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1.\" Copyright (c) 2003 Apple Computer, Inc. All rights reserved.
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15.\" under the License.
16.\"
17.\" @(#)getattrlist.2
18.
19.Dd October 14, 2004
20.Dt GETATTRLIST 2
21.Os Darwin
22.Sh NAME
23.Nm getattrlist
24.Nd get file system attributes
25.Sh SYNOPSIS
26.Fd #include <sys/attr.h>
27.Fd #include <unistd.h>
28.Ft int
29.Fn getattrlist "const char* path" "struct attrlist * attrList" "void * attrBuf" "size_t attrBufSize" "unsigned long options"
30.
31.Sh DESCRIPTION
32The
33.Fn getattrlist
34function returns attributes (that is, metadata) of file system objects.
35You can think of
36.Fn getattrlist
37as a seriously enhanced version of
38.Xr stat 2 .
39The function returns attributes about the file system object specified by
40.Fa path
41in the buffer specified by
42.Fa attrBuf
43and
44.Fa attrBufSize .
45The
46.Fa attrList
47parameter determines what attributes are returned.
48The
49.Fa options
50parameter lets you control specific aspects of the function's behavior.
51.Pp
52.
53The
54.Fn getattrlist
55function is only supported by certain volume format implementations.
56For maximum compatibility, client programs should use high-level APIs
57(such as the Carbon File Manager) to access file system attributes.
58These high-level APIs include logic to emulate file system attributes
59on volumes that don't support
60.Fn getattrlist .
61.Pp
62.
63Not all volumes support all attributes.
64See the discussion of
65.Dv ATTR_VOL_ATTRIBUTES
66for a discussion of how to determine whether a particular volume supports a
67particular attribute.
68.Pp
69Furthermore, you should only request the attributes that you need.
70Some attributes are expensive to calculate on some volume formats.
71For example,
72.Dv ATTR_DIR_ENTRYCOUNT
73is usually expensive to calculate on non-HFS [Plus] volumes.
74If you don't need a particular attribute, you should not ask for it.
75.Pp
76.
77.\" path parameter
78.
79The
80.Fa path
81parameter must reference a valid file system object.
82Read, write or execute permission of the object itself is not required, but
83all directories listed in the path name leading to the object must be
84searchable.
85.Pp
86.
87.\" attrList parameter
88.
89The
90.Fa attrList
91parameter is a pointer to an
92.Vt attrlist
93structure, as defined by
94.Aq Pa sys/attr.h
95(shown below).
96It determines what attributes are returned by the function.
97You are responsible for filling out all fields of this structure before calling the function.
98.Bd -literal
99typedef u_int32_t attrgroup_t;
100.Pp
101struct attrlist {
102 u_short bitmapcount; /* number of attr. bit sets in list */
103 u_int16_t reserved; /* (to maintain 4-byte alignment) */
104 attrgroup_t commonattr; /* common attribute group */
105 attrgroup_t volattr; /* volume attribute group */
106 attrgroup_t dirattr; /* directory attribute group */
107 attrgroup_t fileattr; /* file attribute group */
108 attrgroup_t forkattr; /* fork attribute group */
109};
110#define ATTR_BIT_MAP_COUNT 5
111.Ed
112.Pp
113.
114.\" attrlist elements
115.
116The fields of the
117.Vt attrlist
118structure are defined as follows.
119.Bl -tag -width XXXbitmapcount
120.
121.It bitmapcount
122Number of attribute bit sets in the structure.
123In current systems you must set this to
124.Dv ATTR_BIT_MAP_COUNT .
125.
126.It reserved
127Reserved.
128You must set this to 0.
129.
130.It commonattr
131A bit set that specifies the common attributes that you require.
132Common attributes relate to all types of file system objects.
133See below for a description of these attributes.
134.
135.It volattr
136A bit set that specifies the volume attributes that you require.
137Volume attributes relate to volumes (that is, mounted file systems).
138See below for a description of these attributes.
139If you request volume attributes,
140.Fa path
141must reference the root of a volume.
142In addition, you can't request volume attributes if you also request
143file or directory attributes.
144.
145.It dirattr
146A bit set that specifies the directory attributes that you require.
147See below for a description of these attributes.
148.
149.It fileattr
150A bit set that specifies the file attributes that you require.
151See below for a description of these attributes.
152.
153.It forkattr
154A bit set that specifies the fork attributes that you require.
155Fork attributes relate to the actual data in the file,
156which can be held in multiple named contiguous ranges, or forks.
157See below for a description of these attributes.
158.
159.El
160.Pp
161.
162Unless otherwise noted in the lists below, attributes are read-only.
163Attributes labelled as read/write can be set using
164.Xr setattrlist 2 .
165.Pp
166.
167.\" attrBuf and attrBufSize parameters
168.
169The
170.Fa attrBuf
171and
172.Fa attrBufSize
173parameters specify a buffer into which the function places attribute values.
174The format of this buffer is sufficiently complex that its description
175requires a separate section (see below).
176The initial contents of this buffer are ignored.
177.Pp
178.
179.\" option parameter
180.
181The
182.Fa options
183parameter is a bit set that controls the behaviour of
184.Fn getattrlist .
185The following option bits are defined.
186.
187.Bl -tag -width XXXbitmapcount
188.
189.It FSOPT_NOFOLLOW
190If this bit is set,
191.Fn getattrlist
192will not follow a symlink if it occurs as
193the last component of
194.Fa path .
195.
196.El
197.
198.Sh ATTRIBUTE BUFFER
199.
200The data returned in the buffer described by
201.Fa attrBuf
202and
203.Fa attrBufSize
204is formatted as follows.
205.Pp
206.
207.Bl -enum
208.
209.It
210The first element of the buffer is a
211.Vt u_int32_t
212that contains the overall length, in bytes, of the attributes returned.
213This size includes the length field itself.
214.
215.It
216Following the length field is a list of attributes.
217Each attribute is represented by a field of its type,
218where the type is given as part of the attribute description (below).
219.
220.It
221The attributes are placed into the attribute buffer in the order
222that they are described below.
223.
224.El
225.Pp
226.
227If the attribute is of variable length, it is represented
228in the list by an
229.Vt attrreference
230structure, as defined by
231.Aq Pa sys/attr.h
232(shown below).
233.
234.Bd -literal
235typedef struct attrreference {
236 long attr_dataoffset;
237 size_t attr_length;
238} attrreference_t;
239.Ed
240.Pp
241.
