Atomic Write assists with atomic modification of files using Haskell. It is a wrapper for using the atomic mv(1) operation which correctly sets permissions based on the original file, or on system defaults if no file previously exists.
On most Unix systems, mv is an atomic operation. This makes it simple to write to a file atomically just by using the mv operation. However, this will destroy the permissions on the original file. This library does the following to preserve permissions while atomically writing to a file:
If an original file exists, take those permissions and apply them to the temp file before mving the file into place.
If the original file does not exist, create a following with default permissions (based on the currently-active umask).
This way, when the file is mv'ed into place, the permissions will be the ones held by the original file.
This library is based on similar implementations found in common libraries in Ruby and Python:
To use atomic-write
, import the module corresponding to the type you wish to write atomically, e.g., to write a (strict) ByteString atomically:
import System.AtomicWrite.Writer.ByteString
Then you can use the atomicWriteFile function that accepts a FilePath and a ByteString, e.g.:
atomicWriteFile myFilePath myByteString
See the Haddock documentation.
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
Justin S. Leitgeb 💻 |
William R. Arellano 💻 |
Alexander Mejía 💻 |
Agustin Camino 💻 |
Juan Paucar 💻 |
Barbara Morantes 💡 |
|
Add your contributions |
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!
MIT, see the LICENSE file.
Do you want to contribute to this project? Please take a look at our contributing guideline to know how you can help us build it.