1
0
mirror of https://blitiri.com.ar/repos/chasquid synced 2025-12-21 15:17:01 +00:00

Add a new internal/safeio package for safer I/O functions

This patch adds a new internal/safeio package, which is meant to implement
safer version of some I/O related functions.

For now, only an atomic version of ioutil.WriteFile is implemented. More may
be added later if there's a need for them.
This commit is contained in:
Alberto Bertogli
2016-07-11 20:47:15 +01:00
parent 7e7c8073c4
commit c12fa0eed7
2 changed files with 129 additions and 0 deletions

43
internal/safeio/safeio.go Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,43 @@
// Package safeio implements convenient I/O routines that provide additional
// levels of safety in the presence of unexpected failures.
package safeio
import (
"io/ioutil"
"os"
"path"
)
// WriteFile writes data to a file named by filename, atomically.
// It's a wrapper to ioutil.WriteFile, but provides atomicity (and increased
// safety) by writing to a temporary file and renaming it at the end.
//
// Note this relies on same-directory Rename being atomic, which holds in most
// reasonably modern filesystems.
func WriteFile(filename string, data []byte, perm os.FileMode) error {
// Note we create the temporary file in the same directory, otherwise we
// would have no expectation of Rename being atomic.
tmpf, err := ioutil.TempFile(path.Dir(filename), path.Base(filename))
if err != nil {
return err
}
if err = os.Chmod(tmpf.Name(), perm); err != nil {
tmpf.Close()
os.Remove(tmpf.Name())
return err
}
if _, err = tmpf.Write(data); err != nil {
tmpf.Close()
os.Remove(tmpf.Name())
return err
}
if err = tmpf.Close(); err != nil {
os.Remove(tmpf.Name())
return err
}
return os.Rename(tmpf.Name(), filename)
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,86 @@
package safeio
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
"os"
"testing"
)
func mustTempDir(t *testing.T) string {
dir, err := ioutil.TempDir("", "safeio_test")
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
err = os.Chdir(dir)
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
t.Logf("test directory: %q", dir)
return dir
}
func testWriteFile(fname string, data []byte, perm os.FileMode) error {
err := WriteFile("file1", data, perm)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("error writing new file: %v", err)
}
// Read and compare the contents.
c, err := ioutil.ReadFile(fname)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("error reading: %v", err)
}
if !bytes.Equal(data, c) {
return fmt.Errorf("expected %q, got %q", data, c)
}
// Check permissions.
st, err := os.Stat("file1")
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("error in stat: %v", err)
}
if st.Mode() != perm {
return fmt.Errorf("permissions mismatch, expected %#o, got %#o",
st.Mode(), perm)
}
return nil
}
func TestWriteFile(t *testing.T) {
dir := mustTempDir(t)
// Write a new file.
content := []byte("content 1")
if err := testWriteFile("file1", content, 0660); err != nil {
t.Error(err)
}
// Write an existing file.
content = []byte("content 2")
if err := testWriteFile("file1", content, 0660); err != nil {
t.Error(err)
}
// Write again, but this time change permissions.
content = []byte("content 3")
if err := testWriteFile("file1", content, 0600); err != nil {
t.Error(err)
}
// Remove the test directory, but only if we have not failed. We want to
// keep the failed structure for debugging.
if !t.Failed() {
os.RemoveAll(dir)
}
}
// TODO: We should test the possible failure scenarios for WriteFile, but it
// gets tricky without being able to do failure injection (or turning the code
// into a mess).