KERNEL_MOUNT(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | KERNEL_MOUNT(9) |
free_mntarg
,
kernel_mount
, kernel_vmount
,
mount_arg
, mount_argb
,
mount_argf
, mount_argsu
— functions provided as part of the kernel mount
interface
void
free_mntarg
(struct
mntarg *ma);
int
kernel_mount
(struct
mntarg *ma, int
flags);
int
kernel_vmount
(int
flags, ...);
struct mntarg *
mount_arg
(struct mntarg *ma,
const char *name, const void
*val, int len);
struct mntarg *
mount_argb
(struct
mntarg *ma, int
flag, const char
*name);
struct mntarg *
mount_argf
(struct
mntarg *ma, const char
*name, const char
*fmt, ...);
struct mntarg *
mount_argsu
(struct mntarg *ma,
const char *name, const void
*val, int len);
The
kernel_mount
()
family of functions are provided as an API for building a list of mount
arguments which will be used to mount file systems from inside the kernel.
By accumulating a list of arguments, the API takes shape and provides the
information necessary for the kernel to control the
mount(8) utility. When an error occurs, the process will
stop. This will not cause a panic(9).
The header of the structure is stored in src/sys/kern/vfs_mount.c which permits automatic structure creation to ease the mount process. Memory allocation must always be freed when the entire process is complete, it is an error otherwise.
The
free_mntarg
()
function is used to free or clear the mntarg
structure.
The
kernel_mount
()
function pulls information from the structure to perform the mount request
on a given file system. Additionally, the
kernel_mount
() function always calls the
free_mntarg
() function. If ma
contains any error code generated during the construction, that code will be
called and the file system mount will not be attempted.
The
kernel_vmount
()
is a function similar to printf(9) which is used to mount
a file system.
The
mount_arg
()
function takes a plain argument and crafts parts of the structure with
regards to various mount options. If the length is a value less than 0,
strlen(3) is used. This argument will be referenced until
either free_mntarg
() or
kernel_mount
() is called.
The
mount_argb
()
function is used to add boolean arguments to the structure. The
flag is the boolean value and
name must start with
"no
", otherwise a panic will occur.
The
mount_argf
()
function adds printf(9) style arguments to the current
structure.
The
mount_argsu
()
function will add arguments to the structure from a userland string.
An example of the *_cmount
() function:
static int msdosfs_cmount(struct mntarg *ma, void *data, int flags, struct thread *td) { struct msdosfs_args args; int error; if (data == NULL) return (EINVAL); error = copyin(data, &args, sizeof(args)); if (error) return (error); ma = mount_argsu(ma, "from", args.fspec, MAXPATHLEN); ma = mount_arg(ma, "export", &args.export, sizeof(args.export)); ma = mount_argf(ma, "uid", "%d", args.uid); ma = mount_argf(ma, "gid", "%d", args.gid); ma = mount_argf(ma, "mask", "%d", args.mask); ma = mount_argf(ma, "dirmask", "%d", args.dirmask); ma = mount_argb(ma, args.flags & MSDOSFSMNT_SHORTNAME, "noshortname"); ma = mount_argb(ma, args.flags & MSDOSFSMNT_LONGNAME, "nolongname"); ma = mount_argb(ma, !(args.flags & MSDOSFSMNT_NOWIN95), "nowin95"); ma = mount_argb(ma, args.flags & MSDOSFSMNT_KICONV, "nokiconv"); ma = mount_argsu(ma, "cs_win", args.cs_win, MAXCSLEN); ma = mount_argsu(ma, "cs_dos", args.cs_dos, MAXCSLEN); ma = mount_argsu(ma, "cs_local", args.cs_local, MAXCSLEN); error = kernel_mount(ma, flags); return (error); }
When working with kernel_vmount
(),
varargs must come in pairs, e.g.,
{name, value}.
error = kernel_vmount( MNT_RDONLY, "fstype", vfsname, "fspath", "/", "from", path, NULL);
The kernel_mount
() family of functions and
this manual page first appeared in FreeBSD 6.0.
The kernel_mount
() family of functions and
API was developed by Poul-Henning Kamp
<phk@FreeBSD.org>.
This manual page was written by Tom Rhodes
<trhodes@FreeBSD.org>.
December 13, 2004 | Debian |