| /* |
| FUSE: Filesystem in Userspace |
| Copyright (C) 2001-2007 Miklos Szeredi <miklos@szeredi.hu> |
| |
| This program can be distributed under the terms of the GNU LGPLv2. |
| See the file COPYING.LIB. |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef _FUSE_H_ |
| #define _FUSE_H_ |
| |
| /** @file |
| * |
| * This file defines the library interface of FUSE |
| * |
| * IMPORTANT: you should define FUSE_USE_VERSION before including this |
| * header. To use the newest API define it to 26 (recommended for any |
| * new application), to use the old API define it to 21 (default) 22 |
| * or 25, to use the even older 1.X API define it to 11. |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef FUSE_USE_VERSION |
| #define FUSE_USE_VERSION 21 |
| #endif |
| |
| #include "fuse_common.h" |
| |
| #include <fcntl.h> |
| #include <time.h> |
| #include <utime.h> |
| #include <sys/types.h> |
| #include <sys/stat.h> |
| #if defined(__ANDROID__) |
| #include <pthread.h> |
| #endif |
| #include <sys/statvfs.h> |
| #include <sys/uio.h> |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| extern "C" { |
| #endif |
| |
| /* ----------------------------------------------------------- * |
| * Basic FUSE API * |
| * ----------------------------------------------------------- */ |
| |
| /** Handle for a FUSE filesystem */ |
| struct fuse; |
| |
| /** Structure containing a raw command */ |
| struct fuse_cmd; |
| |
| /** Function to add an entry in a readdir() operation |
| * |
| * @param buf the buffer passed to the readdir() operation |
| * @param name the file name of the directory entry |
| * @param stat file attributes, can be NULL |
| * @param off offset of the next entry or zero |
| * @return 1 if buffer is full, zero otherwise |
| */ |
| typedef int (*fuse_fill_dir_t) (void *buf, const char *name, |
| const struct stat *stbuf, loff_t off); |
| |
| /* Used by deprecated getdir() method */ |
| typedef struct fuse_dirhandle *fuse_dirh_t; |
| typedef int (*fuse_dirfil_t) (fuse_dirh_t h, const char *name, int type, |
| ino_t ino); |
| |
| /** |
| * The file system operations: |
| * |
| * Most of these should work very similarly to the well known UNIX |
| * file system operations. A major exception is that instead of |
| * returning an error in 'errno', the operation should return the |
| * negated error value (-errno) directly. |
| * |
| * All methods are optional, but some are essential for a useful |
| * filesystem (e.g. getattr). Open, flush, release, fsync, opendir, |
| * releasedir, fsyncdir, access, create, ftruncate, fgetattr, lock, |
| * init and destroy are special purpose methods, without which a full |
| * featured filesystem can still be implemented. |
| * |
| * Almost all operations take a path which can be of any length. |
| * |
| * Changed in fuse 2.8.0 (regardless of API version) |
| * Previously, paths were limited to a length of PATH_MAX. |
| * |
| * See http://fuse.sourceforge.net/wiki/ for more information. There |
| * is also a snapshot of the relevant wiki pages in the doc/ folder. |
| */ |
| struct fuse_operations { |
| /** Get file attributes. |
| * |
| * Similar to stat(). The 'st_dev' and 'st_blksize' fields are |
| * ignored. The 'st_ino' field is ignored except if the 'use_ino' |
| * mount option is given. |
| */ |
| int (*getattr) (const char *, struct stat *); |
| |
| /** Read the target of a symbolic link |
| * |
| * The buffer should be filled with a null terminated string. The |
| * buffer size argument includes the space for the terminating |
| * null character. If the linkname is too long to fit in the |
| * buffer, it should be truncated. The return value should be 0 |
| * for success. |
| */ |
| int (*readlink) (const char *, char *, size_t); |
| |
| /* Deprecated, use readdir() instead */ |
| int (*getdir) (const char *, fuse_dirh_t, fuse_dirfil_t); |
| |
| /** Create a file node |
| * |
| * This is called for creation of all non-directory, non-symlink |
| * nodes. If the filesystem defines a create() method, then for |
| * regular files that will be called instead. |
| */ |
| int (*mknod) (const char *, mode_t, dev_t); |
| |
| /** Create a directory |
| * |
| * Note that the mode argument may not have the type specification |
| * bits set, i.e. S_ISDIR(mode) can be false. To obtain the |
| * correct directory type bits use mode|S_IFDIR |
| * */ |
| int (*mkdir) (const char *, mode_t); |
| |
| /** Remove a file */ |
| int (*unlink) (const char *); |
| |
| /** Remove a directory */ |
| int (*rmdir) (const char *); |
| |
| /** Create a symbolic link */ |
| int (*symlink) (const char *, const char *); |
| |
| /** Rename a file */ |
| int (*rename) (const char *, const char *); |
| |
| /** Create a hard link to a file */ |
| int (*link) (const char *, const char *); |
| |
| /** Change the permission bits of a file */ |
