NAME
vn_fullpath — convert a vnode reference to a full pathname, given a process contextSYNOPSIS
#include <sys/param.h>#include <sys/vnode.h> int
vn_fullpath(struct thread *td, struct vnode *vp, char **retbuf, char **freebuf);
DESCRIPTION
The vn_fullpath() function makes a “best effort” attempt to generate a string pathname for the passed vnode; the resulting path, if any, will be relative to the root directory of the process associated with the passed thread pointer. The vn_fullpath() function is implemented by inspecting the VFS name cache, and attempting to reconstruct a path from the process root to the object. This process is necessarily unreliable for several reasons: intermediate entries in the path may not be found in the cache; files may have more than one name (hard links), not all file systems use the name cache (specifically, most synthetic file systems do not); a single name may be used for more than one file (in the context of file systems covering other file systems); a file may have no name (if deleted but still open or referenced). However, the resulting string may still be more useable to a user than a vnode pointer value, or a device number and inode number. Code consuming the results of this function should anticipate (and properly handle) failure. Its arguments are:- td
- The thread performing the call; this pointer will be dereferenced to find the process and its file descriptor structure, in order to identify the root vnode to use.
- vp
- The vnode to search for. No need to be locked by the caller.
- retbuf
- Pointer to a char * that vn_fullpath() may (on success) point at a newly allocated buffer containing the resulting pathname.
- freebuf
- Pointer to a char * that vn_fullpath() may (on success) point at a buffer to be freed, when the caller is done with retbuf.
NULL
, and
fullpath to a name to use in the event that
the call to vn_fullpath() fails. After done with
the value of fullpath, the caller will check
if freepath is
non-NULL
, and if so, invoke
free(9) with a pool type of
M_TEMP
.
RETURN VALUES
If the vnode is successfully converted to a pathname, 0 is returned; otherwise, an error number is returned.SEE ALSO
free(9)AUTHORS
This manual page was written by Robert Watson <[email protected]>.November 23, 2008 | Debian |