242This structure contains a 'pointer' to the variable length attribute data.
243The
244.Fa attr_length
245field is the length of the attribute data (in bytes).
246The
247.Fa attr_dataoffset
248field is the offset in bytes from the
249.Vt attrreference
250structure
251to the attribute data.
252This offset will always be a multiple of sizeof(unsigned long) bytes,
253so you can safely access common data types without fear of alignment
254exceptions.
255.Pp
256.
257The
258.Fn getattrlist
259function will silently truncate attribute data if
260.Fa attrBufSize
261is too small.
262The length field at the front of the attribute list always represents
263the length of the data actually copied into the attribute buffer.
264If the data is truncated, there is no easy way to determine the
265buffer size that's required to get all of the requested attributes.
266You should always pass an
267.Fa attrBufSize
268that is large enough to accommodate the known size of the attributes
269in the attribute list (including the leading length field).
270.Pp
271.
272Because the returned attributes are simply truncated if the buffer is
273too small, it's possible for a variable length attribute to reference
274data beyond the end of the attribute buffer. That is, it's possible
275for the attribute data to start beyond the end of the attribute buffer
276(that is, if
277.Fa attrRef
278is a pointer to the
279.Vt attrreference_t ,
280( ( (char *)
281.Fa attrRef
282) +
283.Fa attr_dataoffset
284) > ( ( (char *)
285.Fa attrBuf
286) +
287.Fa attrSize
288) ) or, indeed, for the attribute data to extend beyond the end of the attribute buffer (that is,
289( ( (char *)
290.Fa attrRef
291) +
292.Fa attr_dataoffset
293+
294.Fa attr_datalength
295) > ( ( (char *)
296.Fa attrBuf
297) +
298.Fa attrSize
299) ).
300If this happens you must increase the size of the buffer and call
301.Fn getattrlist
302to get an accurate copy of the attribute.
303.
304.Sh COMMON ATTRIBUTES
305.
306Common attributes relate to all types of file system objects.
307The following common attributes are defined.
308.
309.Bl -tag -width ATTR_VOL_ALLOCATIONCLUMP
310.
311.It ATTR_CMN_NAME
312An
313.Vt attrreference
314structure containing the name of the file system object as
315UTF-8 encoded, null terminated C string.
316The attribute data length will not be greater than
317.Dv NAME_MAX +
3181.
319.Pp
320.
321.It ATTR_CMN_DEVID
322A
323.Vt dev_t
324containing the device number of the device on which this
325file system object's volume is mounted.
326Equivalent to the
327.Fa st_dev
328field of the
329.Vt stat
330structure returned by
331.Xr stat 2 .
332.
333.It ATTR_CMN_FSID
334An
335.Vt fsid_t
336structure containing the file system identifier for the volume on which
337the file system object resides.
338Equivalent to the
339.Fa f_fsid
340field of the
341.Vt statfs
342structure returned by
343.Xr statfs 2 .
344.
345.Pp
346This value is not related to the file system ID from traditional Mac OS (for example,
347the
348.Fa filesystemID
349field of the
350.Vt FSVolumeInfo
351structure returned by Carbon's FSGetVolumeInfo() function).
352On current versions of Mac OS X that value is synthesised by the Carbon File Manager.
353.
354.It ATTR_CMN_OBJTYPE
355An
356.Vt fsobj_type_t
357that identifies the type of file system object.
358The values are taken from
359.Vt enum vtype
360in
361.Aq Pa sys/vnode.h .
362.
363.It ATTR_CMN_OBJTAG
364An
365.Vt fsobj_tag_t
366that identifies the type of file system containing the object.
367The values are taken from
368.Vt enum vtagtype
369in
370.Aq Pa sys/vnode.h .
371.
372.It ATTR_CMN_OBJID
373An
374.Vt fsobj_id_t
375structure that uniquely identifies the file system object
376within its volume.
377The fid_generation field of this structure will be zero for all non-root callers
378(effective UID not 0).
379This identifier need not be persistent across an unmount/mount sequence.
380.Pp
381.
382Some volume formats use well known values for the
383.Fa fid_objno
384field for the root directory (2) and the parent of root directory (1).
385This is not a required behaviour of this attribute.
386.
387.It ATTR_CMN_OBJPERMANENTID
388An
389.Vt fsobj_id_t
390structure that uniquely identifies the file system object
391within its volume.
392The fid_generation field of this structure will be zero for all non-root callers
393(effective UID not 0).
394This identifier should be persistent across an unmount/mount sequence.
395.Pp
396Some file systems (for example, original HFS) may need to modify the on-disk
397structure to return a persistent identifier.
398If such a file system is mounted read-only, an attempt to get this attribute
399will fail with the error
400.Dv EROFS .
401.
402.It ATTR_CMN_PAROBJID
403An
404.Vt fsobj_id_t
405structure that identifies the parent directory of the file system object.
406The fid_generation field of this structure will be zero for all non-root callers
407(effective UID not 0).
408Equivalent to the ATTR_CMN_OBJID attribute of the parent directory.
409This identifier need not be persistent across an unmount/mount sequence.
410.Pp
411.
412On a volume that supports hard links, a multiply linked file has no unique parent.
413This attribute will return an unspecified parent.
414.Pp
415.
416For some volume formats this attribute is very expensive to calculate.
417.
418.It ATTR_CMN_SCRIPT
419(read/write) A
420.Vt text_encoding_t
421containing a text encoding hint for
422the file system object's name.
423It is included to facilitate the lossless round trip conversion of names between
424Unicode and traditional Mac OS script encodings.
425The values are defined in
426.Aq Pa CarbonCore/TextCommon.h .
427File systems that do not have an appropriate text encoding value should return
428kTextEncodingMacUnicode.
429See DTS Q&A 1173 "File Manager Text Encoding Hints".
430.
431.It ATTR_CMN_CRTIME
432(read/write) A
433.Vt timespec
434structure containing the time that the file system object
435was created.
436.
437.It ATTR_CMN_MODTIME
438(read/write) A
439.Vt timespec
440structure containing the time that the file system object
441was last modified.
442Equivalent to the
443.Fa st_mtimespec
444field of the
445.Vt stat
446structure returned by
447.Xr stat 2 .
448.
449.It ATTR_CMN_CHGTIME
450(read/write) A
451.Vt timespec
452structure containing the time that the file system object's
453attributes were last modified.