| int (*chmod) (const char *, mode_t); |
| |
| /** Change the owner and group of a file */ |
| int (*chown) (const char *, uid_t, gid_t); |
| |
| /** Change the size of a file */ |
| int (*truncate) (const char *, loff_t); |
| |
| /** Change the access and/or modification times of a file |
| * |
| * Deprecated, use utimens() instead. |
| */ |
| int (*utime) (const char *, struct utimbuf *); |
| |
| /** File open operation |
| * |
| * No creation (O_CREAT, O_EXCL) and by default also no |
| * truncation (O_TRUNC) flags will be passed to open(). If an |
| * application specifies O_TRUNC, fuse first calls truncate() |
| * and then open(). Only if 'atomic_o_trunc' has been |
| * specified and kernel version is 2.6.24 or later, O_TRUNC is |
| * passed on to open. |
| * |
| * Unless the 'default_permissions' mount option is given, |
| * open should check if the operation is permitted for the |
| * given flags. Optionally open may also return an arbitrary |
| * filehandle in the fuse_file_info structure, which will be |
| * passed to all file operations. |
| * |
| * Changed in version 2.2 |
| */ |
| int (*open) (const char *, struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** Read data from an open file |
| * |
| * Read should return exactly the number of bytes requested except |
| * on EOF or error, otherwise the rest of the data will be |
| * substituted with zeroes. An exception to this is when the |
| * 'direct_io' mount option is specified, in which case the return |
| * value of the read system call will reflect the return value of |
| * this operation. |
| * |
| * Changed in version 2.2 |
| */ |
| int (*read) (const char *, char *, size_t, loff_t, |
| struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** Write data to an open file |
| * |
| * Write should return exactly the number of bytes requested |
| * except on error. An exception to this is when the 'direct_io' |
| * mount option is specified (see read operation). |
| * |
| * Changed in version 2.2 |
| */ |
| int (*write) (const char *, const char *, size_t, loff_t, |
| struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** Get file system statistics |
| * |
| * The 'f_frsize', 'f_favail', 'f_fsid' and 'f_flag' fields are ignored |
| * |
| * Replaced 'struct statfs' parameter with 'struct statvfs' in |
| * version 2.5 |
| */ |
| int (*statfs) (const char *, struct statvfs *); |
| |
| /** Possibly flush cached data |
| * |
| * BIG NOTE: This is not equivalent to fsync(). It's not a |
| * request to sync dirty data. |
| * |
| * Flush is called on each close() of a file descriptor. So if a |
| * filesystem wants to return write errors in close() and the file |
| * has cached dirty data, this is a good place to write back data |
| * and return any errors. Since many applications ignore close() |
| * errors this is not always useful. |
| * |
| * NOTE: The flush() method may be called more than once for each |
| * open(). This happens if more than one file descriptor refers |
| * to an opened file due to dup(), dup2() or fork() calls. It is |
| * not possible to determine if a flush is final, so each flush |
| * should be treated equally. Multiple write-flush sequences are |
| * relatively rare, so this shouldn't be a problem. |
| * |
| * Filesystems shouldn't assume that flush will always be called |
| * after some writes, or that if will be called at all. |
| * |
| * Changed in version 2.2 |
| */ |
| int (*flush) (const char *, struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** Release an open file |
| * |
| * Release is called when there are no more references to an open |
| * file: all file descriptors are closed and all memory mappings |
| * are unmapped. |
| * |
| * For every open() call there will be exactly one release() call |
| * with the same flags and file descriptor. It is possible to |
| * have a file opened more than once, in which case only the last |
| * release will mean, that no more reads/writes will happen on the |
| * file. The return value of release is ignored. |
| * |
| * Changed in version 2.2 |
| */ |
| int (*release) (const char *, struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** Synchronize file contents |
| * |
| * If the datasync parameter is non-zero, then only the user data |
| * should be flushed, not the meta data. |
| * |
| * Changed in version 2.2 |
| */ |
| int (*fsync) (const char *, int, struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** Set extended attributes */ |
| int (*setxattr) (const char *, const char *, const char *, size_t, int); |
| |
| /** Get extended attributes */ |
| int (*getxattr) (const char *, const char *, char *, size_t); |
| |
| /** List extended attributes */ |
| int (*listxattr) (const char *, char *, size_t); |
| |
| /** Remove extended attributes */ |
