Helpers for testing I/O behavior with partial, interrupted and blocking reads and writes.
This library provides:
PartialReadandPartialWrite, which wrap existingReadandWriteimplementations and allow specifying arbitrary behavior on the nextread,writeorflushcall.- With the optional 
futures03andtokio02features,PartialAsyncReadandPartialAsyncWriteto wrap existingAsyncReadandAsyncWriteimplementations. These implementations are task-aware, so they will know how to pause and unpause tasks if they return aWouldBlockerror. - With the optional 
quickcheck09feature, generation of random sequences of operations which can be provided to one of the wrappers. See thequickcheck_typesdocumentation for more. 
A Read or Write wrapper is conceptually simple but can be difficult to
get right, especially if the wrapper has an internal buffer. Common
issues include:
- A partial read or write, even without an error, might leave the wrapper in an invalid state (example fix).
 
With the AsyncRead and AsyncWrite provided by futures03 and tokio02:
- A call to 
read_to_endorwrite_allwithin the wrapper might be partly successful but then error out. These functions will return the error without informing the caller of how much was read or written. Wrappers with an internal buffer will want to advance their state corresponding to the partial success, so they can't useread_to_endorwrite_all(example fix). - Instances must propagate 
Poll::Pendingup, but that shouldn't leave them in an invalid state. 
These situations can be hard to think about and hard to test.
partial-io can help in two ways:
- For a known bug involving any of these situations, 
partial-iocan help you write a test. - With the 
quickcheck09feature enabled,partial-iocan also help shake out bugs in your wrapper. Seequickcheck_typesfor more. 
use std::io::{self, Cursor, Read};
use partial_io::{PartialOp, PartialRead};
let data = b"Hello, world!".to_vec();
let cursor = Cursor::new(data);  // Cursor<Vec<u8>> implements io::Read
let ops = vec![PartialOp::Limited(7), PartialOp::Err(io::ErrorKind::Interrupted)];
let mut partial_read = PartialRead::new(cursor, ops);
let mut out = vec![0; 256];
// The first read will read 7 bytes.
assert_eq!(partial_read.read(&mut out).unwrap(), 7);
assert_eq!(&out[..7], b"Hello, ");
// The second read will fail with ErrorKind::Interrupted.
assert_eq!(partial_read.read(&mut out[7..]).unwrap_err().kind(), io::ErrorKind::Interrupted);
// The iterator has run out of operations, so it no longer truncates reads.
assert_eq!(partial_read.read(&mut out[7..]).unwrap(), 6);
assert_eq!(&out[..13], b"Hello, world!");For a real-world example, see the tests in zstd-rs.
See the CONTRIBUTING file for how to help out.
This project is available under the MIT license.