454Equivalent to the
455.Fa st_ctimespec
456field of the
457.Vt stat
458structure returned by
459.Xr stat 2 .
460.
461.It ATTR_CMN_ACCTIME
462(read/write) A
463.Vt timespec
464structure containing the time that the file system object
465was last accessed.
466Equivalent to the
467.Fa st_atimespec
468field of the
469.Vt stat
470structure returned by
471.Xr stat 2 .
472.
473.It ATTR_CMN_BKUPTIME
474(read/write) A
475.Vt timespec
476structure containing the time that the file system object was
477last backed up.
478This value is for use by backup utilities.
479The file system stores but does not interpret the value.
480.
481.It ATTR_CMN_FNDRINFO
482(read/write) 32 bytes of data for use by the Finder.
483Equivalent to the concatenation of a
484.Vt FileInfo
485structure and an
486.Vt ExtendedFileInfo
487structure
488(or, for directories, a
489.Vt FolderInfo
490structure and an
491.Vt ExtendedFolderInfo
492structure).
493These structures are defined in
494.Aq Pa CarbonCore/Finder.h .
495.Pp
496This attribute is not byte swapped by the file system.
497The value of multibyte fields on disk is always big endian.
498When running on a little endian system (such as Darwin on x86),
499you must byte swap any multibyte fields.
500.
501.It ATTR_CMN_OWNERID
502(read/write) A
503.Vt uid_t
504containing the owner of the file system object.
505Equivalent to the
506.Fa st_uid
507field of the
508.Vt stat
509structure returned by
510.Xr stat 2 .
511.
512.It ATTR_CMN_GRPID
513(read/write) A
514.Vt gid_t
515containing the group of the file system object.
516Equivalent to the
517.Fa st_gid
518field of the
519.Vt stat
520structure returned by
521.Xr stat 2 .
522.
523.It ATTR_CMN_ACCESSMASK
524(read/write) A
525.Vt u_int32_t
526containing the access permissions of the file system object.
527Equivalent to the
528.Fa st_mode
529field of the
530.Vt stat
531structure returned by
532.Xr stat 2 .
533.
534.It ATTR_CMN_NAMEDATTRCOUNT
535A
536.Vt u_int32_t
537containing the number of named attributes of the file system object.
538.
539.It ATTR_CMN_NAMEDATTRLIST
540An
541.Vt attrreference
542structure containing a list of named attributes of the file system object.
543No built-in file systems on Mac OS X currently support named attributes.
544Because of this, the structure of this attribute's value is not yet defined.
545.
546.It ATTR_CMN_FLAGS
547(read/write) A
548.Vt u_int32_t
549containing file flags.
550Equivalent to the
551.Fa st_flags
552field of the
553.Vt stat
554structure returned by
555.Xr stat 2 .
556For more information about these flags, see
557.Xr chflags 2 .
558.Pp
559.
560The order that attributes are placed into the attribute buffer
561almost invariably matches the order of the attribute mask bit values.
562The exception is
563.Dv ATTR_CMN_FLAGS .
564If its order was based on its bit position, it would be before
565the
566.Dv ATTR_CMN_NAMEDATTRCOUNT
567/
568.Dv ATTR_CMN_NAMEDATTRLIST
569pair, however,
570it is placed in the buffer after them.
571.
572.It ATTR_CMN_USERACCESS
573A
574.Vt u_int32_t
575containing the effective permissions of the current user
576(the calling process's effective UID) for this file system object.
577You can test for read, write, and execute permission using
578.Dv R_OK ,
579.Dv W_OK ,
580and
581.Dv X_OK ,
582respectively.
583See
584.Xr access 2
585for more details.
586.
587.It ATTR_CMN_FILEID
588A
589.Vt u_int64_t
590that uniquely identifies the file system object within its volume.
591.
592.It ATTR_CMN_PARENTID
593A
594.Vt u_int64_t
595that identifies the parent directory of the file system object.
596.
597.El
598.
599.Sh VOLUME ATTRIBUTES
600.
601Volume attributes relate to volumes (that is, mounted file systems).
602The following volume attributes are defined.
603.
604.Bl -tag -width ATTR_VOL_ALLOCATIONCLUMP
605.
606.It ATTR_VOL_INFO
607For reasons that are not at all obvious, you must set
608.Dv ATTR_VOL_INFO
609in the
610.Fa volattr
611field if you request any other volume attributes.
612This does not result in any attribute data being added to the attribute buffer.
613.
614.It ATTR_VOL_FSTYPE
615A
616.Vt u_int32_t
617containing the file system type.
618Equivalent to the
619.Fa f_type
620field of the
621.Vt statfs
622structure returned by
623.Xr statfs 2 .
624Generally not a useful value.
625.
626.It ATTR_VOL_SIGNATURE
627A
628.Vt u_int32_t
629containing the volume signature word.
630This value is unique within a given file system type and lets you
631distinguish between different volume formats handled by the same file system.
632See
633.Aq Pa CarbonCore/Files.h
634for more details.
635.
636.It ATTR_VOL_SIZE
637An
638.Vt off_t
639containing the total size of the volume in bytes.
640.
641.It ATTR_VOL_SPACEFREE
642An
643.Vt off_t
644containing the free space on the volume in bytes.
645.
646.It ATTR_VOL_SPACEAVAIL
647An
648.Vt off_t
649containing the space, in bytes, on the volume available to non-privileged processes.
650This is the free space minus the amount of space reserved by the system to prevent critical
651disk exhaustion errors.
652Non-privileged programs, like a disk management tool, should use this value to display the
653space available to the user.
654.Pp
655.Dv ATTR_VOL_SPACEAVAIL
656is to
657.Dv ATTR_VOL_SPACEFREE
658as
659.Fa f_bavail
660is to
661.Fa f_bfree
662in
663.Xr statfs 2 .
664.
665.It ATTR_VOL_MINALLOCATION
666An
667.Vt off_t
668containing the minimum allocation size on the volume in bytes.
669If you create a file containing one byte, it will consume this much space.
670.
671.It ATTR_VOL_ALLOCATIONCLUMP
672An
673.Vt off_t
674containing the allocation clump size on the volume, in bytes.
675As a file is extended, the file system will attempt to allocate
676this much space each time in order to reduce fragmentation.
677.
678.It ATTR_VOL_IOBLOCKSIZE
679A
680.Vt u_int32_t
681containing the optimal block size when reading or writing data.
682Equivalent to the
683.Fa f_iosize
684field of the
685.Vt statfs
686structure returned by
687.Xr statfs 2 .