| int (*removexattr) (const char *, const char *); |
| |
| /** Open directory |
| * |
| * Unless the 'default_permissions' mount option is given, |
| * this method should check if opendir is permitted for this |
| * directory. Optionally opendir may also return an arbitrary |
| * filehandle in the fuse_file_info structure, which will be |
| * passed to readdir, closedir and fsyncdir. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.3 |
| */ |
| int (*opendir) (const char *, struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** Read directory |
| * |
| * This supersedes the old getdir() interface. New applications |
| * should use this. |
| * |
| * The filesystem may choose between two modes of operation: |
| * |
| * 1) The readdir implementation ignores the offset parameter, and |
| * passes zero to the filler function's offset. The filler |
| * function will not return '1' (unless an error happens), so the |
| * whole directory is read in a single readdir operation. This |
| * works just like the old getdir() method. |
| * |
| * 2) The readdir implementation keeps track of the offsets of the |
| * directory entries. It uses the offset parameter and always |
| * passes non-zero offset to the filler function. When the buffer |
| * is full (or an error happens) the filler function will return |
| * '1'. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.3 |
| */ |
| int (*readdir) (const char *, void *, fuse_fill_dir_t, loff_t, |
| struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** Release directory |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.3 |
| */ |
| int (*releasedir) (const char *, struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** Synchronize directory contents |
| * |
| * If the datasync parameter is non-zero, then only the user data |
| * should be flushed, not the meta data |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.3 |
| */ |
| int (*fsyncdir) (const char *, int, struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** |
| * Initialize filesystem |
| * |
| * The return value will passed in the private_data field of |
| * fuse_context to all file operations and as a parameter to the |
| * destroy() method. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.3 |
| * Changed in version 2.6 |
| */ |
| void *(*init) (struct fuse_conn_info *conn); |
| |
| /** |
| * Clean up filesystem |
| * |
| * Called on filesystem exit. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.3 |
| */ |
| void (*destroy) (void *); |
| |
| /** |
| * Check file access permissions |
| * |
| * This will be called for the access() system call. If the |
| * 'default_permissions' mount option is given, this method is not |
| * called. |
| * |
| * This method is not called under Linux kernel versions 2.4.x |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.5 |
| */ |
| int (*access) (const char *, int); |
| |
| /** |
| * Create and open a file |
| * |
| * If the file does not exist, first create it with the specified |
| * mode, and then open it. |
| * |
| * If this method is not implemented or under Linux kernel |
| * versions earlier than 2.6.15, the mknod() and open() methods |
| * will be called instead. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.5 |
| */ |
| int (*create) (const char *, mode_t, struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** |
| * Change the size of an open file |
| * |
| * This method is called instead of the truncate() method if the |
| * truncation was invoked from an ftruncate() system call. |
| * |
| * If this method is not implemented or under Linux kernel |
| * versions earlier than 2.6.15, the truncate() method will be |
| * called instead. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.5 |
| */ |
| int (*ftruncate) (const char *, loff_t, struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** |
| * Get attributes from an open file |
| * |
| * This method is called instead of the getattr() method if the |
| * file information is available. |
| * |
| * Currently this is only called after the create() method if that |
| * is implemented (see above). Later it may be called for |
| * invocations of fstat() too. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.5 |
| */ |
| int (*fgetattr) (const char *, struct stat *, struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** |
| * Perform POSIX file locking operation |
| * |
| * The cmd argument will be either F_GETLK, F_SETLK or F_SETLKW. |
| * |
| * For the meaning of fields in 'struct flock' see the man page |
| * for fcntl(2). The l_whence field will always be set to |
| * SEEK_SET. |
| * |
| * For checking lock ownership, the 'fuse_file_info->owner' |
| * argument must be used. |
| * |
| * For F_GETLK operation, the library will first check currently |
