositoryhttps://github.com/PhilipDaniels/paths_as_strings
max_upload_size
id114827
size22,826
Philip Daniels (PhilipDaniels)

documentation

https://github.com/PhilipDaniels/paths_as_strings

README

paths_as_strings

A Rust crate to unambiguously and universally encode Paths as UTF-8 strings.

Rust paths are not always convertible to UTF-8 strings because they are OS-compatible, and neither Unix or Windows uses UTF-8 to represent paths. This presents a problem if you want to convert a path to a string form, for example to store it in an MRU.txt file. I wrote this crate to get around this problem.

This crate exports two functions, encode_path which converts a path to UTF-8 and its inverse, decode_path, which can be used to do reverse the encoding.

Usage:

use std::borrow::Cow;
use std::path::PathBuf;

fn main() {
    let the_path = PathBuf::from("some/path");

    let encoded: Cow<str> = paths_as_strings::encode_path(&the_path);
    println!("encoded = {:?}", encoded);

    let decoded: PathBuf = paths_as_strings::decode_path(&encoded).unwrap();
    println!("decoded = {:?}", decoded);
}

In the (very, very) common case of a path that actually is a UTF-8 string this is equivalent to calling Path.to_str() to encode and PathBuf::from() to decode. In other words, it's no more expensive than calling the two methods you would normally use.

In the (very, very) rare case of a path that is not valid UTF-8 - or that contains a control character such as \n - then the path will be encoded as base64 and prepended with a special prefix that signifies that the path is encoded.

The decoding can fail if the encoded string is tampered with, so decode_path returns a Result<PathBuf, base64::DecodeError>.

The clever bit

The clever bit it how decode_path is able to recognise a path that has been base64-encoded vs. one that hasn't. For example, the string 'b478dn3hgi' may represent an encoded filename or it may be an actual valid filename. Some way therefore has to be found to represent encoded paths in a namespace distinct from non-encoded paths. This is done by having encode_path - only when encoding is needed - return a string that cannot be a valid filename.

On Windows, there are many characters that cannot be used in filenames, furthermore when using the drive-letter syntax such as "A:", the first character can only be A-Z. The scheme this crate uses is to prefix base64-encoded paths with "::\_".

On Linux, it's harder because any character other than '/' and '\0' is valid in any place in a filename, which means that all the characters that base64 encoding uses are also valid in real filenames. However, POSIX specifies that /dev/null is a filename, hence not a directory, so you can never have files such as /dev/null/xyz. The scheme this crate uses is to prefix base64-encoded paths with "/dev/null/b64_".

Running the utilities

paths_as_strings comes with two utility programs.

The first is called make_awkward_dir and can be run with the command cargo run --example make_awkward_dir. It will create a directory called 'awkward' which contains all possible 1-byte filenames (Unix) or 2-byte filenames (Windows). It's useful for testing that the encoding/decoding is working correctly.

The second program scans a directory looking for files that cannot be expressed as UTF-8 and hence need to be encoded. You can run it using the command cargo run --example path_analyzer. It takes one argument, a directory to start the scan in, which defaults to the current working directory. It will print out any filenames that need encoding and totals at the end. For example:

Counting paths below /home/phil/repos/paths_as_strings according to encoding needs.

Counting complete. Totals follow:
num_not_encoded = 451, num_encoded = 0

This means that of 451 paths found below that directory, 451 of them could be expressed as UTF-8 strings directly, and none of them needed encoding.

When run against the entire filesystem on my Linux Mint 19 system, it prints

num_not_encoded = 8668563, num_encoded = 3

3 out of 8,668,566 paths needed encoding (and were successfully round-tripped).
This represents 0.000034607800182867614% of the total path count.

I told you it was rare. The 3 bad filenames were all for files downloaded from the Internet, they are not part of the standard OS file payload.

Commit count: 8

cargo fmt