688.
689.It ATTR_VOL_OBJCOUNT
690A
691.Vt u_int32_t
692containing the number of file system objects on the volume.
693.
694.It ATTR_VOL_FILECOUNT
695A
696.Vt u_int32_t
697containing the number of files on the volume.
698.
699.It ATTR_VOL_DIRCOUNT
700A
701.Vt u_int32_t
702containing the number of directories on the volume.
703.
704.It ATTR_VOL_MAXOBJCOUNT
705A
706.Vt u_int32_t
707containing the maximum number of file system objects that can be stored on the volume.
708.
709.It ATTR_VOL_MOUNTPOINT
710An
711.Vt attrreference
712structure containing the path to the volume's mount point as a
713UTF-8 encoded, null terminated C string.
714The attribute data length will not be greater than
715.Dv MAXPATHLEN .
716Equivalent to the
717.Fa f_mntonname
718field of the
719.Vt statfs
720structure returned by
721.Xr statfs 2 .
722.
723.It ATTR_VOL_NAME
724(read/write) An
725.Vt attrreference
726structure containing the name of the volume as a
727UTF-8 encoded, null terminated C string.
728The attribute data length will not be greater than
729.Dv NAME_MAX +
7301.
731.Pp
732.
733This attribute is only read/write if the
734.Dv VOL_CAP_INT_VOL_RENAME
735bit is set in the volume capabilities (see below).
736.Pp
737.
738.It ATTR_VOL_MOUNTFLAGS
739A
740.Vt u_int32_t
741containing the volume mount flags.
742This is a copy of the value passed to the
743.Fa flags
744parameter of
745.Xr mount 2
746when the volume was mounted.
747Equivalent to the
748.Fa f_flags
749field of the
750.Vt statfs
751structure returned by
752.Xr statfs 2 .
753.
754.It ATTR_VOL_MOUNTEDDEVICE
755An
756.Vt attrreference
757structure that returns the same value as the
758.Fa f_mntfromname
759field of the
760.Vt statfs
761structure returned by
762.Xr statfs 2 .
763For local volumes this is the path to the device on which the volume is mounted as a
764UTF-8 encoded, null terminated C string.
765For network volumes, this is a unique string that identifies the mount.
766The attribute data length will not be greater than
767.Dv MAXPATHLEN .
768.Pp
769.
770.It ATTR_VOL_ENCODINGSUSED
771An
772.Vt unsigned long long
773containing a bitmap of the text encodings used on this volume.
774For more information about this, see the discussion of
775.Fa encodingsBitmap
776in DTS Technote 1150 "HFS Plus Volume Format".
777.
778.It ATTR_VOL_CAPABILITIES
779A
780.Vt vol_capabilities_attr_t
781structure describing the optional features supported by this volume.
782See below for a discussion of volume capabilities.
783.
784.It ATTR_VOL_ATTRIBUTES
785A
786.Vt vol_attributes_attr_t
787structure describing the attributes supported by this volume.
788This structure is discussed below, along with volume capabilities.
789.
790.El
791.
792.Sh DIRECTORY ATTRIBUTES
793.
794The following directory attributes are defined.
795.
796.Bl -tag -width ATTR_VOL_ALLOCATIONCLUMP
797.
798.It ATTR_DIR_LINKCOUNT
799A
800.Vt u_int32_t
801containing the number of hard links to the directory;
802this does not include the historical "." and ".." entries.
803For filesystems that do not support hard links to directories,
804this value will be 1.
805.
806.It ATTR_DIR_ENTRYCOUNT
807A
808.Vt u_int32_t
809containing the number of file system objects in the directory, not including
810any synthetic items.
811.
812.It ATTR_DIR_MOUNTSTATUS
813A
814.Vt u_int32_t
815containing flags describing what's mounted on the directory.
816Currently the only flag defined is
817.Dv DIR_MNTSTATUS_MNTPOINT,
818which indicates that there is a file system mounted on this directory.
819Due to a bug (r. 3502822), this flag is never set on current system.
820.
821.El
822.
823.Sh FILE ATTRIBUTES
824.
825The following file attributes are defined.
826.
827.Bl -tag -width ATTR_VOL_ALLOCATIONCLUMP
828.
829.It ATTR_FILE_LINKCOUNT
830A
831.Vt u_int32_t
832containing the number of hard links to this file.
833Equivalent to the
834.Fa st_nlink
835field of the
836.Vt stat
837structure returned by
838.Xr stat 2 .
839.
840.It ATTR_FILE_TOTALSIZE
841An
842.Vt off_t
843containing the total number of bytes in all forks of the file (the logical size).
844.
845.It ATTR_FILE_ALLOCSIZE
846An
847.Vt off_t
848containing a count of the bytes on disk used by all of the file's forks (the physical size).
849.
850.It ATTR_FILE_IOBLOCKSIZE
851A
852.Vt u_int32_t
853containing the optimal block size when reading or writing this file's data.
854.
855.It ATTR_FILE_CLUMPSIZE
856A
857.Vt u_int32_t
858containing the allocation clump size for this file, in bytes.
859As the file is extended, the file system will attempt to allocate
860this much space each time in order to reduce fragmentation.
861This value applies to the data fork.
862.
863.It ATTR_FILE_DEVTYPE
864(read/write) A
865.Vt u_int32_t
866containing the device type for a special device file.
867Equivalent to the
868.Fa st_rdev
869field of the
870.Vt stat
871structure returned by
872.Xr stat 2 .
873.
874.It ATTR_FILE_FILETYPE
875A
876.Vt u_int32_t
877that whose value is reserved.
878Clients should ignore its value.
879New volume format implementations should not support this attribute.
880.
881.It ATTR_FILE_FORKCOUNT
882A
883.Vt u_int32_t
884containing the number of forks in the file.
885No built-in file systems on Mac OS X currently support forks other
886than the data and resource fork.
887.
888.It ATTR_FILE_FORKLIST
889An
890.Vt attrreference
891structure containing a list of named forks of the file.
892No built-in file systems on Mac OS X currently support forks
893other than the data and resource fork.
894Because of this, the structure of this attribute's value is not yet defined.
895.
896.It ATTR_FILE_DATALENGTH
897An
898.Vt off_t
899containing the length of the data fork in bytes (the logical size).
900.
901.It ATTR_FILE_DATAALLOCSIZE
902An
903.Vt off_t
904containing a count of the bytes on disk used by the data fork (the physical size).