| * held locks, and if a conflicting lock is found it will return |
| * information without calling this method. This ensures, that |
| * for local locks the l_pid field is correctly filled in. The |
| * results may not be accurate in case of race conditions and in |
| * the presence of hard links, but it's unlikely that an |
| * application would rely on accurate GETLK results in these |
| * cases. If a conflicting lock is not found, this method will be |
| * called, and the filesystem may fill out l_pid by a meaningful |
| * value, or it may leave this field zero. |
| * |
| * For F_SETLK and F_SETLKW the l_pid field will be set to the pid |
| * of the process performing the locking operation. |
| * |
| * Note: if this method is not implemented, the kernel will still |
| * allow file locking to work locally. Hence it is only |
| * interesting for network filesystems and similar. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.6 |
| */ |
| int (*lock) (const char *, struct fuse_file_info *, int cmd, |
| struct flock *); |
| |
| /** |
| * Change the access and modification times of a file with |
| * nanosecond resolution |
| * |
| * This supersedes the old utime() interface. New applications |
| * should use this. |
| * |
| * See the utimensat(2) man page for details. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.6 |
| */ |
| int (*utimens) (const char *, const struct timespec tv[2]); |
| |
| /** |
| * Map block index within file to block index within device |
| * |
| * Note: This makes sense only for block device backed filesystems |
| * mounted with the 'blkdev' option |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.6 |
| */ |
| int (*bmap) (const char *, size_t blocksize, uint64_t *idx); |
| |
| /** |
| * Flag indicating that the filesystem can accept a NULL path |
| * as the first argument for the following operations: |
| * |
| * read, write, flush, release, fsync, readdir, releasedir, |
| * fsyncdir, ftruncate, fgetattr, lock, ioctl and poll |
| * |
| * If this flag is set these operations continue to work on |
| * unlinked files even if "-ohard_remove" option was specified. |
| */ |
| unsigned int flag_nullpath_ok:1; |
| |
| /** |
| * Flag indicating that the path need not be calculated for |
| * the following operations: |
| * |
| * read, write, flush, release, fsync, readdir, releasedir, |
| * fsyncdir, ftruncate, fgetattr, lock, ioctl and poll |
| * |
| * Closely related to flag_nullpath_ok, but if this flag is |
| * set then the path will not be calculaged even if the file |
| * wasn't unlinked. However the path can still be non-NULL if |
| * it needs to be calculated for some other reason. |
| */ |
| unsigned int flag_nopath:1; |
| |
| /** |
| * Flag indicating that the filesystem accepts special |
| * UTIME_NOW and UTIME_OMIT values in its utimens operation. |
| */ |
| unsigned int flag_utime_omit_ok:1; |
| |
| /** |
| * Reserved flags, don't set |
| */ |
| unsigned int flag_reserved:29; |
| |
| /** |
| * Ioctl |
| * |
| * flags will have FUSE_IOCTL_COMPAT set for 32bit ioctls in |
| * 64bit environment. The size and direction of data is |
| * determined by _IOC_*() decoding of cmd. For _IOC_NONE, |
| * data will be NULL, for _IOC_WRITE data is out area, for |
| * _IOC_READ in area and if both are set in/out area. In all |
| * non-NULL cases, the area is of _IOC_SIZE(cmd) bytes. |
| * |
| * If flags has FUSE_IOCTL_DIR then the fuse_file_info refers to a |
| * directory file handle. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.8 |
| */ |
| int (*ioctl) (const char *, int cmd, void *arg, |
| struct fuse_file_info *, unsigned int flags, void *data); |
| |
| /** |
| * Poll for IO readiness events |
| * |
| * Note: If ph is non-NULL, the client should notify |
| * when IO readiness events occur by calling |
| * fuse_notify_poll() with the specified ph. |
| * |
| * Regardless of the number of times poll with a non-NULL ph |
| * is received, single notification is enough to clear all. |
| * Notifying more times incurs overhead but doesn't harm |
| * correctness. |
| * |
| * The callee is responsible for destroying ph with |
| * fuse_pollhandle_destroy() when no longer in use. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.8 |
| */ |
| int (*poll) (const char *, struct fuse_file_info *, |
| struct fuse_pollhandle *ph, unsigned *reventsp); |
| |
| /** Write contents of buffer to an open file |
| * |
| * Similar to the write() method, but data is supplied in a |
| * generic buffer. Use fuse_buf_copy() to transfer data to |
| * the destination. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.9 |
| */ |
| int (*write_buf) (const char *, struct fuse_bufvec *buf, loff_t off, |
| struct fuse_file_info *); |
| |
| /** Store data from an open file in a buffer |
| * |
| * Similar to the read() method, but data is stored and |
