ref: a5cb451b299b03f44154fac5780b6a57ca130ce0
dir: /man/10/devattach/
.TH DEVATTACH 10.2 .SH NAME devattach, devclone, devdir, devgen, devwalk, devdirread, devstat, devopen, devbread, devbwrite, devcreate, devremove, devwstat, devreset, devinit, devshutdown, openmode \- common device driver support .SH SYNOPSIS .ta \w'\fLBlock* 'u +10n .B typedef int .B Devgen(Chan *c, char *name, Dirtab *tab, int ntab, int i, Dir *dp) .PP .B Chan* devattach(int tc, char *spec) .PP .B Chan* devclone(Chan *c) .PP .B void devdir(Chan *c, Qid qid, char *n, long length, .B char *user, long perm, Dir *dp) .PP .B int devgen(Chan *c, char *name, Dirtab *tab, int ntab, .B int i, Dir *dp) .PP .B Walkqid* devwalk(Chan *c, Chan *nc, char **name, int nname, .B Dirtab *tab, int ntab, Devgen *gen) .PP .B void devstat(Chan *c, uchar *db, int n, Dirtab *tab, .B int ntab, Devgen *gen) .PP .B long devdirread(Chan *c, char *d, long n, Dirtab *tab, .B int ntab, Devgen *gen) .PP .B Chan* devopen(Chan *c, int omode, Dirtab *tab, .B int ntab, Devgen *gen) .PP .B Block* devbread(Chan *c, long n, ulong offset) .PP .B long devbwrite(Chan *c, Block *bp, ulong offset) .PP .B void devcreate(Chan*, char*, int, ulong) .PP .B void devremove(Chan*) .PP .B void devwstat(Chan*, uchar*, int) .PP .B void devreset(void) .PP .B void devinit(void) .PP .B void devshutdown(void) .PP .B int openmode(ulong mode) .SH DESCRIPTION Device drivers call these functions to carry out essential tasks and default actions. They do most of the name space management for a driver that serves a simple name space (eg, data and control files), leaving the driver to concentrate on the device-specific details of the I/O requests. More complex drivers also make good use of them at the leaves of their name space, and to help manage the .B Chan structures correctly. .PP A device has an associated .IR type , represented as a Unicode character (`rune') that identifies the device inside and outside the kernel. It appears as the value of the .B type field in the .B Dir resulting from a .IR sys-stat (2) of any file provided by the device. A device is named outside the kernel using a path name starting with .B # followed by the device character (eg, .B c in .B #c for the console). Any subsequent characters before the next '/' or end of string is the `device specifier', interpreted solely by the device itself. .PP .I Devattach returns a new channel representing the root of the file tree corresponding to device type .IR tc , with device specifier .IR spec . It is normally called by a driver's .I attach function (see .IR dev (10.2)). The .B qid for the new channel is .BR "(Qid){0,0,QTDIR}" , suitable for a root directory for many devices, but a device driver is free to change it (provided the .B QTDIR bit remains in the .BR Qid.type ). .PP .I Devclone returns a new channel that is a copy of .IR c . An attempt to clone an open channel causes a .IR panic (10.2). .PP The .L Dir structure is shown below: .IP .EX typedef struct Dir { /* system-modified data */ ushort type; /* server type */ uint dev; /* server subtype */ /* file data */ Qid qid; /* unique id from server */ ulong mode; /* permissions */ ulong atime; /* last read time */ ulong mtime; /* last write time */ vlong length; /* file length */ char *name; /* last element of path */ char *uid; /* owner name */ char *gid; /* group name */ char *muid; /* last modifier name */ } Dir; .EE .PP This .B Dir structure corresponds directly to the Limbo .B Dir adt described in .IR sys-stat (2). .PP Given a channel and assorted other information, .I devdir initialises a Dir structure at .IR dp . .I Devdir supplies the following data itself: .RS .TF length .TP .B atime last access time (set to current time) .TP .B mtime last modification time (set to kernel creation date) .TP .B gid group name (set to .IR eve (10.2)) .TP .B length length in bytes (set to zero, which is normal for most devices) .RE .PD .PP Note that .I devdir assigns the values of .I name and .I user directly to fields of .BI * dp, and consequently those values must remain valid until the last use of .BI * dp. (Sometimes that requires the use of an auxiliary buffer, such as .BR up->genbuf .) If channel .I c corresponds to a file descriptor on which 9P is served, .I devdir sets both the flag bit .B QTMOUNT in .IB dp ->qid.type