NAME
getfsent
,
getfsspec
, getfsfile
,
setfsent
, endfsent
—
get file system descriptor file
entry
LIBRARY
Standard system libraries.
SYNOPSIS
#include
<fstab.h>
struct fstab *
getfsent
(void);
struct fstab *
getfsspec
(const
char *spec);
struct fstab *
getfsfile
(const
char *file);
int
setfsent
(void);
void
endfsent
(void);
DESCRIPTION
The
getfsent
(),
getfsspec
(), and getfsfile
()
functions each return a pointer to an object with the following structure
containing file system descriptions from the directory systems consulted by
the opendirectoryd
daemon. This will include records
from the local /etc/fstab file.
struct fstab { char *fs_spec; /* block special device name */ char *fs_file; /* file system path prefix */ char *fs_vfstype; /* File system type, ufs, nfs */ char *fs_mntops; /* Mount options ala -o */ char *fs_type; /* FSTAB_* from fs_mntops */ int fs_freq; /* dump frequency, in days */ int fs_passno; /* pass number on parallel fsck */ };
The fields have meanings described in fstab(5).
The
getfsspec
()
and
getfsfile
()
functions search in available directory services for a matching special file
name or file system file name.
For programs wishing to read the entire database,
getfsent
()
searches all available directory services on it's first invocation. It
caches the returned entries in a list and returns fstab entries one at a
time.
The
setfsent
()
and
endfsent
()
functions clear the cached results from a previous
getfsent
() call.
Entries in the /etc/fstab file with a type field equivalent to
FSTAB_XX
are ignored.
RETURN VALUES
The getfsent
(),
getfsspec
(), and getfsfile
()
functions return a NULL
pointer on
EOF
or error. The setfsent
()
function returns 0 on failure, 1 on success. The
endfsent
() function returns nothing.
FILES
- /etc/fstab
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The getfsent
() function appeared in
4.0BSD; the endfsent
(),
getfsfile
(), getfsspec
(),
and setfsent
() functions appeared in
4.3BSD.
BUGS
The data space used by these functions is thread-specific; if future use requires the data, it should be copied before any subsequent calls to these functions overwrite it.