HANDLESection: C Library Functions (3) |
HANDLESection: C Library Functions (3) |
#include <sys/types.h> #include <xfs/handle.h> int path_to_handle (char *path, void **hanp, size_t *hlen); int path_to_fshandle (char *path, void **hanp, size_t *hlen); int handle_to_fshandle (void *hanp, size_t hlen, void **fshanp, size_t *fshlen); int open_by_handle (void *hanp, size_t hlen, int oflag); int readlink_by_handle (void *hanp, size_t hlen, void *buf, size_t bs); int attr_multi_by_handle (void *hanp, size_t hlen, void *buf, int rtrvcnt, int flags); int attr_list_by_handle (void *hanp, size_t hlen, char *buf, size_t bufsiz, int flags, struct attrlist_cursor *cursor); int fssetdm_by_handle (void *hanp, size_t hlen, struct fsdmidata *fssetdm); void free_handle (void *hanp, size_t hlen); [
These functions provide a way to perform certain filesystem operations without using a file descriptor to access filesystem objects. They are intended for use by a limited set of system utilities such as backup programs. They are supported only by the XFS filesystem. Link with the libhandle library to access these functions.
A handle uniquely identifies a filesystem object or an entire filesystem. There is one and only one handle per filesystem or filesystem object. Handles consist of some number of bytes. The size of a handle (i.e. the number of bytes comprising it) varies by the type of handle and may vary for different objects of the same type. The content of a handle is opaque to applications. Since handle sizes vary and their contents are opaque, handles are described by two quantities, a pointer and a size. The size indicates the number of bytes in the handle which are pointed to by the pointer. The path_to_handle() function returns the handle for the object given by the path argument. If the final component of the path name is a symbolic link, the handle returned is that of the link itself. The path_to_fshandle() function returns the handle for the filesystem in which the object given by the path argument resides. The handle_to_fshandle() function returns the handle for the filesystem in which the object referenced by the handle given by the hanp and hlen arguments resides. The open_by_handle() function opens a file descriptor for the object referenced by a handle. It is analogous and identical to open(2) with the exception of accepting handles instead of path names. The readlink_by_handle() function returns the contents of a symbolic link referenced by a handle. The attr_multi_by_handle() function manipulates multiple user attributes on a filesystem object. It is analogous and identical to attr_multif(3) except that a handle is specified instead of a file descriptor. The attr_list_by_handle() function returns the names of the user attributes of a filesystem object. It is analogous and identical to attr_listf(3) except that a handle is specified instead of a file descriptor. The fssetdm_by_handle() function sets the di_dmevmask and di_dmstate fields in an XFS on-disk inode. It is analogous to the XFS_IOC_FSSETDM xfsctl(3) command, except that a handle is specified instead of a file. The free_handle() function frees the storage allocated for handles returned by the following functions: path_to_handle(), path_to_fshandle(), and handle_to_fshandle().
The function free_handle() has no failure indication. The other functions return the value 0 to the calling process if they succeed; otherwise, they return the value -1 and set errno to indicate the error: