PMEM2_BADBLOCK_CONTEXT_NEW(3) | PMDK Programmer's Manual | PMEM2_BADBLOCK_CONTEXT_NEW(3) |
pmem2_badblock_context_new(), pmem2_badblock_context_delete() - allocate and free a context for pmem2_badblock_next() and pmem2_badblock_clear() operations
#include <libpmem2.h> struct pmem2_source; struct pmem2_badblock_context; int pmem2_badblock_context_new( struct pmem2_badblock_context **bbctx, const struct pmem2_source *src); void pmem2_badblock_context_delete( struct pmem2_badblock_context **bbctx);
The pmem2_badblock_context_new() function instantiates a new (opaque) bad block context structure, pmem2_badblock_context, which is used to read and clear bad blocks (by pmem2_badblock_next() and pmem2_badblock_clear()). The function returns the bad block context through the pointer in *bbctx.
New bad block context structure is initialized with values read from the source given as the first argument (src).
A bad block is an uncorrectable media error - a part of a storage media that is either inaccessible or unwritable due to permanent physical damage. In case of memory-mapped I/O, if a process tries to access (read or write) the corrupted block, it will be terminated by the SIGBUS signal.
The pmem2_badblock_context_delete() function frees *bbctx returned by pmem2_badblock_context_new() and sets *bbctx to NULL. If *bbctx is NULL, no operation is performed.
It is not supported on Windows.
The pmem2_badblock_context_new() function returns 0 on success or a negative error code on failure.
The pmem2_badblock_context_new() sets *bbctx to NULL on failure.
The pmem2_badblock_context_delete() does not return any value.
The pmem2_badblock_context_new() can fail with the following errors:
pmem2_badblock_next(3), pmem2_badblock_clear(3), libpmem2(7) and <https://pmem.io>
2022-08-25 | PMDK - pmem2 API version 1.0 |