lune/docs/luneTypes.d.luau
2023-02-23 11:31:42 +01:00

678 lines
18 KiB
Lua

--[=[
@type FsWriteOptions
@within fs
Options for filesystem APIs what write to files and/or directories.
This is a dictionary that may contain one or more of the following values:
* `overwrite` - If the target path should be overwritten or not, in the case that it already exists
]=]
export type FsWriteOptions = {
overwrite: boolean?,
}
--[=[
@class fs
Filesystem
]=]
declare fs: {
--[=[
@within fs
@must_use
Reads a file at `path`.
An error will be thrown in the following situations:
* `path` does not point to an existing file.
* The current process lacks permissions to read the file.
* The contents of the file cannot be read as a UTF-8 string.
* Some other I/O error occurred.
@param path The path to the file to read
@return The contents of the file
]=]
readFile: (path: string) -> string,
--[=[
@within fs
@must_use
Reads entries in a directory at `path`.
An error will be thrown in the following situations:
* `path` does not point to an existing directory.
* The current process lacks permissions to read the contents of the directory.
* Some other I/O error occurred.
@param path The directory path to search in
@return A list of files & directories found
]=]
readDir: (path: string) -> { string },
--[=[
@within fs
Writes to a file at `path`.
An error will be thrown in the following situations:
* The file's parent directory does not exist.
* The current process lacks permissions to write to the file.
* Some other I/O error occurred.
@param path The path of the file
@param contents The contents of the file
]=]
writeFile: (path: string, contents: string) -> (),
--[=[
@within fs
Creates a directory and its parent directories if they are missing.
An error will be thrown in the following situations:
* `path` already points to an existing file or directory.
* The current process lacks permissions to create the directory or its missing parents.
* Some other I/O error occurred.
@param path The directory to create
]=]
writeDir: (path: string) -> (),
--[=[
@within fs
Removes a file.
An error will be thrown in the following situations:
* `path` does not point to an existing file.
* The current process lacks permissions to remove the file.
* Some other I/O error occurred.
@param path The file to remove
]=]
removeFile: (path: string) -> (),
--[=[
@within fs
Removes a directory and all of its contents.
An error will be thrown in the following situations:
* `path` is not an existing and empty directory.
* The current process lacks permissions to remove the directory.
* Some other I/O error occurred.
@param path The directory to remove
]=]
removeDir: (path: string) -> (),
--[=[
@within fs
@must_use
Checks if a given path is a file.
An error will be thrown in the following situations:
* The current process lacks permissions to read at `path`.
* Some other I/O error occurred.
@param path The file path to check
@return If the path is a file or not
]=]
isFile: (path: string) -> boolean,
--[=[
@within fs
@must_use
Checks if a given path is a directory.
An error will be thrown in the following situations:
* The current process lacks permissions to read at `path`.
* Some other I/O error occurred.
@param path The directory path to check
@return If the path is a directory or not
]=]
isDir: (path: string) -> boolean,
--[=[
@within fs
Moves a file or directory to a new path.
Throws an error if a file or directory already exists at the target path.
This can be bypassed by passing `true` as the third argument, or a dictionary of options.
Refer to the documentation for `FsWriteOptions` for specific option keys and their values.
An error will be thrown in the following situations:
* The current process lacks permissions to read at `from` or write at `to`.
* The new path exists on a different mount point.
* Some other I/O error occurred.
@param from The path to move from
@param to The path to move to
@param overwriteOrOptions Options for the target path, such as if should be overwritten if it already exists
]=]
move: (from: string, to: string, overwriteOrOptions: (boolean | FsWriteOptions)?) -> (),
}
type NetMethod = "GET" | "POST" | "PUT" | "DELETE" | "HEAD" | "OPTIONS" | "PATCH"
--[=[
@type NetFetchParams
@within net
Parameters for sending network requests with `net.request`.
