module Reader: Reader
module Read_result:sig
..end
module Id:Core.Std.Unique_id
type
t
include Invariant.S
val io_stats : Io_stats.t
io_stats
Overall IO statistics for all readersval last_read_time : t -> Core.Std.Time.t
last_read_time t
returns time of the most recent read
system call that
returned data.val stdin : t Core.Std.Lazy.t
stdin
is a reader for file descriptor 0. It is lazy because we don't want
to create it in all programs that happen to link with async.val open_file : ?close_on_exec:bool -> ?buf_len:int -> string -> t Import.Deferred.t
open_file file
opens file
for reading and returns a reader reading from it.val transfer : t -> string Import.Pipe.Writer.t -> unit Import.Deferred.t
transfer t pipe_w
transfers data from t
into pipe_w
one chunk at a time
(whatever is read from the underlying file descriptor without post-processing). The
result becomes determined after reaching EOF on t
and the final bytes have been
transferred.
This function will normally not be needed (see pipe
).
val pipe : t -> string Import.Pipe.Reader.t
pipe t
returns the reader end of a pipe that will continually be filled with chunks
of data from the underlying Reader.t. When the reader reaches EOF or the pipe is
closed, pipe
closes the the reader, and then after the reader close is finished,
closes the pipe.val create : ?buf_len:int -> Fd.t -> t
create ~buf_len fd
creates a new reader that is reading from fd
.val of_in_channel : Pervasives.in_channel -> Fd.Kind.t -> t
val with_file : ?buf_len:int ->
?exclusive:bool ->
string -> f:(t -> 'a Import.Deferred.t) -> 'a Import.Deferred.t
with_file file f
opens files
, creates a reader with it, and passes the reader to
f
. It closes the reader when the result of f
becomes determined, and returns
f
's result.
NOTE, you need to be careful that all your IO is done when the deferred you return
becomes determined. If for example, you use with_file
, and call lines
, make sure
you return a deferred that becomes determined when the EOF is reached on the pipe,
not when you get the pipe (because you get it straight away).
val close : t -> unit Import.Deferred.t
close t
prevents further use of t
and closes t
's underlying file descriptor.
The result of close
becomes determined once the underlying file descriptor has been
closed. It is an error to call other operations on t
after close t
has been
called, except that calls of close
subsequent to the original call to close
will
return the same deferred as the original call.
close_finished t
becomes determined after t
's underlying file descriptor has been
closed, i.e. it is the same as the result of close
. close_finished
differs from
close
in that it does not have the side effect of initiating a close.
is_closed t
returns true
iff close t
has been called.
with_close t ~f
runs f ()
, and closes t
after f
finishes or raises.
val close_finished : t -> unit Import.Deferred.t
val is_closed : t -> bool
val with_close : t -> f:(unit -> 'a Import.Deferred.t) -> 'a Import.Deferred.t
val id : t -> Id.t
id t
val fd : t -> Fd.t
fd t
val read : t ->
?pos:int -> ?len:int -> string -> int Read_result.t Import.Deferred.t
read t ?pos ?len buf
reads up to len
bytes into buf, blocking
until some data is available or end-of-input is reached. The resulting
i
satisfies 0 < i <= len
.type'a
read_one_chunk_at_a_time_until_eof_result =[ `Eof | `Eof_with_unconsumed_data of string | `Stopped of 'a ]
read_one_chunk_at_a_time_until_eof t ~handle_chunk
reads into t
's internal buffer,
and whenever bytes are available, applies handle_chunk
to them. It waits to read
again until the deferred returned by handle_chunk
becomes determined.val read_one_chunk_at_a_time_until_eof : t ->
handle_chunk:(Core.Std.Bigstring.t ->
pos:int ->
len:int ->
[ `Consumed of int * [ `Need of int | `Need_unknown ]
| `Continue
| `Stop of 'a ] Import.Deferred.t) ->
'a read_one_chunk_at_a_time_until_eof_result Import.Deferred.t
val read_substring : t ->
Core.Std.Substring.t -> int Read_result.t Import.Deferred.t
read_substring t ss
reads up to Substring.length ss
bytes into ss
,
blocking until some data is available or Eof is reched. The resulting i
satisfies 0 < i <= Substring.length ss
.val read_bigsubstring : t ->
Core.Std.Bigsubstring.t -> int Read_result.t Import.Deferred.t
val read_char : t -> char Read_result.t Import.Deferred.t
val really_read : t ->
?pos:int -> ?len:int -> string -> [ `Eof of int | `Ok ] Import.Deferred.t
really_read t buf ?pos ?len
reads until it fills len
bytes of buf
starting at pos
or runs out of input. In the former case it returns `Ok.
