NAME
vnodeops
,
VOP_LOOKUP
, VOP_CREATE
,
VOP_MKNOD
, VOP_OPEN
,
VOP_CLOSE
, VOP_ACCESS
,
VOP_GETATTR
, VOP_SETATTR
,
VOP_READ
, VOP_WRITE
,
VOP_FALLOCATE
, VOP_FDISCARD
,
VOP_IOCTL
, VOP_FCNTL
,
VOP_POLL
, VOP_KQFILTER
,
VOP_REVOKE
, VOP_MMAP
,
VOP_FSYNC
, VOP_SEEK
,
VOP_REMOVE
, VOP_LINK
,
VOP_RENAME
, VOP_MKDIR
,
VOP_RMDIR
, VOP_SYMLINK
,
VOP_READDIR
, VOP_READLINK
,
VOP_ABORTOP
, VOP_INACTIVE
,
VOP_RECLAIM
, VOP_LOCK
,
VOP_UNLOCK
, VOP_ISLOCKED
,
VOP_BMAP
, VOP_PRINT
,
VOP_PATHCONF
, VOP_ADVLOCK
,
VOP_WHITEOUT
, VOP_GETPAGES
,
VOP_PUTPAGES
, VOP_STRATEGY
,
VOP_BWRITE
, VOP_GETEXTATTR
,
VOP_SETEXTATTR
,
VOP_LISTEXTATTR
,
VOP_DELETEEXTATTR
—
vnode operations
SYNOPSIS
#include
<sys/param.h>
#include <sys/buf.h>
#include <sys/dirent.h>
#include <sys/vnode.h>
#include <sys/mount.h>
#include <sys/namei.h>
#include <sys/unistd.h>
#include <sys/fcntl.h>
#include <sys/lockf.h>
#include <sys/extattr.h>
int
VOP_LOOKUP
(struct
vnode *dvp, struct vnode
**vpp, struct
componentname *cnp);
int
VOP_CREATE
(struct
vnode *dvp, struct vnode
**vpp, struct
componentname *cnp,
struct vattr *vap);
int
VOP_MKNOD
(struct
vnode *dvp, struct vnode
**vpp, struct
componentname *cnp,
struct vattr *vap);
int
VOP_OPEN
(struct
vnode *vp, int
mode, kauth_cred_t
cred);
int
VOP_CLOSE
(struct
vnode *vp, int
fflag, kauth_cred_t
cred);
int
VOP_ACCESS
(struct
vnode *vp, int
mode, kauth_cred_t
cred);
int
VOP_GETATTR
(struct
vnode *vp, struct vattr
*vap, kauth_cred_t
cred);
int
VOP_SETATTR
(struct
vnode *vp, struct vattr
*vap, kauth_cred_t
cred);
int
VOP_READ
(struct
vnode *vp, struct uio
*uio, int ioflag,
kauth_cred_t cred);
int
VOP_WRITE
(struct
vnode *vp, struct uio
*uio, int ioflag,
kauth_cred_t cred);
int
VOP_FALLOCATE
(struct
vnode *vp, off_t
pos, off_t
len);
int
VOP_FDISCARD
(struct
vnode *vp, off_t
pos, off_t
len);
int
VOP_IOCTL
(struct
vnode *vp, u_long
command, void
*data, int fflag,
kauth_cred_t cred);
int
VOP_FCNTL
(struct
vnode *vp, u_int
command, void
*data, int fflag,
kauth_cred_t cred);
int
VOP_POLL
(struct
vnode *vp, int
events);
int
VOP_KQFILTER
(struct
vnode *vp, struct knote
*kn);
int
VOP_REVOKE
(struct
vnode *vp, int
flags);
int
VOP_MMAP
(struct
vnode *vp, vm_prot_t
prot, kauth_cred_t
cred);
int
VOP_FSYNC
(struct
vnode *vp, kauth_cred_t
cred, int flags,
off_t offlo,
off_t offhi);
int
VOP_SEEK
(struct
vnode *vp, off_t
oldoff, off_t
newoff, kauth_cred_t
cred);
int
VOP_REMOVE
(struct
vnode *dvp, struct vnode
*vp, struct componentname
*cnp);
int
VOP_LINK
(struct
vnode *dvp, struct vnode
*vp, struct componentname
*cnp);
int
VOP_RENAME
(struct
vnode *fdvp, struct vnode
*fvp, struct
componentname *fcnp,
struct vnode *tdvp,
struct vnode *tvp,
struct componentname
*tcnp);
int
VOP_MKDIR
(struct
vnode *dvp, struct vnode
**vpp, struct
componentname *cnp,
struct vattr *vap);
int
VOP_RMDIR
(struct
vnode *dvp, struct vnode
*vp, struct componentname
*cnp);
int
VOP_SYMLINK
(struct
vnode *dvp, struct vnode
**vpp, struct
componentname *cnp,
struct vattr *vap,
char *target);
int
VOP_READDIR
(struct
vnode *vp, struct uio
*uio, kauth_cred_t
cred, int *eofflag,
off_t **cookies,
int *ncookies);
int
VOP_READLINK
(struct
vnode *vp, struct uio
*uio, kauth_cred_t
cred);
int
VOP_ABORTOP
(struct
vnode *dvp, struct
componentname *cnp);
int
VOP_INACTIVE
(struct
vnode *vp);
int
VOP_RECLAIM
(struct
vnode *vp);
int
VOP_LOCK
(struct
vnode *vp, int
flags);
int
VOP_UNLOCK
(struct
vnode *vp);
int
VOP_ISLOCKED
(struct
vnode *vp);
int
VOP_BMAP
(struct
vnode *vp, daddr_t
bn, struct vnode
**vpp, daddr_t
*bnp, int
*runp);
int
VOP_PRINT
(struct
vnode *vp);
int
VOP_PATHCONF
(struct
vnode *vp, int
name, register_t
*retval);
int
VOP_ADVLOCK
(struct
vnode *vp, void
*id, int op,
struct flock *fl,
int flags);
int
VOP_WHITEOUT
(struct
vnode *dvp, struct
componentname *cnp, int
flags);
int
VOP_GETPAGES
(struct
vnode *vp, voff_t
offset, struct vm_page
**m, int *count,
int centeridx,
vm_prot_t access_type,
int advice,
int flags);
int
VOP_PUTPAGES
(struct
vnode *vp, voff_t
offlo, voff_t
offhi, int
flags);
int
VOP_STRATEGY
(struct
vnode *vp, struct buf
*bp);
int
VOP_BWRITE
(struct
vnode *vp, struct buf
*bp);
int
VOP_GETEXTATTR
(struct
vnode *vp, int
attrnamespace, const char
*name, struct uio
*uio, size_t *size,
kauth_cred_t cred);
int
VOP_SETEXTATTR
(struct
vnode *vp, int
attrnamespace, const char
*name, struct uio
*uio, kauth_cred_t
cred);
int
VOP_LISTEXTATTR
(struct
vnode *vp, int
attrnamespace, struct uio
*uio, size_t *size,
kauth_cred_t cred);
int
VOP_DELETEEXTATTR
(struct
vnode *vp, int
attrnamespace, const char
*name, kauth_cred_t
cred);
Not all header files are required for each function.
DESCRIPTION
The vnode operations vector describes what operations can be done to the file associated with the vnode. The system maintains one vnode operations vector for each file system type configured into the kernel. The vnode operations vector contains a pointer to a function for each operation supported by the file system. Many of the functions described in the vnode operations vector are closely related to their corresponding system calls. In most cases, they are called as a result of the system call associated with the operation being invoked.Functions in the vnode operations vector are invoked using specialized macros. The following table gives a summary of the operations.
Macro | Description |
VOP_LOOKUP | Lookup file name in name cache |
VOP_CREATE | Create a new file |
VOP_MKNOD | Make a new device |
VOP_OPEN | Open a file |
VOP_CLOSE | Close a file |
VOP_ACCESS | Determine file accessibility |
VOP_GETATTR | Get file attributes |
VOP_SETATTR | Set file attributes |
VOP_READ | Read from a file |
VOP_WRITE | Write to a file |
VOP_FALLOCATE | Allocate backing for a file |
VOP_FDISCARD | Discard backing for a file |
VOP_IOCTL | Perform device-specific I/O |
VOP_FCNTL | Perform file control |
VOP_POLL | Test if poll event has occurred |
VOP_KQFILTER | Register a knote |
VOP_REVOKE | Eliminate vnode activity |
VOP_MMAP | Map file into user address space |
VOP_FSYNC | Flush pending data to disk |
VOP_SEEK | Test if file is seekable |
VOP_REMOVE | Remove a file |
VOP_LINK | Link a file |
VOP_RENAME | Rename a file |
VOP_MKDIR | Make a new directory |
VOP_RMDIR | Remove a directory |
VOP_SYMLINK | Create a symbolic link |
VOP_READDIR | Read directory entry |
VOP_READLINK | Read contents of a symlink |
VOP_ABORTOP | Abort pending operation |
VOP_INACTIVE | Release the inactive vnode |
VOP_RECLAIM | Reclaim vnode for another file |
VOP_LOCK | Sleep until vnode lock is free |
VOP_UNLOCK | Wake up process sleeping on lock |
VOP_ISLOCKED | Test if vnode is locked |
VOP_BMAP | Logical block number conversion |
VOP_PRINT | Print debugging information |
VOP_PATHCONF | Return POSIX pathconf data |
VOP_ADVLOCK | Advisory record locking |
VOP_WHITEOUT | Whiteout vnode |
VOP_GETPAGES | Read VM pages from file |
VOP_PUTPAGES | Write VM pages to file |
VOP_STRATEGY | Read/write a file system buffer |
VOP_BWRITE | Write a file system buffer |
VOP_GETEXTATTR | Get extended attribute |
VOP_SETEXTATTR | Set extended attribute |
VOP_LISTEXTATTR | List extended attributes |
VOP_DELETEEXTATTR | Remove extended attribute |
The implementation details of the vnode operations vector are not quite what is described here.
If the file system type does not support a specific operation, it must nevertheless assign an appropriate stub in the vnode operations vector to do the minimum required of it. In most cases, such functions either do nothing or return an error value to the effect that it is not supported.
Many of the functions in the vnode operations vector take a componentname structure. It is used to encapsulate many parameters into a single function argument. It has the following structure:
struct componentname { /* * Arguments to lookup. */ uint32_t cn_nameiop; /* namei operation */ uint32_t cn_flags; /* flags to namei */ kauth_cred_t cn_cred; /* credentials */ /* * Shared between lookup and commit routines. */ const char *cn_nameptr; /* pointer to looked up name */ size_t cn_namelen; /* length of looked up component */ size_t cn_consume; /* chars to consume in lookup() */ };
The top half of the structure is used exclusively
for the pathname lookups using
VOP_LOOKUP
()
and is initialized by the caller. The semantics of the lookup are affected
by the lookup operation specified in
cn_nameiop
and the flags specified in
cn_flags.
Valid operations are:
- LOOKUP
- perform name lookup only
- CREATE
- set up for file creation
- DELETE
- set up for file deletion
- RENAME
- set up for file renaming
- OPMASK
- mask for operation
Valid values for cn->cn_flags are:
- LOCKLEAF
- lock inode on return
- LOCKPARENT
- want parent vnode returned locked
- NOCACHE
- name must not be left in name cache (see namecache(9))
- FOLLOW
- follow symbolic links
- NOFOLLOW
- do not follow symbolic links (pseudo)
- MODMASK
- mask of operational modifiers
No vnode operations may be called from interrupt context. Most operations also require the vnode to be locked on entry. To prevent deadlocks, when acquiring locks on multiple vnodes, the lock of parent directory must be acquired before the lock on the child directory.
Vnode operations for a file system type generally should not be called directly from the kernel, but accessed indirectly through the high-level convenience functions discussed in vnsubr(9).
FUNCTIONS
VOP_LOOKUP
(dvp, vpp, cnp)- Lookup a single pathname component in a given directory. The argument
dvp is the locked vnode of the directory to search
and cnp is the pathname component to be searched
for. If the pathname component is found, the address of the resulting
unlocked vnode is returned in vpp. The operation
specified in
cnp->cn_nameiop
indicates
VOP_LOOKUP
() the reason for requesting the lookup and uses it to cache file system type specific information in the vnode for subsequent operations.There are three types of lookups: ".", ".." (ISDOTDOT), and regular. If the pathname component being searched for is ".", then dvp has an extra reference added to it and it is returned in *vpp. For other pathname components,
VOP_LOOKUP
() checks the accessibility of the directory and searches the name cache for the pathname component. See namecache(9). If the pathname is not found in the name cache, the directory is searched for the pathname. The resulting unlocked vnode is returned in vpp. dvp is always returned locked.On failure *vpp is
NULL
, and *dvp is left locked. If the operation is successful *vpp is unlocked and zero is returned. Typically, if *vpp and dvp are the same vnode the caller will need to release twice (decrement the reference count) and unlock once. VOP_CREATE
(dvp, vpp, cnp, vap)- Create a new file in a given directory. The argument
dvp is the locked vnode of the directory to create
the new file in and cnp is the pathname component of
the new file. The argument vap specifies the
attributes that the new file should be created with. If the file is
successfully created, the address of the resulting unlocked vnode is
returned in vpp and zero is returned.
This function is called after
VOP_LOOKUP
() when a file is being created. Normally,VOP_LOOKUP
() will have set the SAVENAME flag in cnp->cn_flags to keep the memory pointed to by cnp->cn_pnbuf valid. If an error is detected when creating the file, this memory is released. If the file is created successfully it will be released unless the SAVESTART flags in specified in cnp->cn_flags. VOP_MKNOD
(dvp, vpp, cnp, vap)- Make a new device-special file in a given directory. The argument
dvp is the locked vnode of the directory to create
the new device-special file in and cnp is the
pathname component of the new device-special file. The argument
vap specifies the attributes that the new
device-special file should be created with. If the file is successfully
created, the address of the resulting unlocked vnode is returned in
vpp and zero is returned.
This function is called after
VOP_LOOKUP
() when a device-special file is being created. Normally,VOP_LOOKUP
() will have set the SAVENAME flag in cnp->cn_flags to keep the memory pointed to by cnp->cn_pnbuf valid. If an error is detected when creating the device-special file, this memory is released. If the device-special file is created successfully it will be released unless the SAVESTART flags in specified in cnp->cn_flags. VOP_OPEN
(vp, mode, cred)- Open a file. The argument vp is the vnode of the
file to open and mode specifies the access mode
required by the calling process. The calling credentials are specified by
cred. The access mode is a set of flags, including
FREAD, FWRITE, O_NONBLOCK, O_APPEND, etc.
VOP_OPEN
() must be called before a file can be accessed by a thread. The vnode reference count is incremented.VOP_OPEN
() expects the vnode vp to be locked on entry and will leave it locked on return. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned. VOP_CLOSE
(vp, fflag, cred)- Close a file. The argument vp is the vnode of the
file to close and fflag specifies the access mode by
the calling process. The possible flags are
FREAD
,FWRITE
andFNONBLOCK
. The calling credentials are specified by cred.VOP_CLOSE
() frees resources allocated byVOP_OPEN
().The vnode vp will be locked on entry and should remain locked on return.
VOP_ACCESS
(vp, mode, cred)- Determine the accessibility (permissions) of the file against the
specified credentials. The argument vp is the vnode
of the file to check, mode is the type of access
required and cred contains the user credentials to
check. The argument mode is a mask which can contain
VREAD, VWRITE or VEXEC. If the file is accessible in the specified way,
zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned.
The vnode vp will be locked on entry and should remain locked on return.
VOP_GETATTR
(vp, vap, cred)- Get specific vnode attributes on a file. The argument
vp is the vnode of the file to get the attributes
for. The argument cred specifies the calling
credentials.
VOP_GETATTR
() uses the file system type specific data object vp->v_data to reference the underlying file attributes. The attributes are returned in vap. Attributes which are not available are set to the value VNOVAL.For more information on vnode attributes see vattr(9). Historically it was considered acceptable to call
VOP_GETATTR
() without first locking the vnode. This usage is deprecated.The vnode vp will be locked on entry and should remain locked on return.
VOP_SETATTR
(vp, vap, cred)- Set specific vnode attributes on a file. The argument
vp is the locked vnode of the file to set the
attributes for. The argument cred specifies the
calling credentials.
VOP_SETATTR
() uses the file system type specific data object vp->v_data to reference the underlying file attributes. The new attributes are defined in vap. Attributes which are not being modified byVOP_SETATTR
() should be set to the value VNOVAL. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error is returned.For more information on vnode attributes see vattr(9).
VOP_READ
(vp, uio, ioflag, cred)- Read the contents of a file. The argument vp is the
vnode of the file to read from, uio is the location
to read the data into, ioflag is a set of flags and
cred are the credentials of the calling process.
The ioflag argument is used to give directives and hints to the file system. When attempting a read, the high 16 bits are used to provide a read-ahead hint (in unit of file system blocks) that the file system should attempt. The low 16 bits are a bit mask which can contain the following flags:
- IO_UNIT
- do I/O as atomic unit
- IO_APPEND
- append write to end
- IO_SYNC
- sync I/O file integrity completion
- IO_NODELOCKED
- underlying node already locked
- IO_NDELAY
- FNDELAY flag set in file table
- IO_DSYNC
- sync I/O data integrity completion
- IO_ALTSEMANTICS
- use alternate I/O semantics
- IO_NORMAL
- operate on regular data
- IO_EXT
- operate on extended attributes
- IO_DIRECT
- do not buffer data in the kernel
Zero is returned on success, otherwise an error is returned. The vnode should be locked on entry and remains locked on exit.
VOP_WRITE
(vp, uio, ioflag, cred)- Write to a file. The argument vp is the vnode of the
file to write to, uio is the location of the data to
write, ioflag is a set of flags and
cred are the credentials of the calling process.
The ioflag argument is used to give directives and hints to the file system. The low 16 bits are a bit mask which can contain the same flags as
VOP_READ
().Zero is returned on success, otherwise an error is returned. The vnode should be locked on entry and remains locked on exit.
VOP_FALLOCATE
(vp, pos, len)- Allocate backing store. The argument vp is the vnode for the file. The pos and len arguments (specified in bytes) name an extent within the file. The blocks underlying this range, rounding up at the top and down at the bottom if needed, are checked; if no physical storage is allocated, a physical block is allocated and zeroed. This operation removes “holes” from files.
VOP_FDISCARD
(vp, pos, len)- Discard backing store. The argument vp is the vnode for the file. The pos and len arguments (specified in bytes) name an extent within the file. The blocks underlying this range, rounding down at the top and up at the bottom if needed, are checked. If any physical storage is used, it is deallocated. This operation creates “holes” in files. Discarded blocks of regular files read back afterwards as zeroes. On devices, the underlying discard-block operation if any (e.g. ATA TRIM) is issued. The device handles this as it sees fit. In particular it is not guaranteed that discarded blocks on devices will be zeroed; reading a discarded block might produce zeros, or ones, or the previously existing data, or some other data, or trash.
VOP_IOCTL
(vp, command, data, fflag, cred)- Perform device-specific I/O. The argument vp is the
locked vnode of the file, normally representing a device. The argument
command specifies the device-specific operation to
perform and cnp provides extra data for the
specified operation. The argument fflags is a set of
flags. The argument cred is the caller's
credentials. If the operation is successful, zero is returned, otherwise
an appropriate error code is returned.
Most file systems do not supply a function for
VOP_IOCTL
(). This function implements the ioctl(2) system call. VOP_FCNTL
(vp, command, data, fflag, cred)- Perform file control. The argument vp is the locked vnode of the file. The argument command specifies the operation to perform and cnp provides extra data for the specified operation. The argument fflags is a set of flags. The argument cred is the caller's credentials. If the operation is successful, zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned.
VOP_POLL
(vp, events)- Test if a poll event has occurred. The argument vp
is the vnode of the file to poll. It returns any events of interest as
specified by events that may have occurred for the
file. The argument events is a set of flags as
specified by poll(2).
The vnode vp remains unlocked throughout the whole operation.
VOP_KQFILTER
(vp, kn)- Register a knote kn with the vnode
vn. If the operation is successful zero is returned,
otherwise an appropriate error code is returned.
The vnode vp remains unlocked throughout the whole operation.
VOP_REVOKE
(vp, flags)- Eliminate all activity associated with the vnode vp.
The argument flags is a set of flags. If REVOKEALL
is set in flags all vnodes aliased to the vnode
vp are also eliminated. If the operation is
successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error is returned.
The vnode vp remains unlocked throughout the whole operation.
VOP_MMAP
(vp, prot, cred)- Inform file system that vp is in the process of
being memory mapped. The argument prot specifies the
vm access protection the vnode is going to be mapped with. The argument
cred is the caller's credentials. If the file system
allows the memory mapping, zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate
error code is returned.
Most file systems do not supply a function for
VOP_MMAP
() and usegenfs_mmap
() to default for success. Only file systems which do not integrate with the page cache at all typically want to disallow memory mapping. VOP_FSYNC
(vp, cred, flags, offlo, offhi)- Flush pending data buffers for a file to disk. The argument
vp is the locked vnode of the file for flush. The
argument cred is the caller's credentials. The
argument flags is a set of flags. If FSYNC_WAIT is
specified in flags, the function should wait for I/O
to complete before returning. The argument offlo and
offhi specify the range of file to flush. If the
operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error
code is returned.
This function implements the sync(2) and fsync(2) system calls.
VOP_SEEK
(vp, oldoff, newoff, cred)- Test if the file is seekable for the specified offset newoff. The argument vp is the locked vnode of the file to test. For most file systems this function simply tests if newoff is valid. If the specified newoff is less than zero, the function returns error code EINVAL.
VOP_REMOVE
(dvp, vp, cnp)- Remove a file. The argument dvp is the locked vnode of the directory to remove the file from and vp is the locked vnode of the file to remove. The argument cnp is the pathname component about the file to remove. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned. Both dvp and vp are locked on entry and are to be unlocked before returning.
VOP_LINK
(dvp, vp, cnp)- Link to a file. The argument dvp is the locked node of the directory to create the new link and vp is the vnode of the file to be linked. The argument cnp is the pathname component of the new link. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an error code is returned. The directory vnode dvp should be locked on entry and will be released and unlocked on return. The vnode vp should not be locked on entry and will remain unlocked on return.
