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https://github.com/golang/go
synced 2024-11-25 02:07:58 -07:00
change the tutorial to use File, file rather than FD, fd.
also make the default input for makehtml be go_tutorial.txt. R=rsc DELTA=176 (58 added, 58 deleted, 60 changed) OCL=26374 CL=26374
This commit is contained in:
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@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Let's Go
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Rob Pike
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----
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(February 4, 2009)
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(March 17, 2009)
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This document is a tutorial introduction to the basics of the Go systems programming
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@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ program that doesn't depend on "print()":
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--PROG progs/helloworld2.go
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This version imports the ''os'' package to acess its "Stdout" variable, of type
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"*os.FD". The "import" statement is a declaration: it names the identifier ("os")
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"*os.File". The "import" statement is a declaration: it names the identifier ("os")
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that will be used to access members of the package imported from the file ("os"),
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found in the current directory or in a standard location.
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Given "os.Stdout" we can use its "WriteString" method to print the string.
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@ -307,11 +307,11 @@ An I/O Package
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----
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Next we'll look at a simple package for doing file I/O with the usual
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sort of open/close/read/write interface. Here's the start of "fd.go":
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sort of open/close/read/write interface. Here's the start of "file.go":
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--PROG progs/fd.go /package/ /^}/
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--PROG progs/file.go /package/ /^}/
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The first line declares the name of the package -- "fd" for ''file descriptor'' --
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The first line declares the name of the package -- "file" --
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and then we import two packages. The "os" package hides the differences
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between various operating systems to give a consistent view of files and
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so on; here we're only going to use its error handling utilities
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@ -321,11 +321,11 @@ The other item is the low-level, external "syscall" package, which provides
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a primitive interface to the underlying operating system's calls.
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Next is a type definition: the "type" keyword introduces a type declaration,
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in this case a data structure called "FD".
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To make things a little more interesting, our "FD" includes the name of the file
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in this case a data structure called "File".
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To make things a little more interesting, our "File" includes the name of the file
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that the file descriptor refers to.
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Because "FD" starts with a capital letter, the type is available outside the package,
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Because "File" starts with a capital letter, the type is available outside the package,
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that is, by users of the package. In Go the rule about visibility of information is
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simple: if a name (of a top-level type, function, method, constant, variable, or of
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a structure field) is capitalized, users of the package may see it. Otherwise, the
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@ -333,37 +333,37 @@ name and hence the thing being named is visible only inside the package in which
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it is declared. This is more than a convention; the rule is enforced by the compiler.
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In Go, the term for publicly visible names is ''exported''.
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In the case of "FD", all its fields are lower case and so invisible to users, but we
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In the case of "File", all its fields are lower case and so invisible to users, but we
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will soon give it some exported, upper-case methods.
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First, though, here is a factory to create them:
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--PROG progs/fd.go /newFD/ /^}/
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--PROG progs/file.go /newFile/ /^}/
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This returns a pointer to a new "FD" structure with the file descriptor and name
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This returns a pointer to a new "File" structure with the file descriptor and name
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filled in. This code uses Go's notion of a ''composite literal'', analogous to
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the ones used to build maps and arrays, to construct a new heap-allocated
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object. We could write
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n := new(FD);
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n.fildes = fd;
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n := new(File);
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n.fd = fd;
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n.name = name;
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return n
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but for simple structures like "FD" it's easier to return the address of a nonce
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but for simple structures like "File" it's easier to return the address of a nonce
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composite literal, as is done here on line 17.
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We can use the factory to construct some familiar, exported variables of type "*FD":
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We can use the factory to construct some familiar, exported variables of type "*File":
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--PROG progs/fd.go /var/ /^.$/
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--PROG progs/file.go /var/ /^.$/
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The "newFD" function was not exported because it's internal. The proper,
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The "newFile" function was not exported because it's internal. The proper,
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exported factory to use is "Open":
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--PROG progs/fd.go /func.Open/ /^}/
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--PROG progs/file.go /func.Open/ /^}/
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There are a number of new things in these few lines. First, "Open" returns
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multiple values, an "FD" and an error (more about errors in a moment).
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multiple values, an "File" and an error (more about errors in a moment).
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We declare the
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multi-value return as a parenthesized list of declarations; syntactically
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they look just like a second parameter list. The function
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@ -371,9 +371,9 @@ they look just like a second parameter list. The function
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also has a multi-value return, which we can grab with the multi-variable
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declaration on line 27; it declares "r" and "e" to hold the two values,
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both of type "int64" (although you'd have to look at the "syscall" package
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to see that). Finally, line 28 returns two values: a pointer to the new "FD"
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to see that). Finally, line 28 returns two values: a pointer to the new "File"
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and the error. If "syscall.Open" fails, the file descriptor "r" will
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be negative and "NewFD" will return "nil".
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be negative and "NewFile" will return "nil".