and the flag bit .B DMMOUNT in .IB dp ->mode (see .IR sys-export (2) and .I mount in .IR sys-bind (2)). .PP A simple name space can be represented in a driver by an array of .B Dirtab structures. The array is typically static when the names and permissions are static, but can be dynamically allocated and initialised if required. The structure of .B Dirtab is shown below: .IP .EX typedef struct Dirtab { char name[KNAMELEN]; Qid qid; vlong length; long perm; } Dirtab; .EE .PP The name .RB ` . ' .I must appear as the first entry in a .B Dirtab if the default .I devgen function is used. On the other hand, the name .RB ` .. ' must never appear in a .B Dirtab table. Drivers that support a directory hierarchy must walk up the hierarchy towards the root when their .I walk function receives .RB ` .. ' as a file name component. The name .RB ` . ' is never seen by a driver. .PP The .IR devdirread , .IR devopen , .IR devstat , and .IR devwalk functions all take a .I gen function argument, of type .BR Devgen , which they invoke to retrieve the items in a .B Chan that represents a directory. .I Gen takes a channel .I c (a directory), a file .I name (which is nil except during .IR devwalk ), an array of .B Dirtab structures .I tab of length .IR ntab , and a table index .IR i . The functions calling .I gen expect it to place the .IR i 'th entry in the directory into .IR \f5*\fPdp . It should return 1 if the call was successful, -1 if .I i is beyond the index of the last directory entry, or 0 if there is no entry at .IR i , but there are entries beyond it. When .I i has the special value .B DEVDOTDOT then .I gen should set .IR \f5*\fPdp to reflect the parent of .IR c ; if .I c is a one-level device directory, then `..' is equivalent to `.'. Custom implementations of .I gen often ignore .IR devtab , and instead return their own dynamically generated set of directory entries from some other source. Exceptionally, during .I devwalk a non-nil .I name is provided: it is the name being looked up, and a device-specific .I gen can short-circuit the search by returning -1 if the name does not exist, or filling in .IR \f5*\fPdp and returning 1 if it does exist. .PP The function .I devgen is compatible with .BR Devgen ; it returns the .IR i 'th entry in .IR devtab , and can be used to provide a simple, static set of directory entries. .PP .I Devwalk walks channel .I c to the file in the device named by the path encoded in .IR name , which is an array of strings of length .IR nname . It provides the interface to .IR walk (5) within the kernel, and that specification must be well understood to appreciate all the nuances of its interface. Fortunately, in nearly all device drivers, a device's .I walk function typically passes its parameters on to .I devwalk (adding the device's own .B Dirtab array as the the value of .IR tab ), and simply returning the result of .IR devwalk . .PP .I Devwalk walks .I c using the given set of names, and if the walk is successful, the channel .I nc will refer to the result of the walk (specifically, .IB nc ->qid is set to the Qid for the file). If .I nc is nil, .I devwalk will allocate a new channel itself, that is initially a clone of .IR c . As in .IR walk (5), .I devwalk can return a partial result, represented by a dynamically allocated value of the following structure: .IP .EX struct Walkqid { Chan *clone; int nqid; Qid qid[1]; /* actually nname in length */ }; .EE .PP The value must be freed after use. For each element of .I name , .I devwalk passes the .I tab parameter to .I gen together with the currently-sought element of .IR name . If the first element is not found, .I devwalk returns nil; otherwise, it returns a .B Walkqid value in which .B nqid elements of the array .B qid are set to the qids (see .IR intro (5)) of each valid element of .IR name . If all .I nname elements were successfully traversed, then .B nqid will have the value .IR nname , and .B clone will refer to the result of the walk, which is either .I nc if given, or the new channel allocated by .IR devwalk . Otherwise, at least one element succeeded and .B nqid is less than .I nname and .B clone is nil. On an error or incomplete walk, the error string is set to the error that stopped the walk (eg, .B Enonexist or .BR Enotdir ). .PP .I Devstat fills the array