A FAT filesystem library implemented in Rust.
Features:
chrono feature is enabled)Add this to your Cargo.toml:
[dependencies] fatfs = "0.3"
and this to your crate root:
extern crate fatfs;
You can start using the fatfs library now:
let img_file = File::open("fat.img")?;
let fs = fatfs::FileSystem::new(img_file, fatfs::FsOptions::new())?;
let root_dir = fs.root_dir();
let mut file = root_dir.create_file("hello.txt")?;
file.write_all(b"Hello World!")?;
Note: it is recommended to wrap the underlying file struct in a buffering/caching object like BufStream from fscommon crate. For example:
extern crate fscommon; let buf_stream = BufStream::new(img_file); let fs = fatfs::FileSystem::new(buf_stream, fatfs::FsOptions::new())?;
See more examples in the examples subdirectory.
Add this to your Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
fatfs = { version = "0.3", features = ["core_io"], default-features = false }
For building in no_std mode a Rust compiler version compatible with core_io crate is required.
For now core_io supports only nightly Rust channel. See a date suffix in latest core_io crate version for exact compiler version.
Additional features:
lfn - LFN (long file name) supportalloc - use alloc crate for dynamic allocation. Needed for API which uses String type. You may have to provide a memory allocator implementation.unicode - use Unicode-compatible case conversion in file names - you may want to have it disabled for lower memory footprintNote: above features are enabled by default and were designed primarily for no_std usage.
The MIT license. See LICENSE.txt.