In the latter, it returns `Eof n
where n
is the number of bytes that
were read before end of input, and 0 <= n < String.length ss
.val really_read_substring : t -> Core.Std.Substring.t -> [ `Eof of int | `Ok ] Import.Deferred.t
val really_read_bigsubstring : t ->
Core.Std.Bigsubstring.t -> [ `Eof of int | `Ok ] Import.Deferred.t
val read_until : t ->
[ `Char of char | `Pred of char -> bool ] ->
keep_delim:bool ->
[ `Eof | `Eof_without_delim of string | `Ok of string ] Import.Deferred.t
read_until t pred ~keep_delim
reads until it hits a delimiter c
such that:
pred = `Char c'
then c = c'
pred = `Pred p
then p c
`Char c'
is equivalent to `Pred (fun c -> c = c')
but the underlying
implementation is more efficient, in particular it will not call a function on every
input character.
read_until
returns a freshly-allocated string consisting of all the characters read
and optionally including the delimiter as per keep_delim
.
val read_until_max : t ->
[ `Char of char | `Pred of char -> bool ] ->
keep_delim:bool ->
max:int ->
[ `Eof
| `Eof_without_delim of string
| `Max_exceeded of string
| `Ok of string ] Import.Deferred.t
read_until
, except you have the option of specifiying a maximum number of
chars to read.val read_line : t -> string Read_result.t Import.Deferred.t
read_line t
reads up to, and including the next newline (\n) character (or \r\n) and
returns a freshly-allocated string containing everything up to but not including the
newline character. If read_line
encounters EOF before the newline char then
everything read up to but not including EOF will be returned as a line.val really_read_line : wait_time:Core.Std.Time.Span.t -> t -> string option Import.Deferred.t
really_read_line ~wait_time t
reads up to, and including the next newline (\n)
character and returns an optional, freshly-allocated string containing everything up
to but not including the newline character. If really_read_line
encounters EOF
before the newline char, then a time span of wait_time
will be used before the input
operation is retried. If the descriptor is closed, None
will be returned.type'a
read =?parse_pos:Core.Std.Sexp.Parse_pos.t -> 'a
val read_sexp : (t -> Core.Std.Sexp.t Read_result.t Import.Deferred.t)
read
read_sexp t
reads the next sexp.val read_sexps : (t -> Core.Std.Sexp.t Import.Pipe.Reader.t) read
read_sexps t
reads all the sexps and returns them as a pipe. When the reader
reaches EOF or the pipe is closed, read_sexps
closes the the reader, and then
after the reader close is finished, closes the pipe.val read_bin_prot : ?max_len:int ->
t ->
'a Bin_prot.Type_class.reader ->
'a Read_result.t Import.Deferred.t
read_bin_prot ?max_len t bp_reader
reads the next binary protocol message using
binary protocol reader bp_reader
. The format is the "size-prefixed binary
protocol", in which the length of the data is prefixed as a 64-bit integer to the
data. This is the format that Writer.write_bin_prot writes.val read_marshal_raw : t -> string Read_result.t Import.Deferred.t
val read_marshal : t -> 'a Read_result.t Import.Deferred.t
val recv : t -> string Read_result.t Import.Deferred.t
recv t
returns a string that was written with Writer.sendval read_all : t ->
(t -> 'a Read_result.t Import.Deferred.t) ->
'a Import.Pipe.Reader.t
read_all t read_one
returns a pipe that receives all values read from t
by
repeatedly using read_one t
. When the reader reaches EOF, it closes the reader,
and then after the reader close is finished, closes the pipe.val lseek : t -> int64 -> mode:[< `End | `Set ] -> int64 Import.Deferred.t
lseek t offset ~mode
clears t
's buffer and calls Unix.lseek
on t
's file
descriptor. The `Cur
mode is not exposed because seeking relative to the current
position of the file descriptor is not the same as seeking to relative to the current
position of the reader.val lines : t -> string Import.Pipe.Reader.t
lines t
reads all the lines from t
and puts them in the pipe, one line per pipe
element. The lines do not contain the trailing newline. When the reader reaches EOF
or the pipe is closed, lines
closes the the reader, and then after the reader close
is finished, closes the pipe.val contents : t -> string Import.Deferred.t
contents t
returns the string corresponding to the full contents (up to EOF) of the
reader. contents
closes t
