1 // Copyright 2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
2 // file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
3 // http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
5 // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
6 // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
7 // <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
8 // option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
9 // except according to those terms.
11 #![allow(missing_docs, bad_style)]
15 use ffi::{OsStr, OsString};
16 use io::{self, ErrorKind};
18 use os::windows::ffi::{OsStrExt, OsStringExt};
22 #[macro_use] pub mod compat;
39 pub mod stack_overflow;
47 ::alloc::oom::set_oom_handler(oom_handler);
49 // See comment in sys/unix/mod.rs
50 fn oom_handler() -> ! {
53 let msg = "fatal runtime error: out of memory\n";
55 // WriteFile silently fails if it is passed an invalid handle, so
56 // there is no need to check the result of GetStdHandle.
57 c::WriteFile(c::GetStdHandle(c::STD_ERROR_HANDLE),
58 msg.as_ptr() as c::LPVOID,
59 msg.len() as c::DWORD,
67 pub fn decode_error_kind(errno: i32) -> ErrorKind {
68 match errno as c::DWORD {
69 c::ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED => return ErrorKind::PermissionDenied,
70 c::ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS => return ErrorKind::AlreadyExists,
71 c::ERROR_FILE_EXISTS => return ErrorKind::AlreadyExists,
72 c::ERROR_BROKEN_PIPE => return ErrorKind::BrokenPipe,
73 c::ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND => return ErrorKind::NotFound,
74 c::ERROR_PATH_NOT_FOUND => return ErrorKind::NotFound,
75 c::ERROR_NO_DATA => return ErrorKind::BrokenPipe,
76 c::ERROR_OPERATION_ABORTED => return ErrorKind::TimedOut,
81 c::WSAEACCES => ErrorKind::PermissionDenied,
82 c::WSAEADDRINUSE => ErrorKind::AddrInUse,
83 c::WSAEADDRNOTAVAIL => ErrorKind::AddrNotAvailable,
84 c::WSAECONNABORTED => ErrorKind::ConnectionAborted,
85 c::WSAECONNREFUSED => ErrorKind::ConnectionRefused,
86 c::WSAECONNRESET => ErrorKind::ConnectionReset,
87 c::WSAEINVAL => ErrorKind::InvalidInput,
88 c::WSAENOTCONN => ErrorKind::NotConnected,
89 c::WSAEWOULDBLOCK => ErrorKind::WouldBlock,
90 c::WSAETIMEDOUT => ErrorKind::TimedOut,
92 _ => ErrorKind::Other,
96 pub fn to_u16s<S: AsRef<OsStr>>(s: S) -> io::Result<Vec<u16>> {
97 fn inner(s: &OsStr) -> io::Result<Vec<u16>> {
98 let mut maybe_result: Vec<u16> = s.encode_wide().collect();
99 if maybe_result.iter().any(|&u| u == 0) {
100 return Err(io::Error::new(io::ErrorKind::InvalidInput,
101 "strings passed to WinAPI cannot contain NULs"));
103 maybe_result.push(0);
109 // Many Windows APIs follow a pattern of where we hand a buffer and then they
110 // will report back to us how large the buffer should be or how many bytes
111 // currently reside in the buffer. This function is an abstraction over these
112 // functions by making them easier to call.
114 // The first callback, `f1`, is yielded a (pointer, len) pair which can be
115 // passed to a syscall. The `ptr` is valid for `len` items (u16 in this case).
116 // The closure is expected to return what the syscall returns which will be
117 // interpreted by this function to determine if the syscall needs to be invoked
118 // again (with more buffer space).
120 // Once the syscall has completed (errors bail out early) the second closure is
121 // yielded the data which has been read from the syscall. The return value
122 // from this closure is then the return value of the function.
123 fn fill_utf16_buf<F1, F2, T>(mut f1: F1, f2: F2) -> io::Result<T>
124 where F1: FnMut(*mut u16, c::DWORD) -> c::DWORD,
125 F2: FnOnce(&[u16]) -> T
127 // Start off with a stack buf but then spill over to the heap if we end up
128 // needing more space.
129 let mut stack_buf = [0u16; 512];
130 let mut heap_buf = Vec::new();
132 let mut n = stack_buf.len();
134 let buf = if n <= stack_buf.len() {
137 let extra = n - heap_buf.len();
138 heap_buf.reserve(extra);
143 // This function is typically called on windows API functions which
144 // will return the correct length of the string, but these functions
145 // also return the `0` on error. In some cases, however, the
146 // returned "correct length" may actually be 0!
148 // To handle this case we call `SetLastError` to reset it to 0 and
149 // then check it again if we get the "0 error value". If the "last
150 // error" is still 0 then we interpret it as a 0 length buffer and
151 // not an actual error.
153 let k = match f1(buf.as_mut_ptr(), n as c::DWORD) {
154 0 if c::GetLastError() == 0 => 0,
155 0 => return Err(io::Error::last_os_error()),
158 if k == n && c::GetLastError() == c::ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER {
163 return Ok(f2(&buf[..k]))
169 fn os2path(s: &[u16]) -> PathBuf {
170 PathBuf::from(OsString::from_wide(s))
173 pub fn truncate_utf16_at_nul<'a>(v: &'a [u16]) -> &'a [u16] {
174 match v.iter().position(|c| *c == 0) {
175 // don't include the 0
181 fn cvt<I: PartialEq + Zero>(i: I) -> io::Result<I> {
183 Err(io::Error::last_os_error())
189 fn dur2timeout(dur: Duration) -> c::DWORD {
190 // Note that a duration is a (u64, u32) (seconds, nanoseconds) pair, and the
191 // timeouts in windows APIs are typically u32 milliseconds. To translate, we
192 // have two pieces to take care of:
194 // * Nanosecond precision is rounded up
195 // * Greater than u32::MAX milliseconds (50 days) is rounded up to INFINITE
197 dur.as_secs().checked_mul(1000).and_then(|ms| {
198 ms.checked_add((dur.subsec_nanos() as u64) / 1_000_000)
200 ms.checked_add(if dur.subsec_nanos() % 1_000_000 > 0 {1} else {0})
202 if ms > <c::DWORD>::max_value() as u64 {
207 }).unwrap_or(c::INFINITE)