905.
906.It ATTR_FILE_DATAEXTENTS
907An
908.Vt extentrecord
909array for the data fork.
910The array contains eight
911.Vt diskextent
912structures which represent the first
913eight extents of the fork.
914.Pp
915This attributes exists for compatibility reasons.
916New clients should not use this attribute.
917Rather, they should use the
918.Dv F_LOG2PHYS
919command in
920.Xr fcntl 2 .
921.Pp
922.
923In current implementations the value may not be entirely accurate for
924a variety of reasons.
925.
926.It ATTR_FILE_RSRCLENGTH
927An
928.Vt off_t
929containing the length of the resource fork in bytes (the logical size).
930.
931.It ATTR_FILE_RSRCALLOCSIZE
932An
933.Vt off_t
934containing a count of the bytes on disk used by the resource fork (the physical size).
935.
936.It ATTR_FILE_RSRCEXTENTS
937An
938.Vt extentrecord
939array for the resource fork.
940The array contains eight
941.Vt diskextent
942structures which represent the first
943eight extents of the fork.
944.Pp
945See also
946.Dv ATTR_FILE_DATAEXTENTS .
947.
948.El
949.
950.Sh FORK ATTRIBUTES
951.
952Fork attributes relate to the actual data in the file,
953which can be held in multiple named contiguous ranges, or forks.
954The following fork attributes are defined.
955.
956.Bl -tag -width ATTR_VOL_ALLOCATIONCLUMP
957.
958.It ATTR_FORK_TOTALSIZE
959An
960.Vt off_t
961containing the length of the fork in bytes (the logical size).
962.
963.It ATTR_FORK_ALLOCSIZE
964An
965.Vt off_t
966containing a count of the bytes on disk used by the fork (the physical size).
967.
968.El
969.Pp
970.
971Fork attributes are not properly implemented by any current Mac OS X
972volume format implementation.
973We strongly recommend that client programs do not request fork attributes.
974If you are implementing a volume format, you should not support these attributes.
975.
976.Sh VOLUME CAPABILITIES
977.
978.\" vol_capabilities_attr_t
979.
980Not all volumes support all features.
981The
982.Dv ATTR_VOL_CAPABILITIES
983attribute returns a
984.Vt vol_capabilities_attr_t
985structure (shown below) that indicates which features are supported by the volume.
986.
987.Bd -literal
988typedef u_int32_t vol_capabilities_set_t[4];
989.Pp
990.
991#define VOL_CAPABILITIES_FORMAT 0
992#define VOL_CAPABILITIES_INTERFACES 1
993#define VOL_CAPABILITIES_RESERVED1 2
994#define VOL_CAPABILITIES_RESERVED2 3
995.Pp
996.
997typedef struct vol_capabilities_attr {
998 vol_capabilities_set_t capabilities;
999 vol_capabilities_set_t valid;
1000} vol_capabilities_attr_t;
1001.Ed
1002.Pp
1003.
1004The structure contains two fields,
1005.Fa capabilities
1006and
1007.Fa valid .
1008Each consists of an array of four elements.
1009The arrays are indexed by the following values.
1010.
1011.Bl -tag -width VOL_CAP_FMT_PERSISTENTOBJECTIDS
1012.
1013.It VOL_CAPABILITIES_FORMAT
1014This element contains information about the volume format.
1015See
1016.Dv VOL_CAP_FMT_PERSISTENTOBJECTIDS
1017and so on, below.
1018.
1019.It VOL_CAPABILITIES_INTERFACES
1020This element contains information about which optional functions are
1021supported by the volume format implementation.
1022See
1023.Dv VOL_CAP_INT_SEARCHFS
1024and so on, below.
1025.
1026.It VOL_CAPABILITIES_RESERVED1
1027Reserved.
1028A file system implementation should set this element to zero.
1029A client program should ignore this element.
1030.
1031.It VOL_CAPABILITIES_RESERVED2
1032Reserved.
1033A file system implementation should set this element to zero.
1034A client program should ignore this element.
1035.
1036.El
1037.Pp
1038.
1039The
1040.Fa valid
1041field contains bit sets that indicate which flags are known to the volume format
1042implementation.
1043Each bit indicates whether the contents of the corresponding bit in the
1044.Fa capabilities
1045field is valid.
1046.Pp
1047.
1048The
1049.Fa capabilities
1050field contains bit sets that indicate whether a particular feature is implemented
1051by this volume format.
1052.Pp
1053.
1054The following bits are defined in the first element (indexed by
1055.Dv VOL_CAPABILITIES_FORMAT )
1056of the
1057.Fa capabilities
1058and
1059.Fa valid
1060fields of the
1061.Vt vol_capabilities_attr_t
1062structure.
1063.
1064.Bl -tag -width VOL_CAP_FMT_PERSISTENTOBJECTIDS
1065.
1066.It VOL_CAP_FMT_PERSISTENTOBJECTIDS
1067If this bit is set the volume format supports persistent object identifiers
1068and can look up file system objects by their IDs.
1069See
1070.Dv ATTR_CMN_OBJPERMANENTID
1071for details about how to obtain these identifiers.
1072.
1073.It VOL_CAP_FMT_SYMBOLICLINKS
1074If this bit is set the volume format supports symbolic links.
1075.
1076.It VOL_CAP_FMT_HARDLINKS
1077If this bit is set the volume format supports hard links.
1078.
1079.It VOL_CAP_FMT_JOURNAL
1080If this bit is set the volume format supports a journal used to
1081speed recovery in case of unplanned restart (such as a power outage
1082or crash).
1083This does not necessarily mean the volume is actively using a journal.
1084.Pp
1085Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1086.
1087.It VOL_CAP_FMT_JOURNAL_ACTIVE
1088If this bit is set the volume is currently using a journal for
1089speedy recovery after an unplanned restart.
1090This bit can be set only if
1091.Dv VOL_CAP_FMT_JOURNAL
1092is also set.
1093.Pp
1094Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1095.
1096.It VOL_CAP_FMT_NO_ROOT_TIMES
1097If this bit is set the volume format does not store reliable times for
1098the root directory, so you should not depend on them to detect changes,
1099identify volumes across unmount/mount, and so on.
1100.Pp
1101Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1102.
1103.It VOL_CAP_FMT_SPARSE_FILES
1104If this bit is set the volume format supports sparse files,
1105that is, files which can have 'holes' that have never been written
1106to, and thus do not consume space on disk.