This is a dictionary that may contain one or more of the following values:
* `url` - The URL to send a request to. This is always required
* `method` - The HTTP method verb, such as `"GET"`, `"POST"`, `"PATCH"`, `"PUT"`, or `"DELETE"`. Defaults to `"GET"`
* `query` - A table of key-value pairs representing query parameters in the request path
* `headers` - A table of key-value pairs representing headers
* `body` - The request body
]=]
export type NetFetchParams = {
url: string,
method: NetMethod?,
query: { [string]: string }?,
headers: { [string]: string }?,
body: string?,
}
--[=[
@type NetFetchResponse
@within new
Response type for sending network requests with `net.request`.
This is a dictionary containing the following values:
* `ok` - If the status code is a canonical success status code, meaning within the range 200 -> 299
* `statusCode` - The status code returned for the request
* `statusMessage` - The canonical status message for the returned status code, such as `"Not Found"` for status code 404
* `headers` - A table of key-value pairs representing headers
* `body` - The request body, or an empty string if one was not given
]=]
export type NetFetchResponse = {
ok: boolean,
statusCode: number,
statusMessage: string,
headers: { [string]: string },
body: string,
}
--[=[
@type NetRequest
@within net
Data type for requests in `net.serve`.
This is a dictionary containing the following values:
* `path` - The path being requested, relative to the root. Will be `/` if not specified
* `query` - A table of key-value pairs representing query parameters in the request path
* `method` - The HTTP method verb, such as `"GET"`, `"POST"`, `"PATCH"`, `"PUT"`, or `"DELETE"`. Will always be uppercase
* `headers` - A table of key-value pairs representing headers
* `body` - The request body, or an empty string if one was not given
]=]
export type NetRequest = {
path: string,
query: { [string]: string? },
method: NetMethod,
headers: { [string]: string },
body: string,
}
--[=[
@type NetRequest
@within net
Response type for requests in `net.serve`.
This is a dictionary that may contain one or more of the following values:
* `status` - The status code for the request, in the range `100` -> `599`
* `headers` - A table of key-value pairs representing headers
* `body` - The response body
]=]
export type NetResponse = {
status: number?,
headers: { [string]: string }?,
body: string?,
}
type NetServeHttpHandler = (request: NetRequest) -> string | NetResponse
type NetServeWebSocketHandler = (socket: NetWebSocket) -> ()
--[=[
@type NetServeConfig
@within net
Configuration for `net.serve`.
This may contain one of, or both of the following callbacks:
* `handleRequest` for handling normal http requests, equivalent to just passing a function to `net.serve`
* `handleWebSocket` for handling web socket requests, which will receive a `NetWebSocket` object as its first and only parameter
]=]
export type NetServeConfig = {
handleRequest: NetServeHttpHandler?,
handleWebSocket: NetServeWebSocketHandler?,
}
--[=[
@type NetServeHandle
@within net
A handle to a currently running web server, containing a single `stop` function to gracefully shut down the web server.
]=]
export type NetServeHandle = {
stop: () -> (),
}
--[=[
@type NetWebSocket
@within net
A reference to a web socket connection.
The web socket may be in either an "open" or a "closed" state, changing its current behavior.
When open:
* Any function on the socket such as `send`, `next` or `close` can be called without erroring
* `next` can be called to yield until the next message is received or the socket becomes closed
When closed:
* `next` will no longer return any message(s) and instead instantly return nil
* `send` will throw an error stating that the socket has been closed
]=]
declare class NetWebSocket
close: () -> ()
send: (message: string) -> ()
next: () -> string?
iter: () -> () -> string
function __iter(self): () -> string
end
--[=[
@class net
Networking
]=]
declare net: {
--[=[
@within net
Sends an HTTP request using the given url and / or parameters, and returns a dictionary that describes the response received.
Only throws an error if a miscellaneous network or I/O error occurs, never for unsuccessful status codes.
@param config The URL or request config to use
@return A dictionary representing the response for the request
]=]
request: (config: string | NetFetchParams) -> NetFetchResponse,
--[=[
@within net
@must_use
Connects to a web socket at the given URL.
Throws an error if the server at the given URL does not support
web sockets, or if a miscellaneous network or I/O error occurs.
@param url The URL to connect to
@return A web socket handle
]=]
socket: (url: string) -> NetWebSocket,
--[=[
@within net
Creates an HTTP server that listens on the given `port`.
