NAME¶
attr_get, attr_getf - get the value of a user attribute of a filesystem object
C SYNOPSIS¶
#include <attr/attributes.h>
int attr_get (const char *path, const char *attrname,
char *attrvalue, int *valuelength, int flags);
int attr_getf (int fd, const char *attrname,
char *attrvalue, int *valuelength, int flags);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
attr_get and
attr_getf functions provide a way to retrieve the
value of an attribute.
Path points to a path name for a filesystem object, and
fd refers
to the file descriptor associated with a file. If the attribute
attrname exists, the value associated with it will be copied into the
attrvalue buffer. The
valuelength argument is an input/output
argument that on the call to
attr_get should contain the maximum size
of attribute value the process is willing to accept. On return, the
valuelength will have been modified to show the actual size of the
attribute value returned. The
flags argument can contain the following
symbols bitwise OR'ed together:
- ATTR_ROOT
- Look for attrname in the root address space,
not in the user address space. (limited to use by super-user
only)
- ATTR_DONTFOLLOW
- Do not follow symbolic links when resolving a path
on an attr_get function call. The default is to follow symbolic
links.
attr_get will fail if one or more of the following are true:
- [ENOATTR]
- The attribute name given is not associated with the
indicated filesystem object.
- [E2BIG]
- The value of the given attribute is too large to fit into
the buffer. The integer that the valuelength argument points to has
been modified to show the actual number of bytes that would be required to
store the value of that attribute.
- [ENOENT]
- The named file does not exist.
- [EPERM]
- The effective user ID does not match the
owner of the file and the effective user ID is not
super-user.
- [ENOTDIR]
- A component of the path prefix is not a directory.
- [EACCES]
- Search permission is denied on a component of the path
prefix.
- [EINVAL]
- A bit was set in the flag argument that is not
defined for this system call.
- [EFAULT]
- Path, attrname, attrvalue, or
valuelength points outside the allocated address space of the
process.
- [ELOOP]
- A path name lookup involved too many symbolic links.
- [ENAMETOOLONG]
- The length of path exceeds {MAXPATHLEN}, or a
pathname component is longer than {MAXNAMELEN}.
attr_getf will fail if:
- [ENOATTR]
- The attribute name given is not associated with the
indicated filesystem object.
- [E2BIG]
- The value of the given attribute is too large to fit into
the buffer. The integer that the valuelength argument points to has
been modified to show the actual numnber of bytes that would be required
to store the value of that attribute.
- [EINVAL]
- A bit was set in the flag argument that is not
defined for this system call, or fd refers to a socket, not a
file.
- [EFAULT]
- Attrname, attrvalue, or valuelength
points outside the allocated address space of the process.
- [EBADF]
- Fd does not refer to a valid descriptor.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned, and
errno is set
appropriately.
SEE ALSO¶
attr(1),
attr_list(3),
attr_multi(3),
attr_remove(3), and
attr_set(3).