Diskit - Utilities for intercepting disk requests
Diskit (short for "Disc
root kit") attempts to be an intransparent, rust-style root kit
for intercepting and modifying requests to the hard drive. To use it,
decide what you want to do with the intercepted requests and choose
the appropriate diskit (e.g.: no interception -> [StdDiskit
];
redirect to virtual file system -> [VirtualDiskit
]; logging all
requests -> [LogDiskit
]), then route all requests through it:
use std::io::{Read, Write}; use diskit::{diskit_extend::DiskitExt, Diskit, VirtualDiskit}; fn main() -> Result<(), std::io::Error> { // All requests are redircted to a virtual file system. let diskit = VirtualDiskit::default(); // This writes "Hello, World!" in the newly created file "test.txt". let mut file1 = diskit.create("test.txt")?; file1.write_all(b"Hello, World!")?; // You can close `file1` and it still works: // file1.close()?; // This reads the just created file. let mut file2 = diskit.open("test.txt")?; let mut buf = String::new(); file2.read_to_string(&mut buf)?; assert_eq!(buf, "Hello, World!"); Ok(()) }
If you want to see how diskit would be used in a full program, see legacylisten, the program I wrote diskit for.
Making your own diskit
You can make your own diskit by implementing the [Diskit
] trait.
Because a lot of stdlib types are intransparent, there are
transparent replicas of them here that you're going to have to
use. Most of these types have an inner type
(e.g. File
has FileInner
) to
make the [Diskit
] trait object-safe and this library easy to
use.
To make [StdDiskit
] as overheadless as possible most types have an
Option<StdsVersionOfThisType>
, which should be [None
] in your
implementation.
If your diskit internally still needs to access the disk, please
consider delegating these to an other diskit like [LogDiskit
]
does.
Size of a diskit
Diskits should (there is no way or reason to enforce it) be as
small and cheaply cloneable as possible. This is because
this library should be optimized for [StdDiskit
] (as this is
expected to be it's most used – albeit most useless – diskit) and
while adding diskit support to
legacylisten it became
apparent that for good usability and performance diskits are
cloned often and passed by value.
If your diskit is bigger than one [usize
] consider wrapping it
in an Arc
.
Stability
Diskit is still in a very early version and nothing is stable, although I try to keep it stable.
Contributing
I have written that library specifically for legacylisten and added (mostly) only what I needed for that, so it's still lacking in a lot for normal usage. If you need an additional feature (or features) or otherwise have an idea how to make it better, please don't hesitate to share it or implement it yourself.