VOP_RENAME
(fdvp, fvp, fcnp, tdvp, tvp, tcnp)- Rename a file. The argument fdvp is the vnode of the
old parent directory containing in the file to be renamed and
fvp is the vnode of the file to be renamed. The
argument fcnp is the pathname component about the
file to be renamed. The argument tdvp is the vnode
of the new directory of the target file and tvp is
the vnode of the target file (if it exists). The argument
tcnp is the pathname component about the file's new
name. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an error
code is returned.
The caller must hold the target file system's rename lock. The source directory and file vnodes should be unlocked and their reference counts should be incremented before entry. The target directory and file vnodes should both be locked on entry.
VOP_RENAME
() updates the reference counts prior to returning.Because of the complexity and nastiness of the interface, please do not write new code that calls
VOP_RENAME
() directly until such time as ongoing cleanup work reaches a point where the interface has been rendered halfway sane. VOP_MKDIR
(dvp, vpp, cnp, vap)- Make a new directory in a given directory. The argument
dvp is the locked vnode of the directory to create
the new directory in and cnp is the pathname
component of the new directory. The argument vap
specifies the attributes that the new directory should be created with. If
the file is successfully created, the address of the resulting unlocked
vnode is returned in vpp and zero is returned.
This function is called after
VOP_LOOKUP
() when a directory is being created. Normally,VOP_LOOKUP
() will have set the SAVENAME flag in cnp->cn_flags to keep the memory pointed to by cnp->cn_pnbuf valid. If an error is detected when creating the directory, this memory is released. If the directory is created successfully it will be released unless the SAVESTART flags in specified in cnp->cn_flags. VOP_RMDIR
(dvp, vp, cnp)- Remove a directory in a given directory. The argument dvp is the locked vnode of the directory to remove the directory from and vp is the locked vnode of the directory to remove. The argument cnp is the pathname component of the directory. Zero is returned on success, otherwise an error code is returned. Both dvp and vp should be locked on entry and will be released and unlocked on return.
VOP_SYMLINK
(dvp, vpp, cnp, vap, target)- Create a symbolic link in a given directory. The argument
dvp is the locked vnode of the directory to create
the symbolic link in and cnp is the pathname
component of the symbolic link. The argument vap
specifies the attributes that the symbolic link should be created with and
target specifies the pathname of the target of the
symbolic link. If the symbolic link is successfully created, the address
of the resulting unlocked vnode is returned in vpp
and zero is returned.
This function is called after
VOP_LOOKUP
() when a symbolic link is being created. Normally,VOP_LOOKUP
() will have set the SAVENAME flag in cnp->cn_flags to keep the memory pointed to by cnp->cn_pnbuf valid. If an error is detected when creating the symbolic link, this memory is released. If the symbolic link is created successfully it will be released unless the SAVESTART flags in specified in cnp->cn_flags. VOP_READDIR
(vp, uio, cred, eofflag, cookies, ncookies)- Read directory entry. The argument vp is the vnode
of the directory to read the contents of and uio is
the destination location to read the contents into. The argument
cred is the caller's credentials. The argument
eofflag is the pointer to a flag which is set by
VOP_READDIR
() to indicate an end-of-file condition. If eofflag isNULL
, the end-of-file condition is not returned. The arguments cookies and ncookies specify the addresses for the list and number of directory seek cookies generated for NFS. Both cookies and ncookies should beNULL
if they aren't required to be returned byVOP_READDIR
(). The directory contents are read into struct dirent structures and uio->uio_offset is set to the offset of the next unread directory entry. This offset may be used in a following invocation to continue a sequential read of the directory contents. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned.The directory should be locked on entry and will remain locked on return.
In case ncookies and cookies are supplied, one cookie should be returned per directory entry. The value of the cookie for each directory entry should be the offset within the directory where the on-disk version of the following directory entry starts. That is, for each directory entry i, the corresponding cookie should refer to the offset of directory entry i + 1.
Note that the cookies array must be allocated by the callee using the M_TEMP malloc type as callers of
VOP_READDIR
() must be able to free the allocation. VOP_READLINK
(vp, uio, cred)- Read the contents of a symbolic link. The argument
vp is the locked vnode of the symlink and
uio is the destination location to read the contents
into. The argument cred is the credentials of the
caller. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an
error code is returned.
The vnode should be locked on entry and will remain locked on return.
VOP_ABORTOP
(dvp, cnp)- Abort pending operation on vnode dvp and free
resources allocated in cnp.
