table of contents
VOP_OPEN(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | VOP_OPEN(9) |
NAME¶
VOP_OPEN
, VOP_CLOSE
—
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/vnode.h>
int
VOP_OPEN
(struct
vnode *vp, int
mode, struct ucred
*cred, struct thread
*td, struct file
*fp);
int
VOP_CLOSE
(struct
vnode *vp, int
mode, struct ucred
*cred, struct thread
*td);
DESCRIPTION¶
TheVOP_OPEN
() entry point is called before a file is
accessed by a process and the VOP_CLOSE
() entry point
is called after a file is finished with by the process.
The arguments are:
- vp
- The vnode of the file.
- mode
- The access mode required by the calling process.
- cred
- The caller's credentials.
- td
- The thread which is accessing the file.
- fp
- The file being opened.
Pointer to the file fp is useful for file
systems which require such information, e.g., fdescfs(5).
Use ‘NULL
’ as fp
argument to VOP_OPEN
() for in-kernel opens.
The access mode is a set of flags, including
FREAD
, FWRITE
,
O_NONBLOCK
, O_APPEND
.
LOCKS¶
VOP_OPEN
() expects vp to be locked
on entry and will leave it locked on return.
VOP_CLOSE
() expects at least a reference
to be associated with the vnode and does not care whether the vnode is
locked or not. The lock and reference state is left unchanged on return.
Note that vn_close expects an unlocked, referenced
vnode and will dereference the vnode prior to returning.
RETURN VALUES¶
Zero is returned on success, otherwise an error code is returned.SEE ALSO¶
vnode(9), VOP_LOOKUP(9)AUTHORS¶
This manual page was written by Doug Rabson.December 2, 2009 | Linux 4.19.0-10-amd64 |