High-level wrapper around the unrar C library provided by rarlab.
This library can only extract and list archives, it cannot create them.
Please look inside the examples directory to see how to use this library. Specifically the lister example is well documented and advanced!
Basic example to list archive entries:
use unrar::Archive;
fn main() {
for entry in Archive::new("archive.rar").open_for_listing().unwrap() {
println!("{}", entry.unwrap());
}
}
Run this example: cargo run --example basic_list path/to/archive.rar
.
You can create an archive by using the rar
CLI: rar a archive.rar .
The primary type in this crate is [Archive
]
which denotes an archive on the file system. Archive
itself makes no
FS operations, unless one of the open
methods are called, returning
an [OpenArchive
].
The [Archive
] struct provides two major classes of methods:
- methods that do not touch the FS. These are opinionated utility methods
that are based on RAR path conventions out in the wild. Most commonly, multipart
files usually have extensions such as
.part08.rar
or.r08.rar
. Since extracting must start at the first part, it may be helpful to figure that out using, for instance,archive.as_first_part()
- methods that open the underlying path in the specified mode
(possible modes are [
List
], [ListSplit
] and [Process
]). These methods have the wordopen
in them, are fallible operations, return [OpenArchive
] inside aResult
and are as follows:open_for_listing
andopen_for_listing_split
: list the archive entries (skipping over content/payload)open_for_processing
: process archive entries as well as content/payloadbreak_open
: read archive even if an error is returned, if possible. The [OpenMode
] must be provided explicitly.
An archive is opened in one of these three modes: [List
], [ListSplit
] or [Process
].
This library does not provide random access into archives. Instead, files inside the archive
can only be processed as a stream, unidirectionally, front to back, alternating between
ReadHeader
and ProcessFile
operations (as dictated by the underlying C++ library).
That is the idea behind cursors:
Via cursors, the archive keeps track what operation is permitted next:
- [
CursorBeforeHeader
] ->ReadHeader
- [
CursorBeforeFile
] ->ProcessFile
The library enforces this by making
use of the typestate pattern. An archive, once
opened, starts in the CursorBeforeHeader
state and, thus, must have its read_header
method
called, which returns a new OpenArchive
instance in the CursorBeforeFile
state that only
exposes methods that internally map to the ProcessFile
operation.
Which methods are accessible in each step depends on the archive's current state and the
mode it was opened in.
Here is an overview of what methods are exposed for the OpenMode/Cursor combinations:
Open mode↓ ╲ Cursor position→ | before header | before file |
---|---|---|
[List ], [ListSplit ] |
read_header |
skip |
[Process ] |
read_header |
skip , read , extract , extract_to , extract_with_base |
Archives opened in [List
] or [ListSplit
] mode also implement [Iterator
] whereas archives in
[Process
] mode do not (though this may change in future releases). That is because the first
two will read and return headers while being forced to skip over the payload whereas the latter
has more sophisticated processing possibilities that's not easy to convey using an [Iterator
].
For more sophisticated examples, please look inside the examples/
folder.
Here's what a function that returns the first content of a file could look like:
fn first_file_content<P: AsRef<Path>>(path: P) -> UnrarResult<Vec<u8>> {
let archive = Archive::new(&path).open_for_processing()?; // cursor: before header
let archive = archive.read_header()?.expect("empty archive"); // cursor: before file
dbg!(&archive.entry().filename);
let (data, _rest) = archive.read()?; // cursor: before header
Ok(data)
}
# use std::path::Path;
# use unrar::{Archive, UnrarResult};
#
# let data = first_file_content("data/version.rar").unwrap();
# assert_eq!(std::str::from_utf8(&data), Ok("unrar-0.4.0"));
- Multipart files
- Listing archives
- Extracting them
- Reading them into memory (without extracting)
- Testing them
- Encrypted archives with password
- Linked statically against the unrar source.
- Build unrar C++ code from source
- Basic functionality that operates on filenames / paths (without reading archives)
- Documentation / RustDoc
- Test Suite
- utilizes type system to enforce correct usage
- Well-designed errors (planned)
- TBD
As this library is only a wrapper, these following features are not easily feasible and as such not planned:
- Creating archives
- Random access into arbitrary archive entries
- Pure Rust implementation
- Processing archives from a file descriptor / fs::File handle
- Processing archives from a byte stream
Feel free to contribute! If you detect a bug, open an issue.
Pull requests are also welcome!
If you need help using the library, feel free to create a new discussion or open an issue.
The parts authored by this library's contributors are licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0 (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
The embedded C/C++ library uses its own license. For more informations, see its license file.