This operation is rarely implemented in file systems and
genfs_abortop
() is typically used instead. VOP_INACTIVE
(vp)- Release the inactive vnode.
VOP_INACTIVE
() is called when the kernel is no longer using the vnode. This may be because the reference count reaches zero or it may be that the file system is being forcibly unmounted while there are open files. It can be used to reclaim space for open but deleted files. The argument vp is the locked vnode to be released. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned. The vnode vp must be locked on entry, and will remain locked on return. VOP_RECLAIM
(vp)- Reclaim the vnode for another file system.
VOP_RECLAIM
() is called when a vnode is being reused for a different file system. Any file system specific resources associated with the vnode should be freed. The argument vp is the vnode to be reclaimed. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned. The vnode vp should be locked on entry, and will be returned unlocked. VOP_LOCK
(vp, flags)- Sleep until vnode lock is free. The argument vp is
the vnode of the file to be locked. The argument
flags is
LK_EXCLUSIVE
to take the lock exclusively orLK_SHARED
to take a shared lock. If flags containsLK_NOWAIT
and the lock is busy, the operation will return immediately with an error code. If flags containsLK_RETRY
this is a hint the caller wants the lock on dead vnodes too. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned.VOP_LOCK
() is used to serialize access to the file system such as to prevent two writes to the same file from happening at the same time. Kernel code should use vn_lock(9) to lock a vnode rather than callingVOP_LOCK
() directly. VOP_UNLOCK
(vp)- Wake up process sleeping on lock. The argument vp is
the vnode of the file to be unlocked. If the operation is successful zero
is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned.
VOP_UNLOCK
() is used to serialize access to the file system such as to prevent two writes to the same file from happening at the same time. VOP_ISLOCKED
(vp)- Test if the vnode vp is locked. Possible return
values are
LK_EXCLUSIVE
,LK_SHARED
or 0 for lock held exclusively by the calling thread, shared lock held by anyone or unlocked, respectively.This function must never be used to make locking decisions at run time: it is provided only for diagnostic purposes.
VOP_BMAP
(vp, bn, vpp, bnp, runp)- Convert the logical block number bn of a file
specified by vnode vp to its physical block number
on the disk. The physical block is returned in bnp.
In case the logical block is not allocated, -1 is used.
If vpp is not
NULL
, the vnode of the device vnode for the file system is returned in the address specified by vpp. If runp is notNULL
, the number of contiguous blocks starting from the next block after the queried block will be returned in runp. VOP_PRINT
(vp)- Print debugging information. The argument vp is the vnode to print. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned.
VOP_PATHCONF
(vp, name, retval)- Implement POSIX
pathconf(2) and
fpathconf(2) support. The argument vp
is the locked vnode to get information about. The argument
name specified the type of information to return.
The information is returned in the address specified by
retval. Valid values for name
are:
- _PC_LINK_MAX
- return the maximum number of links to a file
- _PC_NAME_MAX
- return the maximum number of bytes in a file name
- _PC_PATH_MAX
- return the maximum number of bytes in a pathname
- _PC_PIPE_BUF
- return the maximum number of bytes which will be written atomically to a pipe
- _PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED
- return 1 if appropriate privileges are required for the chown(2) system call, otherwise zero
- _PC_NO_TRUNC
- return 0 if file names longer than {
NAME_MAX
} are silently truncated
If name is recognized, *retval is set to the specified value and zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error is returned.
VOP_ADVLOCK
(vp, id, op, fl, flags)- Manipulate Advisory record locks on a vnode. The argument
vp is the vnode on which locks are manipulated. The
argument id is the id token which is changing the
lock and op is the
fcntl(2) operation to perform. Valid values are:
- F_SETLK
- set lock
- F_GETLK
- get the first conflicted lock
- F_UNLCK
- clear lock
The argument fl is a description of the lock. In the case of
SEEK_CUR
, The caller should add the current file offset to fl->l_start beforehand.VOP_ADVLOCK
() treatsSEEK_CUR
asSEEK_SET
.The argument flags is the set of flags. Valid values are:
- F_WAIT
- wait until lock is granted
- F_FLOCK
- use flock(2) semantics for lock
- F_POSIX
- use POSIX semantics for lock
If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error is returned.
VOP_WHITEOUT
(dvp, cnp, flags)- Whiteout pathname component in directory with vnode
dvp. The argument cnp
specifies the pathname component to whiteout.
The vnode dvp should be locked on entry and will remain locked on return.
