xref: /freebsd/share/man/man9/vnode.9 (revision d7d962ead0b6e5e8a39202d0590022082bf5bfb6)
1.\" Copyright (c) 1996 Doug Rabson
2.\"
3.\" All rights reserved.
4.\"
5.\" This program is free software.
6.\"
7.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
8.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
9.\" are met:
10.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
11.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
12.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
13.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
14.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
15.\"
16.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE DEVELOPERS ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
17.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
18.\" OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
19.\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE DEVELOPERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
20.\" INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
21.\" NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
22.\" DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
23.\" THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
24.\" (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
25.\" THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
26.\"
27.\" $FreeBSD$
28.\"
29.Dd February 12, 2014
30.Dt VNODE 9
31.Os
32.Sh NAME
33.Nm vnode
34.Nd internal representation of a file or directory
35.Sh SYNOPSIS
36.In sys/param.h
37.In sys/vnode.h
38.Sh DESCRIPTION
39The vnode is the focus of all file activity in
40.Ux .
41A vnode is described by
42.Vt "struct vnode" .
43There is a
44unique vnode allocated for each active file, each current directory,
45each mounted-on file, text file, and the root.
46.Pp
47Each vnode has three reference counts,
48.Va v_usecount ,
49.Va v_holdcnt
50and
51.Va v_writecount .
52The first is the number of clients within the kernel which are
53using this vnode.
54This count is maintained by
55.Xr vref 9 ,
56.Xr vrele 9
57and
58.Xr vput 9 .
59The second is the number of clients within the kernel who veto
60the recycling of this vnode.
61This count is
62maintained by
63.Xr vhold 9
64and
65.Xr vdrop 9 .
66When both the
67.Va v_usecount
68and the
69.Va v_holdcnt
70of a vnode reaches zero then the vnode will be put on the freelist
71and may be reused for another file, possibly in another file system.
72The transition from the freelist is handled by
73.Xr getnewvnode 9 .
74The third is a count of the number of clients which are writing into
75the file.
76It is maintained by the
77.Xr open 2
78and
79.Xr close 2
80system calls.
81.Pp
82Any call which returns a vnode (e.g.,\&
83.Xr vget 9 ,
84.Xr VOP_LOOKUP 9 ,
85etc.\&)
86will increase the
87.Va v_usecount
88of the vnode by one.
89When the caller is finished with the vnode, it
90should release this reference by calling
91.Xr vrele 9
92(or
93.Xr vput 9
94if the vnode is locked).
95.Pp
96Other commonly used members of the vnode structure are
97.Va v_id
98which is used to maintain consistency in the name cache,
99.Va v_mount
100which points at the file system which owns the vnode,
101.Va v_type
102which contains the type of object the vnode represents and
103.Va v_data
104which is used by file systems to store file system specific data with
105the vnode.
106The
107.Va v_op
108field is used by the
109.Dv VOP_*
110macros to call functions in the file system which implement the vnode's
111functionality.
112.Sh VNODE TYPES
113.Bl -tag -width VSOCK
114.It Dv VNON
115No type.
116.It Dv VREG
117A regular file; may be with or without VM object backing.
118If you want to make sure this get a backing object, call
119.Fn vnode_create_vobject .
120.It Dv VDIR
121A directory.
122.It Dv VBLK
123A block device; may be with or without VM object backing.
124If you want to make sure this get a backing object, call
125.Fn vnode_create_vobject .
126.It Dv VCHR
127A character device.
128.It Dv VLNK
129A symbolic link.
130.It Dv VSOCK
131A socket.
132Advisory locking will not work on this.
133.It Dv VFIFO
134A FIFO (named pipe).
135Advisory locking will not work on this.
136.It Dv VBAD
137Indicates that the vnode has been reclaimed.
138.El
139.Sh IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
140VFIFO uses the "struct fileops" from
141.Pa /sys/kern/sys_pipe.c .
142VSOCK uses the "struct fileops" from
143.Pa /sys/kern/sys_socket.c .
144Everything else uses the one from
145.Pa /sys/kern/vfs_vnops.c .
146.Pp
147The VFIFO/VSOCK code, which is why "struct fileops" is used at all, is
148an artifact of an incomplete integration of the VFS code into the
149kernel.
150.Pp
151Calls to
152.Xr malloc 9
153or
154.Xr free 9
155when holding a
156.Nm
157interlock, will cause a LOR (Lock Order Reversal) due to the
158intertwining of VM Objects and Vnodes.
159.Sh SEE ALSO
160.Xr malloc 9 ,
161.Xr VFS 9 ,
162.Xr VOP_ACCESS 9 ,
163.Xr VOP_ACLCHECK 9 ,
164.Xr VOP_ADVISE 9 ,
165.Xr VOP_ADVLOCK 9 ,
166.Xr VOP_ALLOCATE 9 ,
167.Xr VOP_ATTRIB 9 ,
168.Xr VOP_BWRITE 9 ,
169.Xr VOP_CREATE 9 ,
170.Xr VOP_FSYNC 9 ,
171.Xr VOP_GETACL 9 ,
172.Xr VOP_GETEXTATTR 9 ,
173.Xr VOP_GETPAGES 9 ,
174.Xr VOP_INACTIVE 9 ,
175.Xr VOP_IOCTL 9 ,
176.Xr VOP_LINK 9 ,
177.Xr VOP_LISTEXTATTR 9 ,
178.Xr VOP_LOCK 9 ,
179.Xr VOP_LOOKUP 9 ,
180.Xr VOP_OPENCLOSE 9 ,
181.Xr VOP_PATHCONF 9 ,
182.Xr VOP_PRINT 9 ,
183.Xr VOP_RDWR 9 ,
184.Xr VOP_READ_PGCACHE 9 ,
185.Xr VOP_READDIR 9 ,
186.Xr VOP_READLINK 9 ,
187.Xr VOP_REALLOCBLKS 9 ,
188.Xr VOP_REMOVE 9 ,
189.Xr VOP_RENAME 9 ,
190.Xr VOP_REVOKE 9 ,
191.Xr VOP_SETACL 9 ,
192.Xr VOP_SETEXTATTR 9 ,
193.Xr VOP_SETLABEL 9 ,
194.Xr VOP_STRATEGY 9 ,
195.Xr VOP_VPTOCNP 9 ,
196.Xr VOP_VPTOFH 9
197.Sh AUTHORS
198This manual page was written by
199.An Doug Rabson .
200