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Unix manual page for setattrlist. (host=minya system=Darwin)
SETATTRLIST(2) BSD System Calls Manual SETATTRLIST(2)
NAME
setattrlist, fsetattrlist, setattrlistat -- set file system attributes
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/attr.h>
#include <unistd.h>
int
setattrlist(const char * path, struct attrlist * attrList,
void * attrBuf, size_t attrBufSize, unsigned long options);
int
fsetattrlist(int fd, struct attrlist * attrList, void * attrBuf,
size_t attrBufSize, unsigned long options);
int
setattrlistat(int dir_fd, const char * path, struct attrlist * attrList,
void * attrBuf, size_t attrBufSize, uint32_t options);
DESCRIPTION
The setattrlist() and fsetattrlist() functions set attributes (that is,
metadata) of file system objects. They are the logical opposite of
getattrlist(2). The setattrlist() function sets attributes about the
file system object specified by path from the values in the buffer speci-
fied by attrBuf and attrBufSize; the fsetattrlist() function does the
same for the fd file descriptor. The attrList parameter determines what
attributes are set. The options parameter lets you control specific
aspects of the function's behaviour.
The setattrlistat() system call is equivalent to setattrlist() except in
the case where path specifies a relative path. In this case the
attributes are set for the file system object named by path relative to
the directory associated with the file descriptor fd instead of the cur-
rent working directory. If setattrlistat() is passed the special value
AT_FDCWD in the fd parameter, the current working directory is used and
the behavior is identical to a call to setattrlist().
The functions are only supported by certain volume format implementa-
tions. For maximum compatibility, client programs should use high-level
APIs (such as the Carbon File Manager) to access file system attributes.
These high-level APIs include logic to emulate file system attributes on
volumes that don't support setattrlist() and fsetattrlist().
The path parameter for setattrlist() must reference a valid file system
object. All directories listed in the path name leading to the object
must be searchable. The fd parameter for fsetattrlist() must be a valid
file descriptor for the calling process. The list of potentially set-
table attributes via setattrlist() is different than the list of
attributes that are accessible via getattrlist() In particular, only the
following attributes are modifiable via setattrlist() and not all of them
may be supported on all filesystems.
ATTR_CMN_SCRIPT
ATTR_CMN_CRTIME
ATTR_CMN_MODTIME
ATTR_CMN_CHGTIME
ATTR_CMN_ACCTIME
ATTR_CMN_BKUPTIME
ATTR_CMN_FNDRINFO
ATTR_CMN_OWNERID
ATTR_CMN_GRPID
ATTR_CMN_ACCESSMASK
ATTR_CMN_FLAGS
ATTR_CMN_EXTENDED_SECURITY
ATTR_CMN_GRPUUID
ATTR_CMN_ADDEDTIME
ATTR_VOL_NAME
ATTR_VOL_INFO
ATTR_FILE_DEVTYPE
You must own the file system object in order to set any of the following
attributes:
ATTR_CMN_GRPID
ATTR_CMN_ACCESSMASK
ATTR_CMN_FLAGS
ATTR_CMN_CRTIME
ATTR_CMN_MODTIME
ATTR_CMN_ACCTIME
ATTR_CMN_ADDEDTIME
ATTR_CMN_CHGTIME cannot be set programmatically. Any attempt to set
change time is ignored.
You must be root (that is, your process's effective UID must be 0) in
order to change the ATTR_CMN_OWNERID attribute Setting other attributes
requires that you have write access to the object.
The attrList parameter is a pointer to an attrlist structure. You are
responsible for filling out all fields of this structure before calling
the function. See the discussion of the getattrlist(2) function for a
detailed description of this structure. To set an attribute you must set
the corresponding bit in the appropriate attrgroup_t field of the
attrlist structure.
The attrBuf and attrBufSize parameters specify a buffer that contains the
attribute values to set. Attributes are packed in exactly the same way
as they are returned from getattrlist(2) except that, when setting
attributes, the buffer does not include the leading u_int32_t length
value.
The options parameter is a bit set that controls the behaviour of
setattrlist(). The following option bits are defined.
FSOPT_NOFOLLOW If this bit is set, setattrlist() will not follow a sym-
link if it occurs as the last component of path.
RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion a value of 0 is returned. Otherwise, a value
of -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
COMPATIBILITY
Not all volumes support setattrlist(). However, if a volume supports
getattrlist(2), it must also support setattrlist(). See the documenta-
tion for getattrlist(2) for details on how to tell whether a volume sup-
ports it.
