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// Copyright 2020 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package fs
import (
"errors"
"path"
)
// SkipDir is used as a return value from [WalkDirFunc] to indicate that
// the directory named in the call is to be skipped. It is not returned
// as an error by any function.
var SkipDir = errors.New("skip this directory")
// SkipAll is used as a return value from [WalkDirFunc] to indicate that
// all remaining files and directories are to be skipped. It is not returned
// as an error by any function.
var SkipAll = errors.New("skip everything and stop the walk")
// WalkDirFunc is the type of the function called by [WalkDir] to visit
// each file or directory.
//
// The path argument contains the argument to [WalkDir] as a prefix.
// That is, if WalkDir is called with root argument "dir" and finds a file
// named "a" in that directory, the walk function will be called with
// argument "dir/a".
//
// The d argument is the [DirEntry] for the named path.
//
// The error result returned by the function controls how [WalkDir]
// continues. If the function returns the special value [SkipDir], WalkDir
// skips the current directory (path if d.IsDir() is true, otherwise
// path's parent directory). If the function returns the special value
// [SkipAll], WalkDir skips all remaining files and directories. Otherwise,
// if the function returns a non-nil error, WalkDir stops entirely and
// returns that error.
//
// The err argument reports an error related to path, signaling that
// [WalkDir] will not walk into that directory. The function can decide how
// to handle that error; as described earlier, returning the error will
// cause WalkDir to stop walking the entire tree.
//
// [WalkDir] calls the function with a non-nil err argument in two cases.
//
// First, if the initial [Stat] on the root directory fails, WalkDir
// calls the function with path set to root, d set to nil, and err set to
// the error from [fs.Stat].
//
// Second, if a directory's ReadDir method (see [ReadDirFile]) fails, WalkDir calls the
// function with path set to the directory's path, d set to an
// [DirEntry] describing the directory, and err set to the error from
// ReadDir. In this second case, the function is called twice with the
// path of the directory: the first call is before the directory read is
// attempted and has err set to nil, giving the function a chance to
// return [SkipDir] or [SkipAll] and avoid the ReadDir entirely. The second call
// is after a failed ReadDir and reports the error from ReadDir.
// (If ReadDir succeeds, there is no second call.)
//
// The differences between WalkDirFunc compared to [path/filepath.WalkFunc] are:
//
// - The second argument has type [DirEntry] instead of [FileInfo].
// - The function is called before reading a directory, to allow [SkipDir]
// or [SkipAll] to bypass the directory read entirely or skip all remaining
// files and directories respectively.
// - If a directory read fails, the function is called a second time
// for that directory to report the error.
type WalkDirFunc func(path string, d DirEntry, err error) error
// walkDir recursively descends path, calling walkDirFn.
func walkDir(fsys FS, name string, d DirEntry, walkDirFn WalkDirFunc) error {
if err := walkDirFn(name, d, nil); err != nil || !d.IsDir() {
if err == SkipDir && d.IsDir() {
// Successfully skipped directory.
err = nil
}
return err
}
dirs, err := ReadDir(fsys, name)
if err != nil {
// Second call, to report ReadDir error.
err = walkDirFn(name, d, err)
if err != nil {
if err == SkipDir && d.IsDir() {
err = nil
}
return err
}
}
for _, d1 := range dirs {
name1 := path.Join(name, d1.Name())
if err := walkDir(fsys, name1, d1, walkDirFn); err != nil {
if err == SkipDir {
break
}
return err
}
}
return nil
}
// WalkDir walks the file tree rooted at root, calling fn for each file or
// directory in the tree, including root.
//
// All errors that arise visiting files and directories are filtered by fn:
// see the [fs.WalkDirFunc] documentation for details.
//
// The files are walked in lexical order, which makes the output deterministic
// but requires WalkDir to read an entire directory into memory before proceeding
// to walk that directory.
//
// WalkDir does not follow symbolic links found in directories,
// but if root itself is a symbolic link, its target will be walked.
func WalkDir(fsys FS, root string, fn WalkDirFunc) error {
info, err := Stat(fsys, root)
if err != nil {
err = fn(root, nil, err)
} else {
err = walkDir(fsys, root, FileInfoToDirEntry(info), fn)
}
if err == SkipDir || err == SkipAll {
return nil
}
return err
}
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