1107A sparse file may have an allocated size on disk that is less than its logical length (that is,
1108.Dv ATTR_FILE_ALLOCSIZE
1109<
1110.Dv ATTR_FILE_TOTALSIZE ).
1111.
1112.Pp
1113Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1114.
1115.It VOL_CAP_FMT_ZERO_RUNS
1116For security reasons, parts of a file (runs) that have never been
1117written to must appear to contain zeroes.
1118When this bit is set, the volume keeps track of allocated but unwritten
1119runs of a file so that it can substitute zeroes without actually
1120writing zeroes to the media.
1121This provides performance similar to sparse files, but not the space savings.
1122.Pp
1123Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1124.
1125.It VOL_CAP_FMT_CASE_SENSITIVE
1126If this bit is set the volume format treats upper and lower case
1127characters in file and directory names as different.
1128Otherwise an upper case character is equivalent to a lower case character,
1129and you can't have two names that differ solely in the case of
1130the characters.
1131.Pp
1132Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1133.
1134.It VOL_CAP_FMT_CASE_PRESERVING
1135If this bit is set the volume format preserves the case of
1136file and directory names.
1137Otherwise the volume may change the case of some characters
1138(typically making them all upper or all lower case).
1139A volume that sets
1140.Dv VOL_CAP_FMT_CASE_SENSITIVE
1141must also set
1142.Dv VOL_CAP_FMT_CASE_PRESERVING .
1143.Pp
1144Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1145.
1146.It VOL_CAP_FMT_FAST_STATFS
1147This bit is used as a hint to upper layers (specifically the Carbon File Manager) to
1148indicate that
1149.Xr statfs 2
1150is fast enough that its results need not be cached by the caller.
1151A volume format implementation that caches the
1152.Xr statfs 2
1153information in memory should set this bit.
1154An implementation that must always read from disk or always perform a network
1155transaction to satisfy
1156.Xr statfs 2
1157should not set this bit.
1158.Pp
1159Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1160.
1161.It VOL_CAP_FMT_2TB_FILESIZE
1162If this bit is set the volume format supports file
1163sizes upto 2TB. This bit does not necessarily mean that the file
1164system does not support file size more than 2TB.
1165This bit does not mean that the currently available space on the volume is 2TB.
1166.Pp
1167Introduced with Darwin 8.0 (Mac OS X version 10.4).
1168.
1169.El
1170.Pp
1171.
1172The following bits are defined in the second element (indexed by
1173.Dv VOL_CAPABILITIES_INTERFACES )
1174of the
1175.Fa capabilities
1176and
1177.Fa valid
1178fields of the
1179.Vt vol_capabilities_attr_t
1180structure.
1181.
1182.Bl -tag -width VOL_CAP_FMT_PERSISTENTOBJECTIDS
1183.
1184.It VOL_CAP_INT_SEARCHFS
1185If this bit is set the volume format implementation supports
1186.Xr searchfs 2 .
1187.
1188.It VOL_CAP_INT_ATTRLIST
1189If this bit is set the volume format implementation supports
1190.Fn getattrlist
1191and
1192.Xr setattrlist 2 .
1193.
1194.It VOL_CAP_INT_NFSEXPORT
1195If this bit is set the volume format implementation allows this volume to be exported via NFS.
1196.
1197.It VOL_CAP_INT_READDIRATTR
1198If this bit is set the volume format implementation supports
1199.Xr getdirentriesattr 2 .
1200.
1201.It VOL_CAP_INT_EXCHANGEDATA
1202If this bit is set the volume format implementation supports
1203.Xr exchangedata 2 .
1204.Pp
1205Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1206.
1207.It VOL_CAP_INT_COPYFILE
1208If this bit is set the volume format implementation supports the (private and undocumented)
1209copyfile() function.
1210.Pp
1211Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1212.
1213.It VOL_CAP_INT_ALLOCATE
1214If this bit is set the volume format implementation supports the
1215.Dv F_PREALLOCATE
1216selector of
1217.Xr fcntl 2 .
1218.Pp
1219Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1220.
1221.It VOL_CAP_INT_VOL_RENAME
1222If this bit is set the volume format implementation allows you to
1223modify the volume name using
1224.Xr setattrlist 2 .
1225.Pp
1226Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1227.
1228.It VOL_CAP_INT_ADVLOCK
1229If this bit is set the volume format implementation supports
1230advisory locking, that is, the
1231.Dv F_GETLK ,
1232.Dv F_SETLK ,
1233and
1234.Dv F_SETLKW
1235selectors to
1236.Xr fcntl 2 .
1237.Pp
1238Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1239.
1240.It VOL_CAP_INT_FLOCK
1241If this bit is set the volume format implementation supports
1242whole file locks.
1243This includes
1244.Xr flock 2
1245and the
1246.Dv O_EXLOCK
1247and
1248.Dv O_SHLOCK
1249flags to
1250.Xr open 2 .
1251.Pp
1252Introduced with Darwin 7.0 (Mac OS X version 10.3).
1253.
1254.It VOL_CAP_INT_EXTENDED_SECURITY
1255If this bit is set the volume format implementation supports
1256extended security controls (ACLs).
1257.Pp
1258Introduced with Darwin 8.0 (Mac OS X version 10.4).
1259.
1260.It VOL_CAP_INT_USERACCESS
1261If this bit is set the volume format implementation supports the
1262ATTR_CMN_USERACCESS attribute.
1263.Pp
1264Introduced with Darwin 8.0 (Mac OS X version 10.4).
1265.
1266.El
1267.Pp
1268.
1269.\" vol_attributes_attr_t
1270.
1271A volume can also report which attributes it supports.
1272This information is returned by the
1273.Dv ATTR_VOL_ATTRIBUTES
1274attribute, which returns a
1275.Vt vol_attributes_attr_t
1276structure (shown below).
1277.
1278.Bd -literal
1279typedef struct attribute_set {
1280 attrgroup_t commonattr; /* common attribute group */
1281 attrgroup_t volattr; /* volume attribute group */
1282 attrgroup_t dirattr; /* directory attribute group */
1283 attrgroup_t fileattr; /* file attribute group */
1284 attrgroup_t forkattr; /* fork attribute group */
1285} attribute_set_t;
1286.Pp
1287.
1288typedef struct vol_attributes_attr {
1289 attribute_set_t validattr;
1290 attribute_set_t nativeattr;
1291} vol_attributes_attr_t;
1292.Ed
1293.Pp
1294.
