rclone/cmd/mount2/file.go
Josh Soref d0888edc0a Spelling fixes
Fix spelling of: above, already, anonymous, associated,
authentication, bandwidth, because, between, blocks, calculate,
candidates, cautious, changelog, cleaner, clipboard, command,
completely, concurrently, considered, constructs, corrupt, current,
daemon, dependencies, deprecated, directory, dispatcher, download,
eligible, ellipsis, encrypter, endpoint, entrieslist, essentially,
existing writers, existing, expires, filesystem, flushing, frequently,
hierarchy, however, implementation, implements, inaccurate,
individually, insensitive, longer, maximum, metadata, modified,
multipart, namedirfirst, nextcloud, obscured, opened, optional,
owncloud, pacific, passphrase, password, permanently, persimmon,
positive, potato, protocol, quota, receiving, recommends, referring,
requires, revisited, satisfied, satisfies, satisfy, semver,
serialized, session, storage, strategies, stringlist, successful,
supported, surprise, temporarily, temporary, transactions, unneeded,
update, uploads, wrapped

Signed-off-by: Josh Soref <jsoref@users.noreply.github.com>
2020-10-14 15:21:31 +01:00

152 lines
4.9 KiB
Go

// +build linux darwin,amd64
package mount2
import (
"context"
"fmt"
"io"
"syscall"
fusefs "github.com/hanwen/go-fuse/v2/fs"
"github.com/hanwen/go-fuse/v2/fuse"
"github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/log"
"github.com/rclone/rclone/vfs"
)
// FileHandle is a resource identifier for opened files. Usually, a
// FileHandle should implement some of the FileXxxx interfaces.
//
// All of the FileXxxx operations can also be implemented at the
// InodeEmbedder level, for example, one can implement NodeReader
// instead of FileReader.
//
// FileHandles are useful in two cases: First, if the underlying
// storage systems needs a handle for reading/writing. This is the
// case with Unix system calls, which need a file descriptor (See also
// the function `NewLoopbackFile`). Second, it is useful for
// implementing files whose contents are not tied to an inode. For
// example, a file like `/proc/interrupts` has no fixed content, but
// changes on each open call. This means that each file handle must
// have its own view of the content; this view can be tied to a
// FileHandle. Files that have such dynamic content should return the
// FOPEN_DIRECT_IO flag from their `Open` method. See directio_test.go
// for an example.
type FileHandle struct {
h vfs.Handle
fsys *FS
}
// Create a new FileHandle
func newFileHandle(h vfs.Handle, fsys *FS) *FileHandle {
return &FileHandle{
h: h,
fsys: fsys,
}
}
// Check interface satisfied
var _ fusefs.FileHandle = (*FileHandle)(nil)
// The String method is for debug printing.
func (f *FileHandle) String() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("fh=%p(%s)", f, f.h.Node().Path())
}
// Read data from a file. The data should be returned as
// ReadResult, which may be constructed from the incoming
// `dest` buffer.
func (f *FileHandle) Read(ctx context.Context, dest []byte, off int64) (res fuse.ReadResult, errno syscall.Errno) {
var n int
var err error
defer log.Trace(f, "off=%d", off)("n=%d, off=%d, errno=%v", &n, &off, &errno)
n, err = f.h.ReadAt(dest, off)
if err == io.EOF {
err = nil
}
return fuse.ReadResultData(dest[:n]), translateError(err)
}
var _ fusefs.FileReader = (*FileHandle)(nil)
// Write the data into the file handle at given offset. After
// returning, the data will be reused and may not referenced.
func (f *FileHandle) Write(ctx context.Context, data []byte, off int64) (written uint32, errno syscall.Errno) {
var n int
var err error
defer log.Trace(f, "off=%d", off)("n=%d, off=%d, errno=%v", &n, &off, &errno)
n, err = f.h.WriteAt(data, off)
return uint32(n), translateError(err)
}
var _ fusefs.FileWriter = (*FileHandle)(nil)
// Flush is called for the close(2) call on a file descriptor. In case
// of a descriptor that was duplicated using dup(2), it may be called
// more than once for the same FileHandle.
func (f *FileHandle) Flush(ctx context.Context) syscall.Errno {
return translateError(f.h.Flush())
}
var _ fusefs.FileFlusher = (*FileHandle)(nil)
// Release is called to before a FileHandle is forgotten. The
// kernel ignores the return value of this method,
// so any cleanup that requires specific synchronization or
// could fail with I/O errors should happen in Flush instead.
func (f *FileHandle) Release(ctx context.Context) syscall.Errno {
return translateError(f.h.Release())
}
var _ fusefs.FileReleaser = (*FileHandle)(nil)
// Fsync is a signal to ensure writes to the Inode are flushed
// to stable storage.
func (f *FileHandle) Fsync(ctx context.Context, flags uint32) (errno syscall.Errno) {
return translateError(f.h.Sync())
}
var _ fusefs.FileFsyncer = (*FileHandle)(nil)
// Getattr reads attributes for an Inode. The library will ensure that
// Mode and Ino are set correctly. For files that are not opened with
// FOPEN_DIRECTIO, Size should be set so it can be read correctly. If
// returning zeroed permissions, the default behavior is to change the
// mode of 0755 (directory) or 0644 (files). This can be switched off
// with the Options.NullPermissions setting. If blksize is unset, 4096
// is assumed, and the 'blocks' field is set accordingly.
func (f *FileHandle) Getattr(ctx context.Context, out *fuse.AttrOut) (errno syscall.Errno) {
defer log.Trace(f, "")("attr=%v, errno=%v", &out, &errno)
f.fsys.setAttrOut(f.h.Node(), out)
return 0
}
var _ fusefs.FileGetattrer = (*FileHandle)(nil)
// Setattr sets attributes for an Inode.
func (f *FileHandle) Setattr(ctx context.Context, in *fuse.SetAttrIn, out *fuse.AttrOut) (errno syscall.Errno) {
defer log.Trace(f, "in=%v", in)("attr=%v, errno=%v", &out, &errno)
var err error
f.fsys.setAttrOut(f.h.Node(), out)
size, ok := in.GetSize()
if ok {
err = f.h.Truncate(int64(size))
if err != nil {
return translateError(err)
}
out.Attr.Size = size
}
mtime, ok := in.GetMTime()
if ok {
err = f.h.Node().SetModTime(mtime)
if err != nil {
return translateError(err)
}
out.Attr.Mtime = uint64(mtime.Unix())
out.Attr.Mtimensec = uint32(mtime.Nanosecond())
}
return 0
}
var _ fusefs.FileSetattrer = (*FileHandle)(nil)