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VINVALBUF(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | VINVALBUF(9) |
NAME¶
vinvalbuf
—
flushes and invalidates all buffers associated with a
vnode
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/vnode.h>
int
vinvalbuf
(struct
vnode *vp, int
flags, struct ucred
*cred, int slpflag,
int slptimeo);
DESCRIPTION¶
Thevinvalbuf
() function invalidates all of the buffers
associated with the given vnode. This includes buffers on the clean list and
the dirty list. If the V_SAVE
flag is specified then
the buffers on the dirty list are synced prior to being released. If there is
a VM Object associated with the vnode, it is removed.
Its arguments are:
- vp
- A pointer to the vnode whose buffers will be invalidated.
- flags
- The only supported flag is
V_SAVE
and it indicates that dirty buffers should be synced with the disk. - cred
- The user credentials that are used to VOP_FSYNC(9)
buffers if
V_SAVE
is set. - slpflag
- The slp flag that will be used in the priority of any sleeps in the function.
- slptimeo
- The timeout for any sleeps in the function.
LOCKS¶
The vnode is assumed to be locked prior to the call and remains locked upon return.Giant must be held by prior to the call and remains locked upon return.
RETURN VALUES¶
A 0 value is returned on success.PSEUDOCODE¶
vn_lock(devvp, LK_EXCLUSIVE | LK_RETRY); error = vinvalbuf(devvp, V_SAVE, cred, 0, 0); VOP_UNLOCK(devvp, 0); if (error) return (error);
ERRORS¶
- [
ENOSPC
] - The file system is full. (With
V_SAVE
) - [
EDQUOT
] - Disc quota exceeded. (With
V_SAVE
) - [
EWOULDBLOCK
] - Sleep operation timed out. (See slptimeo)
- [
ERESTART
] - A signal needs to be delivered and the system call should be restarted.
(With
PCATCH
set in slpflag) - [
EINTR
] - The system has been interrupted by a signal. (With
PCATCH
set in slpflag)
SEE ALSO¶
tsleep(9), VOP_FSYNC(9)AUTHORS¶
This manual page was written by Chad David <davidc@acns.ab.ca>.October 20, 2008 | Linux 4.19.0-10-amd64 |