| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| ============================ |
| Linux Directory Notification |
| ============================ |
| |
| Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au> |
| |
| The intention of directory notification is to allow user applications |
| to be notified when a directory, or any of the files in it, are changed. |
| The basic mechanism involves the application registering for notification |
| on a directory using a fcntl(2) call and the notifications themselves |
| being delivered using signals. |
| |
| The application decides which "events" it wants to be notified about. |
| The currently defined events are: |
| |
| ========= ===================================================== |
| DN_ACCESS A file in the directory was accessed (read) |
| DN_MODIFY A file in the directory was modified (write,truncate) |
| DN_CREATE A file was created in the directory |
| DN_DELETE A file was unlinked from directory |
| DN_RENAME A file in the directory was renamed |
| DN_ATTRIB A file in the directory had its attributes |
| changed (chmod,chown) |
| ========= ===================================================== |
| |
| Usually, the application must reregister after each notification, but |
| if DN_MULTISHOT is or'ed with the event mask, then the registration will |
| remain until explicitly removed (by registering for no events). |
| |
| By default, SIGIO will be delivered to the process and no other useful |
| information. However, if the F_SETSIG fcntl(2) call is used to let the |
| kernel know which signal to deliver, a siginfo structure will be passed to |
| the signal handler and the si_fd member of that structure will contain the |
| file descriptor associated with the directory in which the event occurred. |
| |
| Preferably the application will choose one of the real time signals |
| (SIGRTMIN + <n>) so that the notifications may be queued. This is |
| especially important if DN_MULTISHOT is specified. Note that SIGRTMIN |
| is often blocked, so it is better to use (at least) SIGRTMIN + 1. |
| |
| Implementation expectations (features and bugs :-)) |
| --------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The notification should work for any local access to files even if the |
| actual file system is on a remote server. This implies that remote |
| access to files served by local user mode servers should be notified. |
| Also, remote accesses to files served by a local kernel NFS server should |
| be notified. |
| |
| In order to make the impact on the file system code as small as possible, |
| the problem of hard links to files has been ignored. So if a file (x) |
| exists in two directories (a and b) then a change to the file using the |
| name "a/x" should be notified to a program expecting notifications on |
| directory "a", but will not be notified to one expecting notifications on |
| directory "b". |
| |
| Also, files that are unlinked, will still cause notifications in the |
| last directory that they were linked to. |
| |
| Configuration |
| ------------- |
| |
| Dnotify is controlled via the CONFIG_DNOTIFY configuration option. When |
| disabled, fcntl(fd, F_NOTIFY, ...) will return -EINVAL. |
| |
| Example |
| ------- |
| See tools/testing/selftests/filesystems/dnotify_test.c for an example. |
| |
| NOTE |
| ---- |
| Beginning with Linux 2.6.13, dnotify has been replaced by inotify. |
| See Documentation/filesystems/inotify.rst for more information on it. |