ref: 6b84c3a6548f1c577948763b0a09a7b6e2460e04
dir: /man/10/newchan/
.TH NEWCHAN 10.2 .SH NAME newchan, chanfree, cclose, eqqid, eqchan, isdir, fdtochan, namec \- channel operations .SH SYNOPSIS .ta \w'\fLChan* 'u .B Chan* newchan(void) .PP .B void chanfree(Chan *c) .PP .B int eqqid(Qid a, Qid b) .PP .B int eqchan(Chan *a, Chan *b, int pathonly) .PP .B void isdir(Chan *c) .PP .B Chan* fdtochan(Fgrp *f, int fd, int mode, int chkmnt, int iref) .PP .B Chan* namec(char *pathname, int amode, int omode, ulong perm) .PP .B void cclose(Chan *c) .SH DESCRIPTION A value of type .B Chan represents a kernel channel for I/O and name space operations. It has the following public structure: .IP .EX typedef struct Chan{ ushort type; /* driver name */ ulong dev; /* instance number */ ushort mode; /* open mode */ ushort flag; /* COPEN set once opened */ ulong offset; /* current file offset */ Qid qid; /* unique id (path, vers) */ Cname* name; /* name by which it was accessed */ .EE .PP .I Newchan returns a pointer to a newly allocated channel (sleeping if necessary until memory is available). Device drivers do not normally call .IR newchan directly, but instead allocate channels using either .IR devattach , when a process attaches to the device's root, or .IR devclone , when an existing channel is cloned; see .IR devattach (10.2). .PP .I Chanfree frees the channel structure .I c for reuse. .PP .I Eqqid returns 1 if .B Qid values .I a and .I b are equal (ie, both their .B path and .B vers members are equal); it returns 0 otherwise. .PP .I Eqchan returns 1 if .I a and .I b have the same .BR qid , .BR type and .BR dev members (ie, they represent the same file); it returns 0 otherwise. If .I pathonly is non-zero, the comparison of the two .B qid members compares only their .B path values, ignoring the version field .BR vers . .PP .I Isdir checks that a given channel .I c is a directory. If so, it returns; otherwise, it generates an .IR error (10.2), .BR Enotdir . .PP The .B Fgrp structure represents an array of open files, each represented by a .BR Chan , indexed by integer file descriptors. A given .B Fgrp can be shared between processes. .PP .I Fdtochan returns a pointer to the .B Chan corresponding to file descriptor .I fd in file descriptor group .I f (almost invariably .BR up->env->fgrp , the file descriptor group for the current process). If .I mode is a valid mode for .IR sys-open (2), typically .BR OREAD , .B OWRITE or .BR ORDWR , it must correspond to the mode with which .I fd was originally opened; if .I mode is .BR -1 , no check is made. If .I chkmnt is non-zero, .I c must not be a channel in use by the mount driver .IR mnt (3). On successful return, if .I iref is non-zero, the channel's reference count has been incremented. .I Fdtochan calls .IR error (10.2) if it detects invalid uses, in particular an invalid file descriptor .IR fd . .PP .I Namec looks up a .I pathname in the current name space and returns a channel. .I Amode determines the mode of look up, and must be one of the constants below: .TF Aaccess .PD .TP .B Aaccess Access file for information, as in the stat command or call. .TP .B Atodir Access file as directory (the .B QTDIR bit of its .B qid.type must be set). .TP .B Aopen Access for I/O. .TP .B Amount Access directory to be mounted upon. .TP .B Acreate File is to be created. .PP If .I amode is .B Aopen or .BR Acreate , .I omode should be a mode suitable for .IR sys-open (2); if .BR Acreate , .I perm should be valid file permissions. In all other cases, .I omode and .I perm can be zero. .PP .I Cclose decrements the reference count on .IR c ; if no further references remain, it calls the corresponding device's .B Dev.close to close the channel, and frees .IR c . .SH DIAGNOSTICS Most functions call .IR error (10.2) on any sort of error. .SH SOURCE .B /os/port/chan.c .br .B /emu/port/chan.c .SH SEE ALSO .IR ref (10.2)