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About those errors: The "os" library includes a general notion of an error
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string, maintaining a unique set of errors throughout the program. It's a
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@ -382,13 +382,13 @@ consistent error handling throughout Go code. In "Open" we use the
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routine "os.ErrnoToError" to translate Unix's integer "errno" value into
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an error string, which will be stored in a unique instance of "*os.Error".
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Now that we can build "FDs", we can write methods for them. To declare
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Now that we can build "Files", we can write methods for them. To declare
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a method of a type, we define a function to have an explicit receiver
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of that type, placed
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in parentheses before the function name. Here are some methods for "*FD",
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each of which declares a receiver variable "fd".
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in parentheses before the function name. Here are some methods for "*File",
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each of which declares a receiver variable "file".
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--PROG progs/fd.go /Close/ END
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--PROG progs/file.go /Close/ END
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There is no implicit "this" and the receiver variable must be used to access
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members of the structure. Methods are not declared within
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@ -417,7 +417,7 @@ and run the program:
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Rotting cats
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----
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Building on the "fd" package, here's a simple version of the Unix utility "cat(1)",
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Building on the "file" package, here's a simple version of the Unix utility "cat(1)",
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"progs/cat.go":
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--PROG progs/cat.go
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@ -425,7 +425,7 @@ Building on the "fd" package, here's a simple version of the Unix utility "cat(1
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By now this should be easy to follow, but the "switch" statement introduces some
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new features. Like a "for" loop, an "if" or "switch" can include an
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initialization statement. The "switch" on line 12 uses one to create variables
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"nr" and "er" to hold the return values from "fd.Read()". (The "if" on line 19
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"nr" and "er" to hold the return values from "f.Read()". (The "if" on line 19
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has the same idea.) The "switch" statement is general: it evaluates the cases
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from top to bottom looking for the first case that matches the value; the
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case expressions don't need to be constants or even integers, as long as
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@ -444,7 +444,7 @@ Now let's make a variant of "cat" that optionally does "rot13" on its input.
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It's easy to do by just processing the bytes, but instead we will exploit
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Go's notion of an <i>interface</i>.
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The "cat()" subroutine uses only two methods of "fd": "Read()" and "String()",
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The "cat()" subroutine uses only two methods of "f": "Read()" and "String()",
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so let's start by defining an interface that has exactly those two methods.
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Here is code from "progs/cat_rot13.go":
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@ -452,9 +452,9 @@ Here is code from "progs/cat_rot13.go":
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Any type that implements the two methods of "reader" -- regardless of whatever
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other methods the type may also contain -- is said to <i>implement</i> the
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interface. Since "fd.FD" implements these methods, it implements the
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interface. Since "file.File" implements these methods, it implements the
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"reader" interface. We could tweak the "cat" subroutine to accept a "reader"
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instead of a "*fd.FD" and it would work just fine, but let's embellish a little
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instead of a "*file.File" and it would work just fine, but let's embellish a little
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first by writing a second type that implements "reader", one that wraps an
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existing "reader" and does "rot13" on the data. To do this, we just define
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the type and implement the methods and with no other bookkeeping,
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@ -497,7 +497,7 @@ type if the type implements all the methods declared in the interface.
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This means
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that a type may implement an arbitrary number of different interfaces.
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There is no type hierarchy; things can be much more <i>ad hoc</i>,
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as we saw with "rot13". The type "fd.FD" implements "reader"; it could also
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as we saw with "rot13". The type "file.File" implements "reader"; it could also
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implement a "writer", or any other interface built from its methods that
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fits the current situation. Consider the <i>empty interface</i>
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@ -5,23 +5,23 @@
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package main
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import (
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"fd";
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"file";
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"flag";
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)
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func cat(file *fd.FD) {
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func cat(f *file.File) {
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const NBUF = 512;
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var buf [NBUF]byte;
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for {
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switch nr, er := file.Read(buf); true {
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switch nr, er := f.Read(buf); true {
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case nr < 0:
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print("error reading from ", file.String(), ": ", er.String(), "\n");
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print("error reading from ", f.String(), ": ", er.String(), "\n");
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sys.Exit(1);
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case nr == 0: // EOF
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return;
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case nr > 0:
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if nw, ew := fd.Stdout.Write(buf[0:nr]); nw != nr {
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print("error writing from ", file.String(), ": ", ew.String(), "\n");
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if nw, ew := file.Stdout.Write(buf[0:nr]); nw != nr {
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print("error writing from ", f.String(), ": ", ew.String(), "\n");
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}
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}
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}
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@ -30,15 +30,15 @@ func cat(file *fd.FD) {
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func main() {
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flag.Parse(); // Scans the arg list and sets up flags
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if flag.NArg() == 0 {
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cat(fd.Stdin);
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cat(file.Stdin);
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}
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for i := 0; i < flag.NArg(); i++ {
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file, err := fd.Open(flag.Arg(i), 0, 0);
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if file == nil {
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f, err := file.Open(flag.Arg(i), 0, 0);
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if f == nil {
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print("can't open ", flag.Arg(i), ": error ", err, "\n");
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sys.Exit(1);
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}
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cat(file);
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file.Close();
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cat(f);
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f.Close();
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}
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}
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package main
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import (
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"fd";
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"file";
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"flag";
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"os";
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)
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@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ func cat(r reader) {
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case nr == 0: // EOF
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return;
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case nr > 0:
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nw, ew := fd.Stdout.Write(buf[0:nr]);
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nw, ew := file.Stdout.Write(buf[0:nr]);
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if nw != nr {