This will ***not*** block and will keep listening for requests on the given `port`
until the `stop` function on the returned `NetServeHandle` has been called.
@param port The port to use for the server
@param handlerOrConfig The handler function or config to use for the server
]=]
serve: (port: number, handlerOrConfig: NetServeHttpHandler | NetServeConfig) -> NetServeHandle,
--[=[
@within net
@must_use
Encodes the given value as JSON.
@param value The value to encode as JSON
@param pretty If the encoded JSON string should include newlines and spaces. Defaults to false
@return The encoded JSON string
]=]
jsonEncode: (value: any, pretty: boolean?) -> string,
--[=[
@within net
@must_use
Decodes the given JSON string into a lua value.
@param encoded The JSON string to decode
@return The decoded lua value
]=]
jsonDecode: (encoded: string) -> any,
}
type ProcessSpawnOptionsStdio = "inherit" | "default"
--[=[
@type ProcessSpawnOptions
@within process
A dictionary of options for `process.spawn`, with the following available values:
* `cwd` - The current working directory for the process
* `env` - Extra environment variables to give to the process
* `shell` - Whether to run in a shell or not - set to `true` to run using the default shell, or a string to run using a specific shell
* `stdio` - How to treat output and error streams from the child process - set to "inherit" to pass output and error streams to the current process
]=]
export type ProcessSpawnOptions = {
cwd: string?,
env: { [string]: string }?,
shell: (boolean | string)?,
stdio: ProcessSpawnOptionsStdio?,
}
--[=[
@type ProcessSpawnResult
@within process
Result type for child processes in `process.spawn`.
This is a dictionary containing the following values:
* `ok` - If the child process exited successfully or not, meaning the exit code was zero or not set
* `code` - The exit code set by the child process, or 0 if one was not set
* `stdout` - The full contents written to stdout by the child process, or an empty string if nothing was written
* `stderr` - The full contents written to stderr by the child process, or an empty string if nothing was written
]=]
export type ProcessSpawnResult = {
ok: boolean,
code: number,
stdout: string,
stderr: string,
}
--[=[
@class process
Current process & child processes
]=]
declare process: {
--[=[
@within process
@read_only
The current operating system being used.
Possible values:
* `"linux"`
* `"macos"`
* `"windows"`
]=]
os: "linux" | "macos" | "windows",
--[=[
@within process
@read_only
The architecture of the processor currently being used.
Possible values:
* `"x86_64"`
* `"aarch64"`
]=]
arch: "x86_64" | "aarch64",
--[=[
@within process
@read_only
The arguments given when running the Lune script.
]=]
args: { string },
--[=[
@within process
@read_only
The current working directory in which the Lune script is running.
]=]
cwd: string,
--[=[
@within process
@read_write
Current environment variables for this process.
Setting a value on this table will set the corresponding environment variable.
]=]
env: { [string]: string? },
--[=[
@within process
Exits the currently running script as soon as possible with the given exit code.
Exit code 0 is treated as a successful exit, any other value is treated as an error.
Setting the exit code using this function will override any otherwise automatic exit code.
@param code The exit code to set
]=]
exit: (code: number?) -> (),
--[=[
@within process
Spawns a child process that will run the program `program`, and returns a dictionary that describes the final status and ouput of the child process.
The second argument, `params`, can be passed as a list of string parameters to give to the program.
The third argument, `options`, can be passed as a dictionary of options to give to the child process.
Refer to the documentation for `ProcessSpawnOptions` for specific option keys and their values.
@param program The program to spawn as a child process
@param params Additional parameters to pass to the program
@param options A dictionary of options for the child process
@return A dictionary representing the result of the child process
]=]
spawn: (
program: string,
params: { string }?,
options: ProcessSpawnOptions?
) -> ProcessSpawnResult,
}
--[=[
@class stdio
Standard input / output & utility functions
]=]
declare stdio: {
--[=[
@within stdio
@must_use
Return an ANSI string that can be used to modify the persistent output color.
Pass `"reset"` to get a string that can reset the persistent output color.