of bytes .I db with data in the format produced by .IR stat (5) that describes the file referenced by channel .IR c , which must have a corresponding entry returned by .IR gen (ie, an entry with matching .BR Qid.path ). If .I c is a communications channel connecting a 9P server to a current mount point, the .B DMMOUNT bit is set in the resulting .BR Dir.mode , and .B QTMOUNT is set in .BR Dir.qid.type . As in .IR stat (5), the length of the data written to .I db varies; if more than .I n bytes are needed, .I devstat raises the .IR error (10.2) .BR Ebadarg . Otherwise, it returns the number of bytes in .I db actually used. .PP If an entry with the desired qid is not found in the table, but .I c corresponds to a directory (ie, .B QTDIR is set in .IR c\f5->qid.type\fP ), it is taken to be a .I stat of a notional directory containing the files listed in .IR tab . .I Dirstat then builds the corresponding Dir structure: its .B Dir.name is taken from .IR c\f5->path->elem\fP ; the length is .BI DIRLEN*nelem(tab) ; and .B Dir.perm is 0555 (read-execute for all). .PP .I Devdirread calls .I gen to obtain successive .B Dir structures representing entries in the open directory .IR c . These are converted to standard format (see .I convD2M in .IR styx (10.2)) and placed in the buffer .IR b . It returns the number of bytes in the result. At most .I n bytes will be returned, in multiples of .BR DIRLEN . Because the kernel maintains the current offset in .IR c , successive calls to .I devdirread return successive directory components. .PP .I Devopen is called to check and complete a request to open channel .I c for I/O according to .IR omode (the open mode of .IR sys-open (2)). It calls .I gen to obtain successive directory entries which it searches for a Qid matching that of .IR c , and ensures that the current user has permission to open .I c with the given mode, .IR omode , and that the mode itself is valid (see .I openmode below). Permission is checked against the permission in the matching entry. If no matching Qid is found, it is assumed that the notional parent directory of the files represented in .I tab is to be opened. Such a directory is deemed to have mode 0555, allowing access by any user. A directory can only be opened for reading .RB ( OREAD ). .I Devopen returns the channel .I c on success. Last, it sets the bit .B COPEN in .B Chan.flag to mark .I c as open. This convention can always be relied upon by the driver's .I close function to tell if an open succeeded. On the otherhand, if the open request was unsuccessful, .I devopen raises an appropriate .IR error (10.2) and does not return. .PP .I Devbread returns a .B Block (see .IR allocb (10.2)) containing up to .I n bytes read, using .BI "devtab[" c "->type]->read" , from .I c starting at the given .IR offset . The read pointer in the returned .B Block points to the start of the data; the write pointer points to the next available byte. .PP .I Devbwrite writes the data in .B Block .I bp to the file .I c at the given .IR offset , using the write function .BI "devtab[" c "->type]->write" . It then frees the block list .I bp before returning the number of bytes written. .PP Most built-in devices do not allow .IR create , .IR remove or .I wstat on their files. .IR Devcreate , .I devremove and .I devwstat are stubs that raise an .IR error (10.2), .BR Eperm . They can be named directly in a device driver's device switch (the .B Dev structure in .BR /os/port/portdat.h : see .IR dev (10.2)). .PP .IR Devreset , .I devinit and .I devshutdown are also stubs; they do nothing. A device driver puts them in its .B Dev structure when it need take no action on device reset, initialisation, or shut down. .PP .I Openmode is used by a driver that does not use .IR devopen , to check the open mode it receives in its open routine. .I Openmode returns mode .IR o , the mode parameter to .IR sys-open (2) or .IR sys-create , shorn of .BR OTRUNC and similar options, and reduced to one of .BR OREAD , .BR OWRITE or .BR ORDWR . In particular, .B OEXEC becomes .B OREAD within the kernel. .I Openmode raises an .IR error (10.2) .B Ebadarg instead of returning, if .I o is an invalid mode (eg, reserved bits set). .SH SOURCE .B /emu/port/dev.c .br .B /os/port/dev.c .SH SEE ALSO .IR allocb (10.2), .IR eve (10.2), .IR qio (10.2)