VOP_GETPAGES
(vp, offset, m, count, centeridx, access_type, advice, flags)- Read VM pages from file. The argument vp is the
locked vnode to read the VM pages from. The argument
offset is offset in the file to start accessing and
m is an array of VM pages. The argument
count points a variable that specifies the number of
pages to read. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise
an appropriate error code is returned. If PGO_LOCKED is specified in
flags,
VOP_GETPAGES
() might return less pages than requested. In that case, the variable pointed to by count will be updated.This function is primarily used by the page-fault handing mechanism.
VOP_PUTPAGES
(vp, offlo, offhi, flags)- Write modified (dirty) VM pages to file. The argument
vp is the vnode to write the VM pages to. The
vnode's vm object lock (v_uobj.vmobjlock) must be
held by the caller and will be released upon return. The arguments
offlo and offhi specify the
range of VM pages to write. In case offhi is given
as 0, all pages at and after the start offset offlo
belonging the vnode vp will be written. The argument
flags controls the behavior of the routine and takes
the vm pager's flags (
PGO_ -prefixed
). If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned.The function is primarily used by the pageout handling mechanism and is commonly implemented indirectly by
genfs_putpages
() with the help ofVOP_STRATEGY
() andVOP_BMAP
(). VOP_STRATEGY
(vp, bp)- Read/write a file system buffer. The argument vp is
the vnode to read/write to. The argument bp is the
buffer to be read or written.
VOP_STRATEGY
() will either read or write data to the file depending on the value of bp->b_flags. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned. VOP_BWRITE
(vp, bp)- Write a file system buffer. The argument vp is the vnode to write to. The argument bp specifies the buffer to be written. If the operation is successful zero is returned, otherwise an appropriate error code is returned.
VOP_GETEXTATTR
(vp, attrnamespace, name, uio, size, cred)- Get an extended attribute. The argument vp is the
locked vnode of the file or directory from which to retrieve the
attribute. The argument attrnamespace specifies the
extended attribute namespace. The argument name is a
nul-terminated character string naming the attribute to retrieve. The
argument uio, if not
NULL
, specifies where the extended attribute value is to be written. The argument size, if notNULL
, will contain the number of bytes required to read all of the attribute data upon return. In most cases, uio will beNULL
when size is not, and vice versa. The argument cred specifies the user credentials to use when authorizing the request. VOP_SETEXTATTR
(vp, attrnamespace, name, uio, cred)- Set an extended attribute. The argument vp is the locked vnode of the file or directory to which to store the attribute. The argument namespace specifies the extended attribute namespace. The argument name is a nul-terminated character string naming the attribute to store. The argument uio specifies the source of the extended attribute data. The argument cred specifies the user credentials to use when authorizing the request.
VOP_LISTEXTATTR
(vp, attrnamespace, uio, size, cred)- Retrieve the list of extended attributes. The argument
vp is the locked vnode of the file or directory
whose attributes are to be listed. The argument
attrnamespace specifies the extended attribute
namespace. The argument uio, if not
NULL
, specifies where the extended attribute list is to be written. The argument size, if notNULL
, will contain the number of bytes required to read all of the attribute names upon return. In most cases, uio will beNULL
when size is not, and vice versa. The argument cred specifies the user credentials to use when authorizing the request. VOP_DELETEEXTATTR
(vp, attrnamespace, name, cred)- Remove attribute name from file associated with
vp. The argument attrnamespace
specifies the extended attribute namespace. If full removal is not
supported, the file system should return
EOPNOTSUPP
to allow the caller to zero out the value withVOP_SETEXTATTR
().The vnode vp should be locked on entry and will remain locked on return.
FILES
src/sys/kern/vnode_if.src contains the list of vnode functions, their definitions and an exact locking protocol.
ERRORS
- [
EACCES
] - Access for the specified operation is denied.
- [
EDQUOT
] - Quota exceeded.
- [
EINVAL
] - attempt to read from an illegal offset in the directory; unrecognized input
- [
EIO
] - a read error occurred while reading the directory or reading the contents of a symbolic link
- [
EJUSTRETURN
] - A CREATE or RENAME operation would be successful.
- [
ENOATTR
] - The requested attribute is not defined for this vnode.
- [
ENOENT
] - The component was not found in the directory.
- [
ENOSPC
] - The file system is full.
- [
ENOTDIR
] - The vnode does not represent a directory.
- [
ENOTEMPTY
] - attempt to remove a directory which is not empty
- [
EPERM
] - an attempt was made to change an immutable file
- [
EROFS
] - the file system is read-only
SEE ALSO
extattr(9), intro(9), namei(9), vattr(9), vfs(9), vfsops(9), vnode(9)
HISTORY
The vnode operations vector, its functions and the corresponding macros appeared in 4.3BSD.