Module tokio::io [−][src]
Expand description
Traits, helpers, and type definitions for asynchronous I/O functionality.
This module is the asynchronous version of std::io. Primarily, it
defines two traits, AsyncRead and AsyncWrite, which are asynchronous
versions of the Read and Write traits in the standard library.
AsyncRead and AsyncWrite
Like the standard library’s Read and Write traits, AsyncRead and
AsyncWrite provide the most general interface for reading and writing
input and output. Unlike the standard library’s traits, however, they are
asynchronous — meaning that reading from or writing to a tokio::io
type will yield to the Tokio scheduler when IO is not ready, rather than
blocking. This allows other tasks to run while waiting on IO.
Another difference is that AsyncRead and AsyncWrite only contain
core methods needed to provide asynchronous reading and writing
functionality. Instead, utility methods are defined in the AsyncReadExt
and AsyncWriteExt extension traits. These traits are automatically
implemented for all values that implement AsyncRead and AsyncWrite
respectively.
End users will rarely interact directly with AsyncRead and
AsyncWrite. Instead, they will use the async functions defined in the
extension traits. Library authors are expected to implement AsyncRead
and AsyncWrite in order to provide types that behave like byte streams.
Even with these differences, Tokio’s AsyncRead and AsyncWrite traits
can be used in almost exactly the same manner as the standard library’s
Read and Write. Most types in the standard library that implement Read
and Write have asynchronous equivalents in tokio that implement
AsyncRead and AsyncWrite, such as File and TcpStream.
For example, the standard library documentation introduces Read by
demonstrating reading some bytes from a std::fs::File. We
can do the same with tokio::fs::File:
use tokio::io::{self, AsyncReadExt}; use tokio::fs::File; #[tokio::main] async fn main() -> io::Result<()> { let mut f = File::open("foo.txt").await?; let mut buffer = [0; 10]; // read up to 10 bytes let n = f.read(&mut buffer).await?; println!("The bytes: {:?}", &buffer[..n]); Ok(()) }
Buffered Readers and Writers
Byte-based interfaces are unwieldy and can be inefficient, as we’d need to be
making near-constant calls to the operating system. To help with this,
std::io comes with support for buffered readers and writers,
and therefore, tokio::io does as well.
Tokio provides an async version of the std::io::BufRead trait,
AsyncBufRead; and async BufReader and BufWriter structs, which
wrap readers and writers. These wrappers use a buffer, reducing the number
of calls and providing nicer methods for accessing exactly what you want.
For example, BufReader works with the AsyncBufRead trait to add
extra methods to any async reader:
use tokio::io::{self, BufReader, AsyncBufReadExt}; use tokio::fs::File; #[tokio::main] async fn main() -> io::Result<()> { let f = File::open("foo.txt").await?; let mut reader = BufReader::new(f); let mut buffer = String::new(); // read a line into buffer reader.read_line(&mut buffer).await?; println!("{}", buffer); Ok(()) }
BufWriter doesn’t add any new ways of writing; it just buffers every call
to write:
use tokio::io::{self, BufWriter, AsyncWriteExt}; use tokio::fs::File; #[tokio::main] async fn main() -> io::Result<()> { let f = File::create("foo.txt").await?; { let mut writer = BufWriter::new(f); // write a byte to the buffer writer.write(&[42u8]).await?; } // the buffer is flushed once writer goes out of scope Ok(()) }
Implementing AsyncRead and AsyncWrite
Because they are traits, we can implement AsyncRead and AsyncWrite for
our own types, as well. Note that these traits must only be implemented for
non-blocking I/O types that integrate with the futures type system. In
other words, these types must never block the thread, and instead the
current task is notified when the I/O resource is ready.
Standard input and output
Tokio provides asynchronous APIs to standard input, output, and error.
These APIs are very similar to the ones provided by std, but they also
implement AsyncRead and AsyncWrite.
Note that the standard input / output APIs must be used from the context of the Tokio runtime, as they require Tokio-specific features to function. Calling these functions outside of a Tokio runtime will panic.
std re-exports
Additionally, Error, ErrorKind, and Result are re-exported
from std::io for ease of use.
Structs
| BufReader | The |
| BufStream | Wraps a type that is |
| BufWriter | Wraps a writer and buffers its output. |
| Copy | A future that asynchronously copies the entire contents of a reader into a writer. |
| Empty | An async reader which is always at EOF. |
| Error | The error type for I/O operations of the |
| Lines | Stream for the |
| PollEvented | Associates an I/O resource that implements the |
| ReadHalf | The readable half of a value returned from |
| Registration | Associates an I/O resource with the reactor instance that drives it. |
| Repeat | An async reader which yields one byte over and over and over and over and over and… |
| Seek | Future for the |
| Sink | An async writer which will move data into the void. |
| Split | Stream for the |
| Stderr | A handle to the standard error stream of a process. |
| Stdin | A handle to the standard input stream of a process. |
| Stdout | A handle to the standard output stream of a process. |
| Take | Stream for the |
| WriteHalf | The writable half of a value returned from |
Enums
| ErrorKind | A list specifying general categories of I/O error. |
Traits
| AsyncBufRead | Reads bytes asynchronously. |
| AsyncBufReadExt | An extension trait which adds utility methods to |
| AsyncRead | Reads bytes from a source. |
| AsyncReadExt | Reads bytes from a source. |
| AsyncSeek | Seek bytes asynchronously. |
| AsyncSeekExt | An extension trait which adds utility methods to |
| AsyncWrite | Writes bytes asynchronously. |
| AsyncWriteExt | Writes bytes to a sink. |
Functions
| copy | Asynchronously copies the entire contents of a reader into a writer. |
| empty | Creates a new empty async reader. |
| repeat | Creates an instance of an async reader that infinitely repeats one byte. |
| sink | Creates an instance of an async writer which will successfully consume all data. |
| split | Splits a single value implementing |
| stderr | Constructs a new handle to the standard error of the current process. |
| stdin | Constructs a new handle to the standard input of the current process. |
| stdout | Constructs a new handle to the standard output of the current process. |
Type Definitions
| Result | A specialized |