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- /* Copyright (C) 2008-2016 Peter Palotas, Jeffrey Jangli, Alexandr Normuradov
- *
- * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
- * of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
- * in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
- * to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
- * copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
- * furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
- *
- * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
- * all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
- *
- * 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 AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
- * AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
- * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
- * OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
- * THE SOFTWARE.
- */
-
- using System;
- using System.Diagnostics.CodeAnalysis;
- using System.Globalization;
- using System.IO;
- using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
- using System.Security;
- using System.Text;
-
- namespace Alphaleonis.Win32.Filesystem
- {
- partial class Directory
- {
- /// <summary>
- /// Gets the current working directory of the application.
- /// <para>
- /// MSDN: Multithreaded applications and shared library code should not use the GetCurrentDirectory function and should avoid using relative path names.
- /// The current directory state written by the SetCurrentDirectory function is stored as a global variable in each process,
- /// therefore multithreaded applications cannot reliably use this value without possible data corruption from other threads that may also be reading or setting this value.
- /// <para>This limitation also applies to the SetCurrentDirectory and GetFullPathName functions. The exception being when the application is guaranteed to be running in a single thread,
- /// for example parsing file names from the command line argument string in the main thread prior to creating any additional threads.</para>
- /// <para>Using relative path names in multithreaded applications or shared library code can yield unpredictable results and is not supported.</para>
- /// </para>
- /// </summary>
- /// <returns>The path of the current working directory without a trailing directory separator.</returns>
- [SuppressMessage("Microsoft.Design", "CA1024:UsePropertiesWhereAppropriate"), SecurityCritical]
- public static string GetCurrentDirectory()
- {
- var nameBuffer = new StringBuilder(NativeMethods.MaxPathUnicode);
-
- // SetCurrentDirectory()
- // In the ANSI version of this function, the name is limited to 248 characters.
- // To extend this limit to 32,767 wide characters, call the Unicode version of the function and prepend "\\?\" to the path.
- // 2016-09-29: MSDN does not confirm LongPath usage but a Unicode version of this function exists.
-
- var folderNameLength = NativeMethods.GetCurrentDirectory((uint) nameBuffer.Capacity, nameBuffer);
- var lastError = Marshal.GetLastWin32Error();
-
- if (folderNameLength == 0)
- NativeError.ThrowException(lastError);
-
- if (folderNameLength > NativeMethods.MaxPathUnicode)
- throw new PathTooLongException(string.Format(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, "Path is greater than {0} characters: {1}", NativeMethods.MaxPathUnicode, folderNameLength));
-
- return nameBuffer.ToString();
- }
-
-
- /// <summary>
- /// Sets the application's current working directory to the specified directory.
- /// <para>
- /// MSDN: Multithreaded applications and shared library code should not use the GetCurrentDirectory function and should avoid using relative path names.
- /// The current directory state written by the SetCurrentDirectory function is stored as a global variable in each process,
- /// therefore multithreaded applications cannot reliably use this value without possible data corruption from other threads that may also be reading or setting this value.
- /// <para>This limitation also applies to the SetCurrentDirectory and GetFullPathName functions. The exception being when the application is guaranteed to be running in a single thread,
- /// for example parsing file names from the command line argument string in the main thread prior to creating any additional threads.</para>
- /// <para>Using relative path names in multithreaded applications or shared library code can yield unpredictable results and is not supported.</para>
- /// </para>
- /// </summary>
- /// <param name="path">The path to which the current working directory is set.</param>
- [SuppressMessage("Microsoft.Design", "CA1062:Validate arguments of public methods", MessageId = "0", Justification = "Utils.IsNullOrWhiteSpace validates arguments.")]
- [SecurityCritical]
- public static void SetCurrentDirectory(string path)
- {
- SetCurrentDirectory(path, PathFormat.RelativePath);
- }
-
-
- /// <summary>
- /// Sets the application's current working directory to the specified directory.
- /// <para>
- /// MSDN: Multithreaded applications and shared library code should not use the GetCurrentDirectory function and should avoid using relative path names.
- /// The current directory state written by the SetCurrentDirectory function is stored as a global variable in each process,
- /// therefore multithreaded applications cannot reliably use this value without possible data corruption from other threads that may also be reading or setting this value.
- /// <para>This limitation also applies to the SetCurrentDirectory and GetFullPathName functions. The exception being when the application is guaranteed to be running in a single thread,
- /// for example parsing file names from the command line argument string in the main thread prior to creating any additional threads.</para>
- /// <para>Using relative path names in multithreaded applications or shared library code can yield unpredictable results and is not supported.</para>
- /// </para>
- /// </summary>
- /// <param name="path">The path to which the current working directory is set.</param>
- /// <param name="pathFormat">Indicates the format of the path parameter.</param>
- [SuppressMessage("Microsoft.Design", "CA1062:Validate arguments of public methods", MessageId = "0", Justification = "Utils.IsNullOrWhiteSpace validates arguments.")]
- [SecurityCritical]
- public static void SetCurrentDirectory(string path, PathFormat pathFormat)
- {
- if (Utils.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(path))
- throw new ArgumentNullException("path");
-
- var fullCheck = pathFormat == PathFormat.RelativePath;
- Path.CheckSupportedPathFormat(path, fullCheck, fullCheck);
- var pathLp = Path.GetExtendedLengthPathCore(null, path, pathFormat, GetFullPathOptions.AddTrailingDirectorySeparator);
-
- if (pathFormat == PathFormat.FullPath)
- pathLp = Path.GetRegularPathCore(pathLp, GetFullPathOptions.None, false);
-
-
- // SetCurrentDirectory()
- // In the ANSI version of this function, the name is limited to 248 characters.
- // To extend this limit to 32,767 wide characters, call the Unicode version of the function and prepend "\\?\" to the path.
- // 2016-09-29: MSDN confirms LongPath usage starting with Windows 10, version 1607.
-
- if (!NativeMethods.SetCurrentDirectory(pathLp))
- NativeError.ThrowException(Marshal.GetLastWin32Error(), pathLp);
- }
- }
- }
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