The setattrlist() function has been undocumented for more than two years.
In that time a number of volume format implementations have been created
without a proper specification for the behaviour of this routine. You
may encounter volume format implementations with slightly different be-
haviour than what is described here. Your program is expected to be tol-
erant of this variant behaviour.
If you're implementing a volume format that supports setattrlist(), you
should be careful to support the behaviour specified by this document.
ERRORS
setattrlist() and fsetattrlist() will fail if:
[ENOTSUP] The call is not supported by the volume.
[ENOTDIR] A component of the path for setattrlist() prefix is
not a directory.
[ENAMETOOLONG] A component of a path name for setattrlist() exceeded
NAME_MAX characters, or an entire path name exceeded
PATH_MAX characters.
[ENOENT] The file system object for setattrlist() does not
exist.
[EBADF] The file descriptor argument for fsetattrlist() is not
a valid file descriptor.
[EROFS] The volume is read-only.
[EACCES] Search permission is denied for a component of the
path prefix for setattrlist().
[ELOOP] Too many symbolic links were encountered in translat-
ing the pathname for setattrlist().
[EFAULT] path, attrList or attrBuf points to an invalid
address.
[EINVAL] The bitmapcount field of attrList is not
ATTR_BIT_MAP_COUNT.
[EINVAL] You try to set an invalid attribute.
[EINVAL] You try to set an attribute that is read-only.
[EINVAL] You try to set volume attributes and directory or file
attributes at the same time.
[EINVAL] You try to set volume attributes but path does not
reference the root of the volume.
[EPERM] You try to set an attribute that can only be set by
the owner.
[EACCES] You try to set an attribute that's only settable if
you have write permission, and you do not have write
permission.
[EINVAL] The buffer size you specified in attrBufSize is too
small to hold all the attributes that you are trying
to set.
[EIO] An I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to
the file system.
In addition to the errors returned by the setattrlist(), the
setattrlistat() function may fail if:
[EBADF] The path argument does not specify an absolute path
and the fd argument is neither AT_FDCWD nor a valid
file descriptor open for searching.
[ENOTDIR] The path argument is not an absolute path and fd is
neither AT_FDCWD nor a file descriptor associated with
a directory.
CAVEATS
If you try to set any volume attributes, you must set ATTR_VOL_INFO in
the volattr field, even though it consumes no data from the attribute
buffer.
For more caveats, see also the compatibility notes above.
EXAMPLES
The following code shows how to set the file type and creator of a file
by getting the ATTR_CMN_FNDRINFO attribute using getattrlist(2), modify-
ing the appropriate fields of the 32-byte Finder information structure,
and then setting the attribute back using setattrlist(). This assumes
that the target volume supports the required attributes
#include <assert.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stddef.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/attr.h>
#include <sys/errno.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/vnode.h>
typedef struct attrlist attrlist_t;
struct FInfoAttrBuf {
u_int32_t length;
fsobj_type_t objType;
char finderInfo[32];
};
typedef struct FInfoAttrBuf FInfoAttrBuf;
static int FInfoDemo(
const char *path,
const char *type,
const char *creator
)
{
int err;
attrlist_t attrList;
FInfoAttrBuf attrBuf;
assert( strlen(type) == 4 );
assert( strlen(creator) == 4 );
memset(&attrList, 0, sizeof(attrList));
attrList.bitmapcount = ATTR_BIT_MAP_COUNT;
attrList.commonattr = ATTR_CMN_OBJTYPE | ATTR_CMN_FNDRINFO;
err = getattrlist(path, &attrList, &attrBuf, sizeof(attrBuf), 0);
if (err != 0) {
err = errno;
}
if ( (err == 0) && (attrBuf.objType != VREG) ) {
fprintf(stderr, "Not a standard file.\n");
err = EINVAL;
} else {
memcpy( &attrBuf.finderInfo[0], type, 4 );
memcpy( &attrBuf.finderInfo[4], creator, 4 );
attrList.commonattr = ATTR_CMN_FNDRINFO;
err = setattrlist(
path,
&attrList,
attrBuf.finderInfo,
sizeof(attrBuf.finderInfo),
0
);
}
return err;
}
SEE ALSO
chflags(2), chmod(2), chown(2), getattrlist(2), getdirentriesattr(2),
searchfs(2), utimes(2)
HISTORY
A setattrlist() function call appeared in Darwin 1.3.1 (Mac OS X version
10.0). The setatrlistat function call first appeared in macOS version
10.13.
Darwin December 15, 2003 Darwin