| * returned in a generic buffer. |
| * |
| * No actual copying of data has to take place, the source |
| * file descriptor may simply be stored in the buffer for |
| * later data transfer. |
| * |
| * The buffer must be allocated dynamically and stored at the |
| * location pointed to by bufp. If the buffer contains memory |
| * regions, they too must be allocated using malloc(). The |
| * allocated memory will be freed by the caller. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.9 |
| */ |
| int (*read_buf) (const char *, struct fuse_bufvec **bufp, |
| size_t size, loff_t off, struct fuse_file_info *); |
| /** |
| * Perform BSD file locking operation |
| * |
| * The op argument will be either LOCK_SH, LOCK_EX or LOCK_UN |
| * |
| * Nonblocking requests will be indicated by ORing LOCK_NB to |
| * the above operations |
| * |
| * For more information see the flock(2) manual page. |
| * |
| * Additionally fi->owner will be set to a value unique to |
| * this open file. This same value will be supplied to |
| * ->release() when the file is released. |
| * |
| * Note: if this method is not implemented, the kernel will still |
| * allow file locking to work locally. Hence it is only |
| * interesting for network filesystems and similar. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.9 |
| */ |
| int (*flock) (const char *, struct fuse_file_info *, int op); |
| |
| /** |
| * Allocates space for an open file |
| * |
| * This function ensures that required space is allocated for specified |
| * file. If this function returns success then any subsequent write |
| * request to specified range is guaranteed not to fail because of lack |
| * of space on the file system media. |
| * |
| * Introduced in version 2.9.1 |
| */ |
| int (*fallocate) (const char *, int, loff_t, loff_t, |
| struct fuse_file_info *); |
| }; |
| |
| /** Extra context that may be needed by some filesystems |
| * |
| * The uid, gid and pid fields are not filled in case of a writepage |
| * operation. |
| */ |
| struct fuse_context { |
| /** Pointer to the fuse object */ |
| struct fuse *fuse; |
| |
| /** User ID of the calling process */ |
| uid_t uid; |
| |
| /** Group ID of the calling process */ |
| gid_t gid; |
| |
| /** Thread ID of the calling process */ |
| pid_t pid; |
| |
| /** Private filesystem data */ |
| void *private_data; |
| |
| /** Umask of the calling process (introduced in version 2.8) */ |
| mode_t umask; |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * Main function of FUSE. |
| * |
| * This is for the lazy. This is all that has to be called from the |
| * main() function. |
| * |
| * This function does the following: |
| * - parses command line options (-d -s and -h) |
| * - passes relevant mount options to the fuse_mount() |
| * - installs signal handlers for INT, HUP, TERM and PIPE |
| * - registers an exit handler to unmount the filesystem on program exit |
| * - creates a fuse handle |
| * - registers the operations |
| * - calls either the single-threaded or the multi-threaded event loop |
| * |
| * Note: this is currently implemented as a macro. |
| * |
| * @param argc the argument counter passed to the main() function |
| * @param argv the argument vector passed to the main() function |
| * @param op the file system operation |
| * @param user_data user data supplied in the context during the init() method |
| * @return 0 on success, nonzero on failure |
| */ |
| /* |
| int fuse_main(int argc, char *argv[], const struct fuse_operations *op, |
| void *user_data); |
| */ |
| #define fuse_main(argc, argv, op, user_data) \ |
| fuse_main_real(argc, argv, op, sizeof(*(op)), user_data) |
| |
| /* ----------------------------------------------------------- * |
| * More detailed API * |
| * ----------------------------------------------------------- */ |
| |
| /** |
| * Create a new FUSE filesystem. |
| * |
| * @param ch the communication channel |
| * @param args argument vector |
| * @param op the filesystem operations |
| * @param op_size the size of the fuse_operations structure |
| * @param user_data user data supplied in the context during the init() method |
| * @return the created FUSE handle |
| */ |
| struct fuse *fuse_new(struct fuse_chan *ch, struct fuse_args *args, |
| const struct fuse_operations *op, size_t op_size, |
| void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * Destroy the FUSE handle. |
| * |
| * The communication channel attached to the handle is also destroyed. |
| * |
| * NOTE: This function does not unmount the filesystem. If this is |
| * needed, call fuse_unmount() before calling this function. |
| * |
| * @param f the FUSE handle |
| */ |
| void fuse_destroy(struct fuse *f); |
| |
| /** |
| * FUSE event loop. |
| * |
| * Requests from the kernel are processed, and the appropriate |
