Home

Awesome

SharpFileSystem

AppVeyor Travis license

SharpFileSystem is a Virtual File System (VFS) implementation for .NET to allow access to different filesystems in the same way for normal files and directories.

Motivation

After looking a long time for a VFS for .NET, so that I could read files and directories in archives (zip and rar) the same way as any ordinary files and directories. I couldn't find any complete solution for this problem, so I decided to implement a VFS myself. Also what I didn't like in the ordinary filesystems was the path-system. It allowed relative paths (like ..), which can often lead to security issues without explicit checking. It allows referring to directories the same way as referring to files. This often leads to strange behavior, like copying a directory (source) to another directory (destination), here it is often vague whether the destination directory should be overwritten or if it should copy the source-directory inside the destination-directory.

Goals

Features

At the moment the following filesystems are implemented:

There are also filesystems that alter the exposed structure of existing filesystems. These allow you to mix different systems together to get the desired file-structure:

Implementation

At the heart of the system there is the IFileSystem interface. This describes the operations that should be provided by every filesystem:

public interface IFileSystem : IDisposable
{
	ICollection<FileSystemPath> GetEntities(FileSystemPath path);
	bool Exists(FileSystemPath path);
	Stream CreateFile(FileSystemPath path);
	Stream OpenFile(FileSystemPath path, FileAccess access);
	void CreateDirectory(FileSystemPath path);
	void Delete(FileSystemPath path);
}

Normally in .NET/Mono we refer to files by their path coded as a string. This sometimes leads to inconsistencies, which is why I've created the type FileSystemPath to encapsulate the path in SharpFileSystem. There are operations that help create and alter the path, but the rules of using them are more strict, which creates a much more robust environment for the programmer:

Some examples of using FileSystemPath:

OperationResult
var root = FileSystemPath.Root/
var mydir = root.AppendDirectory("mydir")/mydir/
var myfile = mydir.AppendFile("myfile")/mydir/myfile
myfile.AppendFile("myfile2")Error: The specified FileSystemPath is not a directory.
mydir.ParentPath/