1295The
1296.Fa validattr
1297field consists of a number of bit sets that indicate whether an attribute is
1298supported by the volume format implementation.
1299The
1300.Fa nativeattr
1301is similar except that the bit sets indicate whether an attribute is supported
1302natively by the volume format.
1303An attribute is supported natively if the volume format implementation does not have to do
1304any complex conversions to access the attribute.
1305For example, a volume format might support persistent object identifiers, but
1306doing so requires a complex table lookup that is not part of the core volume
1307format.
1308In that case, the
1309.Dv ATTR_VOL_ATTRIBUTES
1310attribute would return
1311.Dv ATTR_CMN_OBJPERMANENTID
1312set in the
1313.Fa validattr
1314field of the
1315.Vt vol_attributes_attr_t ,
1316but not in the
1317.Fa nativeattr
1318field.
1319.
1320.Sh RETURN VALUES
1321Upon successful completion a value of 0 is returned.
1322Otherwise, a value of -1 is returned and
1323.Va errno
1324is set to indicate the error.
1325.
1326.Sh COMPATIBILITY
1327Not all volumes support
1328.Fn getattrlist .
1329The best way to test whether a volume supports this function is to
1330simply call it and check the error result.
1331.Fn getattrlist
1332will return
1333.Dv ENOTSUP
1334if it is not supported on a particular volume.
1335.Pp
1336.
1337The
1338.Fn getattrlist
1339function has been undocumented for more than two years.
1340In that time a number of volume format implementations have been created without
1341a proper specification for the behaviour of this routine.
1342You may encounter volume format implementations with slightly different
1343behaviour than what is described here.
1344Your program is expected to be tolerant of this variant behaviour.
1345.Pp
1346.
1347If you're implementing a volume format that supports
1348.Fn getattrlist ,
1349you should be careful to support the behaviour specified by this document.
1350.
1351.Sh ERRORS
1352.Fn getattrlist
1353will fail if:
1354.Bl -tag -width Er
1355.
1356.It Bq Er ENOTSUP
1357The volume does not support
1358.Fn getattrlist .
1359.
1360.It Bq Er ENOTDIR
1361A component of the path prefix is not a directory.
1362.
1363.It Bq Er ENAMETOOLONG
1364A component of a path name exceeded
1365.Dv NAME_MAX
1366characters, or an entire path name exceeded
1367.Dv PATH_MAX
1368characters.
1369.
1370.It Bq Er ENOENT
1371The file system object does not exist.
1372.
1373.It Bq Er EACCES
1374Search permission is denied for a component of the path prefix.
1375.
1376.It Bq Er ELOOP
1377Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating the pathname.
1378.
1379.It Bq Er EFAULT
1380.Fa path ,
1381.Fa attrList
1382or
1383.Em attrBuf
1384points to an invalid address.
1385.
1386.It Bq Er EINVAL
1387The
1388.Fa bitmapcount
1389field of
1390.Fa attrList
1391is not
1392.Dv ATTR_BIT_MAP_COUNT .
1393.
1394.It Bq Er EINVAL
1395You requested an invalid attribute.
1396.
1397.It Bq Er EINVAL
1398You requested an attribute that is not supported for this file system object.
1399.
1400.It Bq Er EINVAL
1401You requested volume attributes and directory or file attributes.
1402.
1403.It Bq Er EINVAL
1404You requested volume attributes but
1405.Fa path
1406does not reference the root of the volume.
1407.
1408.It Bq Er EROFS
1409The volume is read-only but must be modified in order to return this attribute.
1410.
1411.It Bq Er EIO
1412An I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to the file system.
1413.El
1414.Pp
1415.
1416.Sh CAVEATS
1417.
1418If you request any volume attributes, you must set
1419.Dv ATTR_VOL_INFO
1420in the
1421.Fa volattr
1422field, even though it generates no result in the attribute buffer.
1423.Pp
1424.
1425The order that attributes are stored in the attribute buffer almost
1426invariably matches the order of attribute mask bit values.
1427For example,
1428.Dv ATTR_CMN_NAME
1429(0x00000001) comes before
1430.Dv ATTR_CMN_DEVID
1431(0x00000002) because its value is smaller.
1432However, you can not rely on this ordering because there is one key exception:
1433.Dv ATTR_CMN_FLAGS
1434is placed after the
1435.Dv ATTR_CMN_NAMEDATTRCOUNT
1436/
1437.Dv ATTR_CMN_NAMEDATTRLIST
1438pair, even though its bit position indicates that it should come before.
1439This is due to a bug in an early version of Mac OS X that can't be fixed for
1440binary compatibility reasons.
1441When ordering attributes, you should always use the order in which they
1442are described above.
1443.Pp
1444.
1445For more caveats, see also the compatibility notes above.
1446.
1447.Sh EXAMPLES
1448.
1449The following code prints the file type and creator of a file,
1450assuming that the volume supports the required attributes.
1451.
1452.Bd -literal
1453#include <assert.h>
1454#include <stdio.h>
1455#include <string.h>
1456#include <sys/attr.h>
1457#include <sys/errno.h>
1458#include <unistd.h>
1459#include <sys/vnode.h>
1460.Pp
1461.
1462typedef struct attrlist attrlist_t;
1463.Pp
1464.
1465struct FInfoAttrBuf {
1466 u_int32_t length;
1467 fsobj_type_t objType;
1468 char finderInfo[32];
1469};
1470typedef struct FInfoAttrBuf FInfoAttrBuf;
1471.Pp
1472.
1473static int FInfoDemo(const char *path)
1474{
1475 int err;
1476 attrlist_t attrList;
1477 FInfoAttrBuf attrBuf;
1478.Pp
1479.
1480 memset(&attrList, 0, sizeof(attrList));
1481 attrList.bitmapcount = ATTR_BIT_MAP_COUNT;
1482 attrList.commonattr = ATTR_CMN_OBJTYPE | ATTR_CMN_FNDRINFO;
1483.Pp
1484
1485 err = getattrlist(path, &attrList, &attrBuf, sizeof(attrBuf), 0);
1486 if (err != 0) {
1487 err = errno;
1488 }
1489.Pp
1490
1491 if (err == 0) {
1492 assert(attrBuf.length == sizeof(attrBuf));
1493.Pp
1494
1495 printf("Finder information for %s:\en", path);
1496 switch (attrBuf.objType) {
1497 case VREG:
1498 printf("file type = '%.4s'\en", &attrBuf.finderInfo[0]);
1499 printf("file creator = '%.4s'\en", &attrBuf.finderInfo[4]);
1500 break;
1501 case VDIR:
1502 printf("directory\en");
1503 break;
1504 default:
1505 printf("other object type, %d\en", attrBuf.objType);
1506 break;
1507 }
1508 }
1509.Pp
1510.
