simplevfs ~master

Minimalist virtual file system for game development


To use this package, run the following command in your project's root directory:

Manual usage
Put the following dependency into your project's dependences section:

SimpleVFS

Build Status Build status

Introduction

SimpleVFS it's a fork from D-GameVFS that updates to the latest changes of the language, and attempt to polish and finish the previous works.

D:GameVFS, and by extension SimpleVFS, is a minimalist open source virtual file system library for the D programming language oriented at game developers.

Provided functionality is very basic - files and directories can be created, read and written, but not deleted. There are no security features - e.g. SimpleVFS can't handle a situation when a file it's working with is deleted outside the program. Only files in a physical file system are supported at the moment. There is no archive support right now.

Features

  • File system independent, easy to use API for file/directory manipulation.
  • No external dependencies.
  • Seamless access to multiple directories as if they were a single directory.
  • Easy to extend with custom file system backend.
  • There is no support for ZIP or similar archive formats at the moment.
  • There is no support for deleting files/directories, and none is planned.
  • There are no security features and none are planned.

Directory structure

DirectoryContents
./This README file, utility scripts.
./docsAPI documentation
./sourceSource code.
./examplesCode examples.
./scriptsUtility scripts for CI, etc

Getting started

Install the DMD compiler

Digital Mars D compiler, or DMD, is the most commonly used D compiler. You can find its newest version here <http://dlang.org/download.html>_. Download the version of DMD for your operating system and install it.

Note: Other D compilers exist, such as GDC and LDC.

Simple SimpleVFS project

Create a directory for your project. To have something for SimpleVFS to work with, create subdirectories main_data and user_data in the project directory. In these directories, create some random files or subdirectories. Create a file called main.d in your project directory. Paste the following code into the file:


   import std.stdio;
   import std.typecons;
   import dgamevfs;

   void main()
   {
       // Two filesystem directories, one read-only and the other read-write.
       auto main = new FSDir("main", "main_data/", No.writable);
       auto user = new FSDir("user", "user_data/", Yes.writable);

       // Stack directory where "user" overrides "main".
       auto stack = new StackDir("root");
       stack.mount(main);
       stack.mount(user);

       // Iterate over all files recursively, printing their VFS paths.
       foreach(file; stack.files(Yes.deep))
       {
           writeln(file.path);
       }

       VFSFile file = stack.file("new_file.txt");
       // Creates "new_file" in "user" (which is on top of "main" in the stack).
       file.output.write(cast(const void[])"Hello World!");

       // Read what we've written.
       auto buffer = new char[file.bytes];
       file.input.read(cast(void[]) buffer);

       writeln(buffer);
   }

Code for this example can be found in the examples/getting_started directory.

See the API documentation for more code examples.

Explanation of the code

We start by importing dgamevfs which imports all needed D:GameVFS modules. D:GameVFS uses the Flag template instead of booleans for more descriptive parameters (such as Yes.writable instead of true). You need to import std.typecons to use Flag.

We create two FSDirs - physical file system directory objects, which will be called main and user in the VFS and will represent the main_data and user_data directories which we've created in our project directory. We construct main as a non-writable directory - it's read-only for the VFS.

Next, we create a StackDir and mount() our directories to it. StackDir works with mounted directories as if they were a single directory - for instance, reading file.txt from the StackDir, will first try to read user_data/file.txt, and if that file does not exist, main_data/file.txt. Files in directories mounted later take precedence over those mounted earlier.

StackDir makes it possible, for example, to have a main game directory with common files and a mod directory overriding some of those files.

Then we iterate over all files in the StackDir recursively (using the Yes.deep argument) - including files in subdirectories. Path of each file in the VFS is printed. You should see in the output that the files' paths specify stack as their parent since main and user are mounted to stack. (Note that the paths will refer to stack as parent even if iterating over main and user - as those are now mounted to stack.)

Then we get a VFSFile - D:GameVFS file object - from the stack directory. This file does not exist yet (unless you created it). It will be created when we write to it.

To obtain writing access, we get the VFSFileOutput struct using the VFSFile.output() method. VFSFileOutput provides basic output functionality. It uses reference counting to automatically close the file when you are done with it. Since we just want to write some simple text, we call its write() method directly. VFSFileOutput.write() writes a raw buffer of data to the file, similarly to fwrite() from the C standard library.

Note that we're working on a file from a StackDir. StackDir decides where to actually write the data. In our case, the newest mounted directory is user, which is also writable, so the data is written to user_data/new_file.txt.

In the end, we read the data back using the VFSFileInput class - input analog of VFSFileOutput - which we get with the VFSFile.input() method. We read with the VFSFileInput.read() method, which reads data to provided buffer, up to the buffer length. We determine how large buffer we need to read the entire file with the VFSFile.bytes() method. The buffer might also be larger than the file - read() reads as much data as available and returns the part of the buffer containing the read data.

For more details about SimpleVFS API, see the online documentation.

Compiling

We're going to use dub, which is installed with DMD (or LDC or GDC), to compile our project.

Create a file called dub.json with the following contents:

   {
       "name": "getting-started",
       "targetType": "executable",
       "sourceFiles": ["main.d"],
       "mainSourceFile": "main.d",
       "dependencies":
       {
           "simplevfs": { "version" : "~>0.2.1" }
       },
   }

This file tells dub that we're building an executable called getting-started from a D source file main.d, and that our project depends on SimpleVFS 0.2.1 or any newer, bugfix release of SimpleVFS 0.2.1 . DUB will automatically find and download the correct version of SimpleVFS when the project is built.

Now run the following command in your project's directory::

   dub build

dub will automatically download SimpleVFS and compile it, and then then it will compile our program. This will generate an executable called getting-started or getting-started.exe in your directory.

License

SimpleVFS is released under the terms of the Boost Software License 1.0. This license allows you to use the source code in your own projects, open source or proprietary, and to modify it to suit your needs. However, in source distributions, you have to preserve the license headers in the source code and the accompanying license file.

Full text of the license can be found in file LICENSE_1_0.txt and is also displayed here::

Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person or organization
obtaining a copy of the software and accompanying documentation covered by
this license (the "Software") to use, reproduce, display, distribute,
execute, and transmit the Software, and to prepare derivative works of the
Software, and to permit third-parties to whom the Software is furnished to
do so, all subject to the following:

The copyright notices in the Software and this entire statement, including
the above license grant, this restriction and the following disclaimer,
must be included in all copies of the Software, in whole or in part, and
all derivative works of the Software, unless such copies or derivative
works are solely in the form of machine-executable object code generated by
a source language processor.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TITLE AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT
SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS OR ANYONE DISTRIBUTING THE SOFTWARE BE LIABLE
FOR ANY DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE,
ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

Credits

D:GameVFS was created by Ferdinand Majerech aka Kiith-Sa kiithsacmp[AT]gmail.com .

SimpleVFS was a fork created by Luis Panadero Guardeño aka Zardoz luis.panadero[AT]gmail.com .

The API was inspired the VFS API of the Tango library.

D:GameVFS was created using Vim and DMD on Debian, Ubuntu and Linux Mint as a VFS library in the D programming language.

Authors:
  • Ferdinand Majerech
Sub packages:
simplevfs:getting-started, simplevfs:vfsfile
Dependencies:
none
Versions:
0.2.1 2020-May-13
~master 2020-May-19
~develop 2021-May-04
~dependabot/bundler/docs/tzinfo-1.2.10 2022-Jul-22
~dependabot/bundler/docs/nokogiri-1.14.3 2023-Apr-12
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