before returning the string.val file_contents : string -> string Import.Deferred.t
file_contents file
returns the string with the full contents of the fileval file_lines : string -> string list Import.Deferred.t
file_lines file
returns a list of the lines in the file. The lines do not contain
the trailing newline.val load_sexp : ?exclusive:bool ->
string -> (Core.Std.Sexp.t -> 'a) -> 'a Core.Std.Or_error.t Import.Deferred.t
load_sexp ?exclusive file ~f
loads and convert the S-expression in a given file
using f
, and returns the deferred conversion result as a variant of either Ok res
or Error exn
otherwise. This function provides accurate error locations for failed
conversions.val load_sexp_exn : ?exclusive:bool -> string -> (Core.Std.Sexp.t -> 'a) -> 'a Import.Deferred.t
val load_sexps : ?exclusive:bool ->
string ->
(Core.Std.Sexp.t -> 'a) -> 'a list Core.Std.Or_error.t Import.Deferred.t
load_sexps file ~f
load and convert the S-expressions in a given file
using f
,
and return the deferred list of conversion results as variants of either Ok res
or
Error exn
otherwise. This function is as efficient as load_sexps
followed by
conversion if there are no errors, but provides accurate error locations for failed
conversions.val load_sexps_exn : ?exclusive:bool ->
string -> (Core.Std.Sexp.t -> 'a) -> 'a list Import.Deferred.t
val sexp_of_t : t -> Sexplib.Sexp.t
io_stats
Overall IO statistics for all readerslast_read_time t
returns time of the most recent read
system call that
returned data.stdin
is a reader for file descriptor 0. It is lazy because we don't want
to create it in all programs that happen to link with async.open_file file
opens file
for reading and returns a reader reading from it.transfer t pipe_w
transfers data from t
into pipe_w
one chunk at a time
(whatever is read from the underlying file descriptor without post-processing). The
result becomes determined after reaching EOF on t
and the final bytes have been
transferred.
This function will normally not be needed (see pipe
).
pipe t
returns the reader end of a pipe that will continually be filled with chunks
of data from the underlying Reader.t. When the reader reaches EOF or the pipe is
closed, pipe
closes the the reader, and then after the reader close is finished,
closes the pipe.
create ~buf_len fd
creates a new reader that is reading from fd
.
with_file file f
opens files
, creates a reader with it, and passes the reader to
f
. It closes the reader when the result of f
becomes determined, and returns
f
's result.
NOTE, you need to be careful that all your IO is done when the deferred you return
becomes determined. If for example, you use with_file
, and call lines
, make sure
you return a deferred that becomes determined when the EOF is reached on the pipe,
not when you get the pipe (because you get it straight away).
close t
prevents further use of t
and closes t
's underlying file descriptor.
The result of close
becomes determined once the underlying file descriptor has been
closed. It is an error to call other operations on t
after close t
has been
called, except that calls of close
subsequent to the original call to close
will
return the same deferred as the original call.
close_finished t
becomes determined after t
's underlying file descriptor has been
closed, i.e. it is the same as the result of close
. close_finished
differs from
close
in that it does not have the side effect of initiating a close.
is_closed t
returns true
iff close t
has been called.
with_close t ~f
runs f ()
, and closes t
after f
finishes or raises.
id t
fd t
read t ?pos ?len buf
reads up to len
bytes into buf, blocking
until some data is available or end-of-input is reached. The resulting
i
satisfies 0 < i <= len
.
val sexp_of_read_one_chunk_at_a_time_until_eof_result : ('a -> Sexplib.Sexp.t) ->
'a read_one_chunk_at_a_time_until_eof_result -> Sexplib.Sexp.t
read_one_chunk_at_a_time_until_eof t ~handle_chunk
reads into t
's internal buffer,
and whenever bytes are available, applies handle_chunk
to them. It waits to read
again until the deferred returned by handle_chunk
becomes determined.`Continue
means that handle_chunk
has consumed all len
bytes.`Consumed (c, need)
means that c
bytes were consumed and
need
says how many bytes are needed (including the data
remaining in the buffer after the c
were already consumed).