1511 return err;
1512}
1513.Ed
1514.Pp
1515.
1516The following code is an alternative implementation that uses nested structures
1517to group the related attributes.
1518.
1519.Bd -literal
1520#include <assert.h>
1521#include <stdio.h>
1522#include <stddef.h>
1523#include <string.h>
1524#include <sys/attr.h>
1525#include <sys/errno.h>
1526#include <unistd.h>
1527#include <sys/vnode.h>
1528.Pp
1529.
1530typedef struct attrlist attrlist_t;
1531.Pp
1532.
1533struct FInfo2CommonAttrBuf {
1534 fsobj_type_t objType;
1535 char finderInfo[32];
1536};
1537typedef struct FInfo2CommonAttrBuf FInfo2CommonAttrBuf;
1538.Pp
1539.
1540struct FInfo2AttrBuf {
1541 u_int32_t length;
1542 FInfo2CommonAttrBuf common;
1543};
1544typedef struct FInfo2AttrBuf FInfo2AttrBuf;
1545.Pp
1546.
1547static int FInfo2Demo(const char *path)
1548{
1549 int err;
1550 attrlist_t attrList;
1551 FInfo2AttrBuf attrBuf;
1552.Pp
1553.
1554 memset(&attrList, 0, sizeof(attrList));
1555 attrList.bitmapcount = ATTR_BIT_MAP_COUNT;
1556 attrList.commonattr = ATTR_CMN_OBJTYPE | ATTR_CMN_FNDRINFO;
1557.Pp
1558.
1559 err = getattrlist(path, &attrList, &attrBuf, sizeof(attrBuf), 0);
1560 if (err != 0) {
1561 err = errno;
1562 }
1563.Pp
1564.
1565 if (err == 0) {
1566 assert(attrBuf.length == sizeof(attrBuf));
1567.Pp
1568.
1569 printf("Finder information for %s:\en", path);
1570 switch (attrBuf.common.objType) {
1571 case VREG:
1572 printf(
1573 "file type = '%.4s'\en",
1574 &attrBuf.common.finderInfo[0]
1575 );
1576 printf(
1577 "file creator = '%.4s'\en",
1578 &attrBuf.common.finderInfo[4]
1579 );
1580 break;
1581 case VDIR:
1582 printf("directory\en");
1583 break;
1584 default:
1585 printf(
1586 "other object type, %d\en",
1587 attrBuf.common.objType
1588 );
1589 break;
1590 }
1591 }
1592.Pp
1593.
1594 return err;
1595}
1596.Ed
1597.Pp
1598.
1599The following example shows how to deal with variable length attributes.
1600It assumes that the volume specified by
1601.Fa path
1602supports the necessary attributes.
1603.
1604.Bd -literal
1605#include <assert.h>
1606#include <stdio.h>
1607#include <stddef.h>
1608#include <string.h>
1609#include <sys/attr.h>
1610#include <sys/errno.h>
1611#include <unistd.h>
1612#include <sys/vnode.h>
1613.Pp
1614.
1615typedef struct attrlist attrlist_t;
1616.Pp
1617.
1618struct VolAttrBuf {
1619 u_int32_t length;
1620 u_int32_t fileCount;
1621 u_int32_t dirCount;
1622 attrreference_t mountPointRef;
1623 attrreference_t volNameRef;
1624 char mountPointSpace[MAXPATHLEN];
1625 char volNameSpace[MAXPATHLEN];
1626};
1627typedef struct VolAttrBuf VolAttrBuf;
1628.Pp
1629.
1630static int VolDemo(const char *path)
1631{
1632 int err;
1633 attrlist_t attrList;
1634 VolAttrBuf attrBuf;
1635.Pp
1636.
1637 memset(&attrList, 0, sizeof(attrList));
1638 attrList.bitmapcount = ATTR_BIT_MAP_COUNT;
1639 attrList.volattr = ATTR_VOL_INFO
1640 | ATTR_VOL_FILECOUNT
1641 | ATTR_VOL_DIRCOUNT
1642 | ATTR_VOL_MOUNTPOINT
1643 | ATTR_VOL_NAME;
1644.Pp
1645
1646 err = getattrlist(path, &attrList, &attrBuf, sizeof(attrBuf), 0);
1647 if (err != 0) {
1648 err = errno;
1649 }
1650.Pp
1651
1652 if (err == 0) {
1653 assert(attrBuf.length > offsetof(VolAttrBuf, mountPointSpace));
1654 assert(attrBuf.length <= sizeof(attrBuf));
1655.Pp
1656
1657 printf("Volume information for %s:\en", path);
1658 printf("ATTR_VOL_FILECOUNT: %lu\en", attrBuf.fileCount);
1659 printf("ATTR_VOL_DIRCOUNT: %lu\en", attrBuf.dirCount);
1660 printf(
1661 "ATTR_VOL_MOUNTPOINT: %.*s\en",
1662 (int) attrBuf.mountPointRef.attr_length,
1663 ( ((char *) &attrBuf.mountPointRef)
1664 + attrBuf.mountPointRef.attr_dataoffset )
1665 );
1666 printf(
1667 "ATTR_VOL_NAME: %.*s\en",
1668 (int) attrBuf.volNameRef.attr_length,
1669 ( ((char *) &attrBuf.volNameRef)
1670 + attrBuf.volNameRef.attr_dataoffset )
1671 );
1672 }
1673.Pp
1674.
1675 return err;
1676}
1677.Ed
1678.Pp
1679.
1680.Sh SEE ALSO
1681.
1682.Xr access 2 ,
1683.Xr chflags 2 ,
1684.Xr exchangedata 2 ,
1685.Xr fcntl 2 ,
1686.Xr getdirentriesattr 2 ,
1687.Xr mount 2 ,
1688.Xr searchfs 2 ,
1689.Xr setattrlist 2 ,
1690.Xr stat 2 ,
1691.Xr statfs 2
1692.
1693.Sh HISTORY
1694A
1695.Fn getattrlist
1696function call appeared in Darwin 1.3.1 (Mac OS X version 10.0).
1697.