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print("error writing from ", r.String(), ": ", ew.String(), "\n");
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}
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@ -74,15 +74,15 @@ func cat(r reader) {
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func main() {
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flag.Parse(); // Scans the arg list and sets up flags
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if flag.NArg() == 0 {
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cat(fd.Stdin);
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cat(file.Stdin);
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}
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for i := 0; i < flag.NArg(); i++ {
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file, err := fd.Open(flag.Arg(i), 0, 0);
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if file == nil {
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f, err := file.Open(flag.Arg(i), 0, 0);
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if f == nil {
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print("can't open ", flag.Arg(i), ": error ", err, "\n");
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sys.Exit(1);
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}
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cat(file);
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file.Close();
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cat(f);
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f.Close();
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}
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}
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@ -1,62 +0,0 @@
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// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
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// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
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// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
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package fd
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import (
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"os";
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"syscall";
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)
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type FD struct {
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fildes int64; // file descriptor number
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name string; // file name at Open time
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}
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func newFD(fd int64, name string) *FD {
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if fd < 0 {
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return nil
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}
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return &FD{fd, name}
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}
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var (
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Stdin = newFD(0, "/dev/stdin");
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Stdout = newFD(1, "/dev/stdout");
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Stderr = newFD(2, "/dev/stderr");
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)
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func Open(name string, mode int64, perm int64) (fd *FD, err *os.Error) {
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r, e := syscall.Open(name, mode, perm);
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return newFD(r, name), os.ErrnoToError(e)
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}
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func (fd *FD) Close() *os.Error {
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if fd == nil {
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return os.EINVAL
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}
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r, e := syscall.Close(fd.fildes);
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fd.fildes = -1; // so it can't be closed again
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return nil
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}
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func (fd *FD) Read(b []byte) (ret int, err *os.Error) {
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if fd == nil {
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return -1, os.EINVAL
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}
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r, e := syscall.Read(fd.fildes, &b[0], int64(len(b)));
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return int(r), os.ErrnoToError(e)
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}
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func (fd *FD) Write(b []byte) (ret int, err *os.Error) {
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if fd == nil {
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return -1, os.EINVAL
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}
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r, e := syscall.Write(fd.fildes, &b[0], int64(len(b)));
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return int(r), os.ErrnoToError(e)
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}
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func (fd *FD) String() string {
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return fd.name
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}
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62
doc/progs/file.go
Normal file
62
doc/progs/file.go
Normal file
@ -0,0 +1,62 @@
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// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
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// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
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// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
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package file
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import (
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"os";
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"syscall";
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)
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type File struct {
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fd int64; // file descriptor number
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name string; // file name at Open time
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}
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func newFile(fd int64, name string) *File {
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if fd < 0 {
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return nil
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}
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return &File{fd, name}
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}
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var (
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Stdin = newFile(0, "/dev/stdin");
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Stdout = newFile(1, "/dev/stdout");
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Stderr = newFile(2, "/dev/stderr");
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)
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func Open(name string, mode int64, perm int64) (file *File, err *os.Error) {
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r, e := syscall.Open(name, mode, perm);
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return newFile(r, name), os.ErrnoToError(e)
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}
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func (file *File) Close() *os.Error {
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if file == nil {
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return os.EINVAL
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}
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r, e := syscall.Close(file.fd);
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file.fd = -1; // so it can't be closed again
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return nil
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}
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func (file *File) Read(b []byte) (ret int, err *os.Error) {
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if file == nil {
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return -1, os.EINVAL
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}
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r, e := syscall.Read(file.fd, &b[0], int64(len(b)));
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return int(r), os.ErrnoToError(e)
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}
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func (file *File) Write(b []byte) (ret int, err *os.Error) {
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if file == nil {
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return -1, os.EINVAL
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}
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r, e := syscall.Write(file.fd, &b[0], int64(len(b)));
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return int(r), os.ErrnoToError(e)
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}
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func (file *File) String() string {
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return file.name
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}
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@ -4,12 +4,12 @@
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package main
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import fd "fd"
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import file "file"
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func main() {
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hello := []byte{'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o', ',', ' ', 'w', 'o', 'r', 'l', 'd', '\n'};
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fd.Stdout.Write(hello);
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file, err := fd.Open("/does/not/exist", 0, 0);
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file.Stdout.Write(hello);
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file, err := file.Open("/does/not/exist", 0, 0);
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if file == nil {
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print("can't open file; err=", err.String(), "\n");
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sys.Exit(1);
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@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
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rm -f *.6
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for i in \
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fd.go \
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file.go \
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helloworld.go \
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helloworld2.go \
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helloworld3.go \
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