| * operations are called. |
| * |
| * @param f the FUSE handle |
| * @return 0 if no error occurred, -1 otherwise |
| */ |
| int fuse_loop(struct fuse *f); |
| |
| /** |
| * Exit from event loop |
| * |
| * @param f the FUSE handle |
| */ |
| void fuse_exit(struct fuse *f); |
| |
| /** |
| * FUSE event loop with multiple threads |
| * |
| * Requests from the kernel are processed, and the appropriate |
| * operations are called. Request are processed in parallel by |
| * distributing them between multiple threads. |
| * |
| * Calling this function requires the pthreads library to be linked to |
| * the application. |
| * |
| * @param f the FUSE handle |
| * @return 0 if no error occurred, -1 otherwise |
| */ |
| int fuse_loop_mt(struct fuse *f); |
| |
| /** |
| * Get the current context |
| * |
| * The context is only valid for the duration of a filesystem |
| * operation, and thus must not be stored and used later. |
| * |
| * @return the context |
| */ |
| struct fuse_context *fuse_get_context(void); |
| |
| /** |
| * Get the current supplementary group IDs for the current request |
| * |
| * Similar to the getgroups(2) system call, except the return value is |
| * always the total number of group IDs, even if it is larger than the |
| * specified size. |
| * |
| * The current fuse kernel module in linux (as of 2.6.30) doesn't pass |
| * the group list to userspace, hence this function needs to parse |
| * "/proc/$TID/task/$TID/status" to get the group IDs. |
| * |
| * This feature may not be supported on all operating systems. In |
| * such a case this function will return -ENOSYS. |
| * |
| * @param size size of given array |
| * @param list array of group IDs to be filled in |
| * @return the total number of supplementary group IDs or -errno on failure |
| */ |
| int fuse_getgroups(int size, gid_t list[]); |
| |
| /** |
| * Check if the current request has already been interrupted |
| * |
| * @return 1 if the request has been interrupted, 0 otherwise |
| */ |
| int fuse_interrupted(void); |
| |
| /** |
| * Obsolete, doesn't do anything |
| * |
| * @return -EINVAL |
| */ |
| int fuse_invalidate(struct fuse *f, const char *path); |
| |
| /* Deprecated, don't use */ |
| int fuse_is_lib_option(const char *opt); |
| |
| /** |
| * The real main function |
| * |
| * Do not call this directly, use fuse_main() |
| */ |
| int fuse_main_real(int argc, char *argv[], const struct fuse_operations *op, |
| size_t op_size, void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * Start the cleanup thread when using option "remember". |
| * |
| * This is done automatically by fuse_loop_mt() |
| * @param fuse struct fuse pointer for fuse instance |
| * @return 0 on success and -1 on error |
| */ |
| int fuse_start_cleanup_thread(struct fuse *fuse); |
| |
| /** |
| * Stop the cleanup thread when using option "remember". |
| * |
| * This is done automatically by fuse_loop_mt() |
| * @param fuse struct fuse pointer for fuse instance |
| */ |
| void fuse_stop_cleanup_thread(struct fuse *fuse); |
| |
| /** |
| * Iterate over cache removing stale entries |
| * use in conjunction with "-oremember" |
| * |
| * NOTE: This is already done for the standard sessions |
| * |
| * @param fuse struct fuse pointer for fuse instance |
| * @return the number of seconds until the next cleanup |
| */ |
| int fuse_clean_cache(struct fuse *fuse); |
| |
| /* |
| * Stacking API |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * Fuse filesystem object |
| * |
| * This is opaque object represents a filesystem layer |
| */ |
| struct fuse_fs; |
| |
| /* |
| * These functions call the relevant filesystem operation, and return |
| * the result. |
| * |
| * If the operation is not defined, they return -ENOSYS, with the |
| * exception of fuse_fs_open, fuse_fs_release, fuse_fs_opendir, |
| * fuse_fs_releasedir and fuse_fs_statfs, which return 0. |
| */ |
| |
| int fuse_fs_getattr(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, struct stat *buf); |
| int fuse_fs_fgetattr(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, struct stat *buf, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_rename(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *oldpath, |
| const char *newpath); |
| int fuse_fs_unlink(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path); |
| int fuse_fs_rmdir(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path); |
| int fuse_fs_symlink(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *linkname, |
| const char *path); |
| int fuse_fs_link(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *oldpath, const char *newpath); |
| int fuse_fs_release(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_open(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_read(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, char *buf, size_t size, |
