Enum borsh::maybestd::io::ErrorKind 1.0.0[−][src]
#[non_exhaustive] pub enum ErrorKind {}Show variants
NotFound, PermissionDenied, ConnectionRefused, ConnectionReset, ConnectionAborted, NotConnected, AddrInUse, AddrNotAvailable, BrokenPipe, AlreadyExists, WouldBlock, InvalidInput, InvalidData, TimedOut, WriteZero, Interrupted, Other, UnexpectedEof, Unsupported, OutOfMemory,
Expand description
A list specifying general categories of I/O error.
This list is intended to grow over time and it is not recommended to exhaustively match against it.
It is used with the io::Error
type.
Variants (Non-exhaustive)
This enum is marked as non-exhaustive
An entity was not found, often a file.
The operation lacked the necessary privileges to complete.
The connection was refused by the remote server.
The connection was reset by the remote server.
The connection was aborted (terminated) by the remote server.
The network operation failed because it was not connected yet.
A socket address could not be bound because the address is already in use elsewhere.
A nonexistent interface was requested or the requested address was not local.
The operation failed because a pipe was closed.
An entity already exists, often a file.
The operation needs to block to complete, but the blocking operation was requested to not occur.
A parameter was incorrect.
Data not valid for the operation were encountered.
Unlike InvalidInput
, this typically means that the operation
parameters were valid, however the error was caused by malformed
input data.
For example, a function that reads a file into a string will error with
InvalidData
if the file’s contents are not valid UTF-8.
The I/O operation’s timeout expired, causing it to be canceled.
An error returned when an operation could not be completed because a
call to write
returned Ok(0)
.
This typically means that an operation could only succeed if it wrote a particular number of bytes but only a smaller number of bytes could be written.
This operation was interrupted.
Interrupted operations can typically be retried.
Any I/O error not part of this list.
Errors that are Other
now may move to a different or a new
ErrorKind
variant in the future. It is not recommended to match
an error against Other
and to expect any additional characteristics,
e.g., a specific Error::raw_os_error
return value.
An error returned when an operation could not be completed because an “end of file” was reached prematurely.
This typically means that an operation could only succeed if it read a particular number of bytes but only a smaller number of bytes could be read.
This operation is unsupported on this platform.
This means that the operation can never succeed.
An operation could not be completed, because it failed to allocate enough memory.
Trait Implementations
Intended for use for errors not exposed to the user, where allocating onto the heap (for normal construction via Error::new) is too costly.
This method returns an ordering between self
and other
values if one exists. Read more
This method tests less than (for self
and other
) and is used by the <
operator. Read more
This method tests less than or equal to (for self
and other
) and is used by the <=
operator. Read more
This method tests greater than (for self
and other
) and is used by the >
operator. Read more
Auto Trait Implementations
impl RefUnwindSafe for ErrorKind
impl UnwindSafe for ErrorKind
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more