Struct std::ffi::CString
[−]
[src]
pub struct CString { // some fields omitted }
A type representing an owned C-compatible string
This type serves the primary purpose of being able to safely generate a C-compatible string from a Rust byte slice or vector. An instance of this type is a static guarantee that the underlying bytes contain no interior 0 bytes and the final byte is 0.
A CString
is created from either a byte slice or a byte vector. After
being created, a CString
predominately inherits all of its methods from
the Deref
implementation to [libc::c_char]
. Note that the underlying
array is represented as an array of libc::c_char
as opposed to u8
. A
u8
slice can be obtained with the as_bytes
method. Slices produced from
a CString
do not contain the trailing nul terminator unless otherwise
specified.
Examples
#![feature(libc)] extern crate libc; fn main() { use std::ffi::CString; use libc; extern { fn my_printer(s: *const libc::c_char); } let c_to_print = CString::new("Hello, world!").unwrap(); unsafe { my_printer(c_to_print.as_ptr()); } }use std::ffi::CString; use libc; extern { fn my_printer(s: *const libc::c_char); } let c_to_print = CString::new("Hello, world!").unwrap(); unsafe { my_printer(c_to_print.as_ptr()); }
Methods
impl CString
fn new<T: Into<Vec<u8>>>(t: T) -> Result<CString, NulError>
Creates a new C-compatible string from a container of bytes.
This method will consume the provided data and use the underlying bytes to construct a new string, ensuring that there is a trailing 0 byte.
Examples
#![feature(libc)] extern crate libc; use std::ffi::CString; extern { fn puts(s: *const libc::c_char); } fn main() { let to_print = CString::new("Hello!").unwrap(); unsafe { puts(to_print.as_ptr()); } }extern crate libc; use std::ffi::CString; extern { fn puts(s: *const libc::c_char); } fn main() { let to_print = CString::new("Hello!").unwrap(); unsafe { puts(to_print.as_ptr()); } }
Errors
This function will return an error if the bytes yielded contain an internal 0 byte. The error returned will contain the bytes as well as the position of the nul byte.
unsafe fn from_vec_unchecked(v: Vec<u8>) -> CString
Creates a C-compatible string from a byte vector without checking for interior 0 bytes.
This method is equivalent to new
except that no runtime assertion
is made that v
contains no 0 bytes, and it requires an actual
byte vector, not anything that can be converted to one with Into.
fn as_bytes(&self) -> &[u8]
Returns the contents of this CString
as a slice of bytes.
The returned slice does not contain the trailing nul separator and it is guaranteed to not have any interior nul bytes.
fn as_bytes_with_nul(&self) -> &[u8]
Equivalent to the as_bytes
function except that the returned slice
includes the trailing nul byte.
Methods from Deref<Target=CStr>
fn as_ptr(&self) -> *const c_char
Returns the inner pointer to this C string.
The returned pointer will be valid for as long as self
is and points
to a contiguous region of memory terminated with a 0 byte to represent
the end of the string.
fn to_bytes(&self) -> &[u8]
Converts this C string to a byte slice.
This function will calculate the length of this string (which normally
requires a linear amount of work to be done) and then return the
resulting slice of u8
elements.
The returned slice will not contain the trailing nul that this C string has.
Note: This method is currently implemented as a 0-cost cast, but it is planned to alter its definition in the future to perform the length calculation whenever this method is called.
fn to_bytes_with_nul(&self) -> &[u8]
Converts this C string to a byte slice containing the trailing 0 byte.
This function is the equivalent of to_bytes
except that it will retain
the trailing nul instead of chopping it off.
Note: This method is currently implemented as a 0-cost cast, but it is planned to alter its definition in the future to perform the length calculation whenever this method is called.
fn to_str(&self) -> Result<&str, Utf8Error>
: recently added
Yields a &str
slice if the CStr
contains valid UTF-8.
This function will calculate the length of this string and check for
UTF-8 validity, and then return the &str
if it's valid.
Note: This method is currently implemented to check for validity after a 0-cost cast, but it is planned to alter its definition in the future to perform the length calculation in addition to the UTF-8 check whenever this method is called.
fn to_string_lossy(&self) -> Cow<str>
: recently added
Converts a CStr
into a Cow<str>
.
This function will calculate the length of this string (which normally
requires a linear amount of work to be done) and then return the
resulting slice as a Cow<str>
, replacing any invalid UTF-8 sequences
with U+FFFD REPLACEMENT CHARACTER
.
Note: This method is currently implemented to check for validity after a 0-cost cast, but it is planned to alter its definition in the future to perform the length calculation in addition to the UTF-8 check whenever this method is called.