| loff_t off, struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_read_buf(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| struct fuse_bufvec **bufp, size_t size, loff_t off, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_write(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, const char *buf, |
| size_t size, loff_t off, struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_write_buf(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| struct fuse_bufvec *buf, loff_t off, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_fsync(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, int datasync, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_flush(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_statfs(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, struct statvfs *buf); |
| int fuse_fs_opendir(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_readdir(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, void *buf, |
| fuse_fill_dir_t filler, loff_t off, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_fsyncdir(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, int datasync, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_releasedir(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_create(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, mode_t mode, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_lock(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi, int cmd, struct flock *lock); |
| int fuse_fs_flock(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi, int op); |
| int fuse_fs_chmod(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, mode_t mode); |
| int fuse_fs_chown(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, uid_t uid, gid_t gid); |
| int fuse_fs_truncate(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, loff_t size); |
| int fuse_fs_ftruncate(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, loff_t size, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| int fuse_fs_utimens(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| const struct timespec tv[2]); |
| int fuse_fs_access(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, int mask); |
| int fuse_fs_readlink(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, char *buf, |
| size_t len); |
| int fuse_fs_mknod(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, mode_t mode, |
| dev_t rdev); |
| int fuse_fs_mkdir(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, mode_t mode); |
| int fuse_fs_setxattr(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, const char *name, |
| const char *value, size_t size, int flags); |
| int fuse_fs_getxattr(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, const char *name, |
| char *value, size_t size); |
| int fuse_fs_listxattr(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, char *list, |
| size_t size); |
| int fuse_fs_removexattr(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| const char *name); |
| int fuse_fs_bmap(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, size_t blocksize, |
| uint64_t *idx); |
| int fuse_fs_ioctl(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, int cmd, void *arg, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi, unsigned int flags, void *data); |
| int fuse_fs_poll(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, |
| struct fuse_file_info *fi, struct fuse_pollhandle *ph, |
| unsigned *reventsp); |
| int fuse_fs_fallocate(struct fuse_fs *fs, const char *path, int mode, |
| loff_t offset, loff_t length, struct fuse_file_info *fi); |
| void fuse_fs_init(struct fuse_fs *fs, struct fuse_conn_info *conn); |
| void fuse_fs_destroy(struct fuse_fs *fs); |
| |
| int fuse_notify_poll(struct fuse_pollhandle *ph); |
| |
| /** |
| * Create a new fuse filesystem object |
| * |
| * This is usually called from the factory of a fuse module to create |
| * a new instance of a filesystem. |
| * |
| * @param op the filesystem operations |
| * @param op_size the size of the fuse_operations structure |
| * @param user_data user data supplied in the context during the init() method |
| * @return a new filesystem object |
| */ |
| struct fuse_fs *fuse_fs_new(const struct fuse_operations *op, size_t op_size, |
| void *user_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * Filesystem module |
| * |
| * Filesystem modules are registered with the FUSE_REGISTER_MODULE() |
| * macro. |
| * |
| * If the "-omodules=modname:..." option is present, filesystem |
| * objects are created and pushed onto the stack with the 'factory' |
| * function. |
| */ |
| struct fuse_module { |
| /** |
| * Name of filesystem |
| */ |
| const char *name; |
| |
| /** |
| * Factory for creating filesystem objects |
| * |