### Example usage
```lua
stdio.write(stdio.color("red"))
print("This text will be red")
stdio.write(stdio.color("reset"))
print("This text will be normal")
```
@param color The color to use
@return A printable ANSI string
]=]
color: (color: "reset" | "black" | "red" | "green" | "yellow" | "blue" | "purple" | "cyan" | "white") -> string,
--[=[
@within stdio
@must_use
Return an ANSI string that can be used to modify the persistent output style.
Pass `"reset"` to get a string that can reset the persistent output style.
### Example usage
```lua
stdio.write(stdio.style("bold"))
print("This text will be bold")
stdio.write(stdio.style("reset"))
print("This text will be normal")
```
@param style The style to use
@return A printable ANSI string
]=]
style: (style: "reset" | "bold" | "dim") -> string,
--[=[
@within stdio
@must_use
Formats arguments into a human-readable string with syntax highlighting for tables.
@param ... The values to format
@return The formatted string
]=]
format: (...any) -> string,
--[=[
@within stdio
Writes a string directly to stdout, without any newline.
@param s The string to write to stdout
]=]
write: (s: string) -> (),
--[=[
@within stdio
Writes a string directly to stderr, without any newline.
@param s The string to write to stderr
]=]
ewrite: (s: string) -> (),
--[=[
@within stdio
@must_use
Prompts for user input using the wanted kind of prompt:
* `"text"` - Prompts for a plain text string from the user
* `"confirm"` - Prompts the user to confirm with y / n (yes / no)
* `"select"` - Prompts the user to select *one* value from a list
* `"multiselect"` - Prompts the user to select *one or more* values from a list
* `nil` - Equivalent to `"text"` with no extra arguments
@param kind The kind of prompt to use
@param message The message to show the user
@param defaultOrOptions The default value for the prompt, or options to choose from for selection prompts
]=]
prompt: (
(() -> string)
& ((kind: "text", message: string?, defaultOrOptions: string?) -> string)
& ((kind: "confirm", message: string, defaultOrOptions: boolean?) -> boolean)
& ((kind: "select", message: string?, defaultOrOptions: { string }) -> number?)
& ((kind: "multiselect", message: string?, defaultOrOptions: { string }) -> { number }?)
),
}
--[=[
@class task
Task scheduler & thread spawning
]=]
declare task: {
--[=[
@within task
Stops a currently scheduled thread from resuming.
@param thread The thread to cancel
]=]
cancel: (thread: thread) -> (),
--[=[
@within task
Defers a thread or function to run at the end of the current task queue.
@param functionOrThread The function or thread to defer
@return The thread that will be deferred
]=]
defer: <T...>(functionOrThread: thread | (T...) -> (...any), T...) -> thread,
--[=[
@within task
Delays a thread or function to run after `duration` seconds.
@param functionOrThread The function or thread to delay
@return The thread that will be delayed
]=]
delay: <T...>(duration: number?, functionOrThread: thread | (T...) -> (...any), T...) -> thread,
--[=[
@within task
Instantly runs a thread or function.
If the spawned task yields, the thread that spawned the task
will resume, letting the spawned task run in the background.
@param functionOrThread The function or thread to spawn
@return The thread that was spawned
]=]
spawn: <T...>(functionOrThread: thread | (T...) -> (...any), T...) -> thread,
--[=[
@within task
Waits for the given duration, with a minimum wait time of 10 milliseconds.
@param duration The amount of time to wait
@return The exact amount of time waited
]=]
wait: (duration: number?) -> number,
}
--[=[
Prints given value(s) to stdout.
This will format and prettify values such as tables, numbers, booleans, and more.
]=]
declare print: <T...>(T...) -> ()
--[=[
Prints given value(s) to stdout with a leading "[INFO]" tag.
This will format and prettify values such as tables, numbers, booleans, and more.
]=]
declare info: <T...>(T...) -> ()
--[=[
Prints given value(s) to stdout with a leading "[WARN]" tag.
This will format and prettify values such as tables, numbers, booleans, and more.
]=]
declare warn: <T...>(T...) -> ()
--[=[
Throws an error and prints a formatted version of it with a leading "[ERROR]" tag.
@param message The error message to throw
@param level The stack level to throw the error at, defaults to 0
]=]
declare error: <T>(message: T, level: number?) -> ()