table of contents
UNDELETE(2) | System Calls Manual | UNDELETE(2) |
NAME¶
undelete
— attempt
to recover a deleted file
LIBRARY¶
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<unistd.h>
int
undelete
(const
char *path);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
undelete
()
system call attempts to recover the deleted file named by
path. Currently, this works only when the named object
is a whiteout in a union file system. The system call removes the whiteout
causing any objects in a lower layer of the union stack to become visible
once more.
Eventually, the
undelete
()
functionality may be expanded to other file systems able to recover deleted
files such as the log-structured file system.
RETURN VALUES¶
The undelete
() function returns the
value 0 if successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and
the global variable errno is set to indicate the
error.
ERRORS¶
The undelete
() succeeds unless:
- [
ENOTDIR
] - A component of the path prefix is not a directory.
- [
ENAMETOOLONG
] - A component of a pathname exceeded 255 characters, or an entire path name exceeded 1023 characters.
- [
EEXIST
] - The path does not reference a whiteout.
- [
ENOENT
] - The named whiteout does not exist.
- [
EACCES
] - Search permission is denied for a component of the path prefix.
- [
EACCES
] - Write permission is denied on the directory containing the name to be undeleted.
- [
ELOOP
] - Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating the pathname.
- [
EPERM
] - The directory containing the name is marked sticky, and the containing directory is not owned by the effective user ID.
- [
EINVAL
] - The last component of the path is
‘
..
’. - [
EIO
] - An I/O error occurred while updating the directory entry.
- [
EINTEGRITY
] - Corrupted data was detected while reading from the file system.
- [
EROFS
] - The name resides on a read-only file system.
- [
EFAULT
] - The path argument points outside the process's allocated address space.
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
The undelete
() system call first appeared
in 4.4BSD-Lite.
March 30, 2020 | Debian |