| * The function may use and remove options from 'args' that belong |
| * to this module. |
| * |
| * For now the 'fs' vector always contains exactly one filesystem. |
| * This is the filesystem which will be below the newly created |
| * filesystem in the stack. |
| * |
| * @param args the command line arguments |
| * @param fs NULL terminated filesystem object vector |
| * @return the new filesystem object |
| */ |
| struct fuse_fs *(*factory)(struct fuse_args *args, |
| struct fuse_fs *fs[]); |
| |
| struct fuse_module *next; |
| struct fusemod_so *so; |
| int ctr; |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * Register a filesystem module |
| * |
| * This function is used by FUSE_REGISTER_MODULE and there's usually |
| * no need to call it directly |
| */ |
| void fuse_register_module(struct fuse_module *mod); |
| |
| /** |
| * Register filesystem module |
| * |
| * For the parameters, see description of the fields in 'struct |
| * fuse_module' |
| */ |
| #define FUSE_REGISTER_MODULE(name_, factory_) \ |
| static __attribute__((constructor)) void name_ ## _register(void) \ |
| { \ |
| static struct fuse_module mod = \ |
| { #name_, factory_, NULL, NULL, 0 }; \ |
| fuse_register_module(&mod); \ |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* ----------------------------------------------------------- * |
| * Advanced API for event handling, don't worry about this... * |
| * ----------------------------------------------------------- */ |
| |
| /* NOTE: the following functions are deprecated, and will be removed |
| from the 3.0 API. Use the lowlevel session functions instead */ |
| |
| /** Function type used to process commands */ |
| typedef void (*fuse_processor_t)(struct fuse *, struct fuse_cmd *, void *); |
| |
| /** This is the part of fuse_main() before the event loop */ |
| struct fuse *fuse_setup(int argc, char *argv[], |
| const struct fuse_operations *op, size_t op_size, |
| char **mountpoint, int *multithreaded, |
| void *user_data); |
| |
| /** This is the part of fuse_main() after the event loop */ |
| void fuse_teardown(struct fuse *fuse, char *mountpoint); |
| |
| /** Read a single command. If none are read, return NULL */ |
| struct fuse_cmd *fuse_read_cmd(struct fuse *f); |
| |
| /** Process a single command */ |
| void fuse_process_cmd(struct fuse *f, struct fuse_cmd *cmd); |
| |
| /** Multi threaded event loop, which calls the custom command |
| processor function */ |
| int fuse_loop_mt_proc(struct fuse *f, fuse_processor_t proc, void *data); |
| |
| /** Return the exited flag, which indicates if fuse_exit() has been |
| called */ |
| int fuse_exited(struct fuse *f); |
| |
| /** This function is obsolete and implemented as a no-op */ |
| void fuse_set_getcontext_func(struct fuse_context *(*func)(void)); |
| |
| /** Get session from fuse object */ |
| struct fuse_session *fuse_get_session(struct fuse *f); |
| |
| /* ----------------------------------------------------------- * |
| * Compatibility stuff * |
| * ----------------------------------------------------------- */ |
| |
| #if FUSE_USE_VERSION < 26 |
| # include "fuse_compat.h" |
| # undef fuse_main |
| # if FUSE_USE_VERSION == 25 |
| # define fuse_main(argc, argv, op) \ |
| fuse_main_real_compat25(argc, argv, op, sizeof(*(op))) |
| # define fuse_new fuse_new_compat25 |
| # define fuse_setup fuse_setup_compat25 |
| # define fuse_teardown fuse_teardown_compat22 |
| # define fuse_operations fuse_operations_compat25 |
| # elif FUSE_USE_VERSION == 22 |
| # define fuse_main(argc, argv, op) \ |
| fuse_main_real_compat22(argc, argv, op, sizeof(*(op))) |
| # define fuse_new fuse_new_compat22 |
| # define fuse_setup fuse_setup_compat22 |
| # define fuse_teardown fuse_teardown_compat22 |
| # define fuse_operations fuse_operations_compat22 |
| # define fuse_file_info fuse_file_info_compat |
| # elif FUSE_USE_VERSION == 24 |
| # error Compatibility with high-level API version 24 not supported |
| # else |
| # define fuse_dirfil_t fuse_dirfil_t_compat |
| # define __fuse_read_cmd fuse_read_cmd |
| # define __fuse_process_cmd fuse_process_cmd |
| # define __fuse_loop_mt fuse_loop_mt_proc |
| # if FUSE_USE_VERSION == 21 |
| # define fuse_operations fuse_operations_compat2 |
| # define fuse_main fuse_main_compat2 |
| # define fuse_new fuse_new_compat2 |
| # define __fuse_setup fuse_setup_compat2 |
| # define __fuse_teardown fuse_teardown_compat22 |
| # define __fuse_exited fuse_exited |
| # define __fuse_set_getcontext_func fuse_set_getcontext_func |
| # else |
| # define fuse_statfs fuse_statfs_compat1 |
| # define fuse_operations fuse_operations_compat1 |
| # define fuse_main fuse_main_compat1 |
| # define fuse_new fuse_new_compat1 |
| # define FUSE_DEBUG FUSE_DEBUG_COMPAT1 |
| # endif |
| # endif |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| #endif /* _FUSE_H_ */ |