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/* store `device' I/O
Copyright (C) 1995,96,97,99,2000,2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Written by Miles Bader <miles@gnu.org>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at
your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#ifndef __DEV_H__
#define __DEV_H__
#include <mach.h>
#include <device/device.h>
#include <rwlock.h>
#include <hurd/store.h>
#include <hurd/trivfs.h>
extern struct trivfs_control *storeio_fsys;
/* Information about backend store, which we presumptively call a "device". */
struct dev
{
/* The argument specification that we use to open the store. */
struct store_parsed *store_name;
/* The device to which we're doing io. This is null when the
device is closed, in which case we will open from `store_name'. */
struct store *store;
int readonly; /* Nonzero if user gave --readonly flag. */
int enforced; /* Nonzero if user gave --enforced flag. */
int no_fileio; /* Nonzero if user gave --no-fileio flag. */
dev_t rdev; /* A unixy device number for st_rdev. */
/* The current owner of the open device. For terminals, this affects
controlling terminal behavior (see term_become_ctty). For all objects
this affects old-style async IO. Negative values represent pgrps. This
has nothing to do with the owner of a file (as returned by io_stat, and
as used for various permission checks by filesystems). An owner of 0
indicates that there is no owner. */
pid_t owner;
/* The number of active opens. */
int nperopens;
/* This lock protects `store', `owner' and `nperopens'. The other
members never change after creation, except for those locked by
io_lock (below). */
struct mutex lock;
/* Nonzero iff the --no-cache flag was given.
If this is set, the remaining members are not used at all
and don't need to be initialized or cleaned up. */
int inhibit_cache;
/* A bitmask corresponding to the part of an offset that lies within a
device block. */
unsigned block_mask;
/* Lock to arbitrate I/O through this device. Block I/O can occur in
parallel, and requires only a reader-lock.
Non-block I/O is always serialized, and requires a writer-lock. */
struct rwlock io_lock;
/* Non-block I/O is buffered through BUF. BUF_OFFS is the device offset
corresponding to the start of BUF (which holds one block); if it is -1,
then BUF is inactive. */
void *buf;
off_t buf_offs;
int buf_dirty;
struct pager *pager;
struct mutex pager_lock;
};
static inline int
dev_is_readonly (const struct dev *dev)
{
return dev->readonly || (dev->store && (dev->store->flags & STORE_READONLY));
}
/* Called with DEV->lock held. Try to open the store underlying DEV. */
error_t dev_open (struct dev *dev);
/* Shut down the store underlying DEV and free any resources it consumes.
DEV itself remains intact so that dev_open can be called again.
This should be called with DEV->lock held. */
void dev_close (struct dev *dev);
/* Returns in MEMOBJ the port for a memory object backed by the storage on
DEV. Returns 0 or the error code if an error occurred. */
error_t dev_get_memory_object(struct dev *dev, vm_prot_t prot,
memory_object_t *memobj);
/* Try to stop all paging activity on DEV, returning true if we were
successful. If NOSYNC is true, then we won't write back any (kernel)
cached pages to the device. */
int dev_stop_paging (struct dev *dev, int nosync);
/* Try and write out any pending writes to DEV. If WAIT is true, will wait
for any paging activity to cease. */
error_t dev_sync (struct dev *dev, int wait);
/* Write LEN bytes from BUF to DEV, returning the amount actually written in
AMOUNT. If successful, 0 is returned, otherwise an error code is
returned. */
error_t dev_write (struct dev *dev, off_t offs, void *buf, size_t len,
size_t *amount);
/* Read up to AMOUNT bytes from DEV, returned in BUF and LEN in the with the
usual mach memory result semantics. If successful, 0 is returned,
otherwise an error code is returned. */
error_t dev_read (struct dev *dev, off_t offs, size_t amount,
void **buf, size_t *len);
#endif /* !__DEV_H__ */
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