minix/servers/procfs/type.h
Lionel Sambuc b6aa3714a1 Remove protocol version of {mode,ino,uid,gid}_t
Now that we have enough room in the message, remove these types.

Change-Id: Ib734c6f0209b259a14a1189b3886b9c8474e1b9a
2014-07-28 17:05:29 +02:00

75 lines
3.7 KiB
C

#ifndef _PROCFS_TYPE_H
#define _PROCFS_TYPE_H
typedef void *data_t; /* abstract data type; can hold pointer */
struct load {
clock_t ticks; /* in this umber of ticks: */
long proc_load; /* .. the CPU had this load */
};
/* ProcFS supports two groups of files: dynamic files, which are created within
* process-specific (PID) directories, and static files, which are global. For
* both, the following structure is used to construct the files.
*
* For dynamic files, the rules are simple: only regular files are supported
* (although partial support for symbolic links is already present), and the
* 'data' field must be filled with a pointer to a function of the type:
*
* void (*)(int slot)
*
* The function will be called whenever a read request for the file is made;
* 'slot' contains the kernel slot number of the process being queried (so for
* the PM and VFS process tables, NR_TASKS has to be subtracted from the slot
* number to find the right slot). The function is expected to produce
* appropriate output using the buf_printf() function.
*
* For static files, regular files and directories are supported. For
* directories, the 'data' field must be a pointer to another 'struct file'
* array that specifies the contents of the directory - this directory will
* the be created recursively. For regular files, the 'data' field must point
* to a function of the type:
*
* void (*)(void)
*
* Here too, the function will be called upon a read request, and it is
* supposed to "fill" the file using buf_printf(). Obviously, for static files,
* there is no slot number.
*
* For both static and dynamic files, 'mode' must specify the file type as well
* as the access mode, and in both cases, each array is terminated with an
* entry that has its name set to NULL.
*/
/* The internal link between static/dynamic files/directories and VTreeFS'
* indexes and cbdata values is as follows:
* - Dynamic directories are always PID directories in the root directory.
* They are generated automatically, and are not specified using a "struct
* file" structure. Their index is their slot number, so that getdents()
* calls always return any PID at most once. Their cbdata value is the PID of
* the process associated with that dynamic directory, for the purpose of
* comparing old and new PIDs after updating process tables (without having
* to atoi() the directory's name).
* - Dynamic files are always in such a dynamic directory. Their index is the
* array index into the "struct file" array of pid files (pid_files[]). They
* are indexed at all, because they may be deleted at any time due to inode
* shortages, independently of other dynamic files in the same directory, and
* recreating them without index would again risk possibly inconsistent
* getdents() results, where for example the same file shows up twice.
* VTreeFS currently does not distinguish between indexed and delatable files
* and hence, all dynamic files must be indexed so as to be deletable anyway.
* - Static directories have no index (they are not and must not be deletable),
* and although their cbdata is their associated 'data' field from their
* "struct file" entries, their cbdata value is currently not relied on
* anywhere. Then again, as of writing, there are no static directories at
* all.
* - Static files have no index either (for the same reason). Their cbdata is
* also their 'data' field from the "struct file" entry creating the file,
* and this is used to actually call the callback function directly.
*/
struct file {
char *name; /* file name, maximum length PNAME_MAX */
mode_t mode; /* file mode, including file type */
data_t data; /* custom data associated with this file */
};
#endif /* _PROCFS_TYPE_H */