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1.1 root 1: .\" Copyright (c) 1983 Regents of the University of California.
2: .\" All rights reserved. The Berkeley software License Agreement
3: .\" specifies the terms and conditions for redistribution.
4: .\"
5: .\" @(#)dir.5 6.1 (Berkeley) 5/15/85
6: .\"
7: .TH DIR 5 "May 15, 1985"
8: .UC 5
9: .SH NAME
10: dir \- format of directories
11: .SH SYNOPSIS
12: .B #include <sys/types.h>
13: .br
14: .B #include <sys/dir.h>
15: .SH DESCRIPTION
16: A directory behaves exactly like an ordinary file, save that no
17: user may write into a directory.
18: The fact that a file is a directory is indicated by
19: a bit in the flag word of its i-node entry; see
20: .IR fs (5).
21: The structure of a directory entry as given in the include file is:
22: .RS
23: .ta 8n +10n +10n
24: .PP
25: .nf
26: /*
27: * A directory consists of some number of blocks of DIRBLKSIZ
28: * bytes, where DIRBLKSIZ is chosen such that it can be transferred
29: * to disk in a single atomic operation (e.g. 512 bytes on most machines).
30: *
31: * Each DIRBLKSIZ byte block contains some number of directory entry
32: * structures, which are of variable length. Each directory entry has
33: * a struct direct at the front of it, containing its inode number,
34: * the length of the entry, and the length of the name contained in
35: * the entry. These are followed by the name padded to a 4 byte boundary
36: * with null bytes. All names are guaranteed null terminated.
37: * The maximum length of a name in a directory is MAXNAMLEN.
38: *
39: * The macro DIRSIZ(dp) gives the amount of space required to represent
40: * a directory entry. Free space in a directory is represented by
41: * entries which have dp->d_reclen > DIRSIZ(dp). All DIRBLKSIZ bytes
42: * in a directory block are claimed by the directory entries. This
43: * usually results in the last entry in a directory having a large
44: * dp->d_reclen. When entries are deleted from a directory, the
45: * space is returned to the previous entry in the same directory
46: * block by increasing its dp->d_reclen. If the first entry of
47: * a directory block is free, then its dp->d_ino is set to 0.
48: * Entries other than the first in a directory do not normally have
49: * dp->d_ino set to 0.
50: */
51: #ifdef KERNEL
52: #define DIRBLKSIZ DEV_BSIZE
53: #else
54: #define DIRBLKSIZ 512
55: #endif
56:
57: #define MAXNAMLEN 255
58:
59: /*
60: * The DIRSIZ macro gives the minimum record length which will hold
61: * the directory entry. This requires the amount of space in struct direct
62: * without the d_name field, plus enough space for the name with a terminating
63: * null byte (dp->d_namlen+1), rounded up to a 4 byte boundary.
64: */
65: #undef DIRSIZ
66: #define DIRSIZ(dp) \e
67: ((sizeof (struct direct) - (MAXNAMLEN+1)) + (((dp)->d_namlen+1 + 3) &~ 3))
68:
69: struct direct {
70: u_long d_ino;
71: short d_reclen;
72: short d_namlen;
73: char d_name[MAXNAMLEN + 1];
74: /* typically shorter */
75: };
76:
77: struct _dirdesc {
78: int dd_fd;
79: long dd_loc;
80: long dd_size;
81: char dd_buf[DIRBLKSIZ];
82: };
83: .fi
84: .RE
85: .PP
86: By convention, the first two entries in each directory
87: are for `.' and `..'. The first is an entry for the
88: directory itself. The second is for the parent directory.
89: The meaning of `..' is modified for the root directory
90: of the master file system (\*(lq/\*(rq),
91: where `..' has the same meaning as `.'.
92: .SH "SEE ALSO"
93: fs(5)
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