It is an error if c < 0 || c > len
. For `Need n
, it is an
error if n < 0 || c + n <= len
.read_substring t ss
reads up to Substring.length ss
bytes into ss
,
blocking until some data is available or Eof is reched. The resulting i
satisfies 0 < i <= Substring.length ss
.really_read t buf ?pos ?len
reads until it fills len
bytes of buf
starting at pos
or runs out of input. In the former case it returns `Ok.
In the latter, it returns `Eof n
where n
is the number of bytes that
were read before end of input, and 0 <= n < String.length ss
.read_until t pred ~keep_delim
reads until it hits a delimiter c
such that:
pred = `Char c'
then c = c'
pred = `Pred p
then p c
`Char c'
is equivalent to `Pred (fun c -> c = c')
but the underlying
implementation is more efficient, in particular it will not call a function on every
input character.
read_until
returns a freshly-allocated string consisting of all the characters read
and optionally including the delimiter as per keep_delim
.
just like read_until
, except you have the option of specifiying a maximum number of
chars to read.
read_line t
reads up to, and including the next newline (\n) character (or \r\n) and
returns a freshly-allocated string containing everything up to but not including the
newline character. If read_line
encounters EOF before the newline char then
everything read up to but not including EOF will be returned as a line.
really_read_line ~wait_time t
reads up to, and including the next newline (\n)
character and returns an optional, freshly-allocated string containing everything up
to but not including the newline character. If really_read_line
encounters EOF
before the newline char, then a time span of wait_time
will be used before the input
operation is retried. If the descriptor is closed, None
will be returned.
read_sexp t
reads the next sexp.
read_sexps t
reads all the sexps and returns them as a pipe. When the reader
reaches EOF or the pipe is closed, read_sexps
closes the the reader, and then
after the reader close is finished, closes the pipe.
read_bin_prot ?max_len t bp_reader
reads the next binary protocol message using
binary protocol reader bp_reader
. The format is the "size-prefixed binary
protocol", in which the length of the data is prefixed as a 64-bit integer to the
data. This is the format that Writer.write_bin_prot writes.
Read and return a buffer containing one marshaled value, but don't unmarshal it. You
can just call Marshal.from_string on the string, and cast it to the desired type
(preferrably the actual type). similar to Marshal.from_channel, but suffers from the
String-length limitation (16MB) on 32bit platforms.
Like read_marshal_raw, but unmarshal the value after reading it
recv t
returns a string that was written with Writer.send
read_all t read_one
returns a pipe that receives all values read from t
by
repeatedly using read_one t
. When the reader reaches EOF, it closes the reader,
and then after the reader close is finished, closes the pipe.
lseek t offset ~mode
clears t
's buffer and calls Unix.lseek
on t
's file
descriptor. The `Cur
mode is not exposed because seeking relative to the current
position of the file descriptor is not the same as seeking to relative to the current
position of the reader.
lines t
reads all the lines from t
and puts them in the pipe, one line per pipe
element. The lines do not contain the trailing newline. When the reader reaches EOF
or the pipe is closed, lines
closes the the reader, and then after the reader close
is finished, closes the pipe.
contents t
returns the string corresponding to the full contents (up to EOF) of the
reader. contents
closes t
before returning the string.
file_contents file
returns the string with the full contents of the file
file_lines file
returns a list of the lines in the file. The lines do not contain
the trailing newline.
load_sexp ?exclusive file ~f
loads and convert the S-expression in a given file
using f
, and returns the deferred conversion result as a variant of either Ok res
or Error exn
otherwise. This function provides accurate error locations for failed
conversions.
load_sexps file ~f
load and convert the S-expressions in a given file
using f
,
and return the deferred list of conversion results as variants of either Ok res
or
Error exn
otherwise. This function is as efficient as load_sexps
followed by
conversion if there are no errors, but provides accurate error locations for failed
conversions.