blob: 74fb7251b3872c4f08f38383bab7ab4c0f8979cd [file] [log] [blame] [raw]
/* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1+ */
#pragma once
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stddef.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/statfs.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/vfs.h>
#include "macro.h"
int is_symlink(const char *path);
int is_dir(const char *path, bool follow);
int is_dir_fd(int fd);
int is_device_node(const char *path);
int dir_is_empty_at(int dir_fd, const char *path);
static inline int dir_is_empty(const char *path) {
return dir_is_empty_at(AT_FDCWD, path);
}
static inline int dir_is_populated(const char *path) {
int r;
r = dir_is_empty(path);
if (r < 0)
return r;
return !r;
}
bool null_or_empty(struct stat *st) _pure_;
int null_or_empty_path(const char *fn);
int null_or_empty_fd(int fd);
int path_is_read_only_fs(const char *path);
int files_same(const char *filea, const char *fileb, int flags);
/* The .f_type field of struct statfs is really weird defined on
* different archs. Let's give its type a name. */
typedef typeof(((struct statfs*)NULL)->f_type) statfs_f_type_t;
bool is_fs_type(const struct statfs *s, statfs_f_type_t magic_value) _pure_;
int fd_is_fs_type(int fd, statfs_f_type_t magic_value);
int path_is_fs_type(const char *path, statfs_f_type_t magic_value);
bool is_temporary_fs(const struct statfs *s) _pure_;
bool is_network_fs(const struct statfs *s) _pure_;
int fd_is_temporary_fs(int fd);
int fd_is_network_fs(int fd);
int fd_is_network_ns(int fd);
int path_is_temporary_fs(const char *path);
/* Because statfs.t_type can be int on some architectures, we have to cast
* the const magic to the type, otherwise the compiler warns about
* signed/unsigned comparison, because the magic can be 32 bit unsigned.
*/
#define F_TYPE_EQUAL(a, b) (a == (typeof(a)) b)
int stat_verify_regular(const struct stat *st);
int fd_verify_regular(int fd);
int stat_verify_directory(const struct stat *st);
int fd_verify_directory(int fd);
/* glibc and the Linux kernel have different ideas about the major/minor size. These calls will check whether the
* specified major is valid by the Linux kernel's standards, not by glibc's. Linux has 20bits of minor, and 12 bits of
* major space. See MINORBITS in linux/kdev_t.h in the kernel sources. (If you wonder why we define _y here, instead of
* comparing directly >= 0: it's to trick out -Wtype-limits, which would otherwise complain if the type is unsigned, as
* such a test would be pointless in such a case.) */
#define DEVICE_MAJOR_VALID(x) \
({ \
typeof(x) _x = (x), _y = 0; \
_x >= _y && _x < (UINT32_C(1) << 12); \
\
})
#define DEVICE_MINOR_VALID(x) \
({ \
typeof(x) _x = (x), _y = 0; \
_x >= _y && _x < (UINT32_C(1) << 20); \
})
int device_path_make_major_minor(mode_t mode, dev_t devno, char **ret);
int device_path_make_canonical(mode_t mode, dev_t devno, char **ret);
int device_path_parse_major_minor(const char *path, mode_t *ret_mode, dev_t *ret_devno);