On 2024-04-25 19:45, Dan Shelton via Cygwin wrote:
On Mon, 22 Apr 2024 at 07:01, Brian Inglis via Cygwin wrote:
On 2024-04-21 17:24, Dan Shelton via Cygwin wrote:
On Sat, 20 Apr 2024 at 05:37, Brian Inglis via Cygwin wrote:
2. If I have Administrator rights, is there a way in /proc where I can
/bin/ls -la or /bin/find -ls all those DOS namespaces and soft links
to the real devices?
Cygwin exposes these MS Windows Executive Object Manager subsystem resource
objects under /proc/sys/ and object namespaces are per session under
/proc/sys/Sessions/ you have e.g.
$ ls -glo /proc/sys/Sessions/BNOLINKS/
total 0
lr--r--r-- 1 0 Apr 19 21:23 0 -> /proc/sys/BaseNamedObjects
lr--r--r-- 1 0 Apr 19 21:23 1 -> /proc/sys/Sessions/1/BaseNamedObjects
so each session has its own set of BaseNamedObjects, which you can list with
appropriate permissions, or using a tree browser.
Now where does the "1" in /proc/sys/Sessions/1/BaseNamedObjects come
from? Is there a Cygwin or Win32 API for that?
It's the MS Windows session number for the first user session.
You can access them using Cygwin or MS Windows directory lookups or tree
browsers, as I said.
Search microsoft.com for Windows sessions for details about MS Windows APIs.
Windows has multiple session apis (terminal, logon, ...), which is
used for the DOS namespace?
There really does not appear to be a "DOS" namespace, rather there are a bunch
of legacy object names in the namespaces which may be used by console and GUI
programs to access and operate on the underlying objects, possibly also using
legacy APIs.
Under MS Windows you can use Sysinternals WinObj64 to browse the hierarchy and
objects.
What is that?
If you do not yet know that, perhaps you should not yet be digging into these MS
Windows Executive subsystem objects.
Some of these questions seem very abstract - are these academic questions or
projects?
Building knowledge, learning, and debugging actual code.
Have a look at the object hierarchies either using a Cygwin tree browser or the
winobj64 object browser to see what is actually out there and their properties.
The Cygwin all-volunteer spare time project's interest is in using newlib libc
and Windows APIs to provide Unix functionality, to relevant POSIX standards if
available and appropriate.
For anything else you should consult the available project documentation in the
cygwin-doc package or online, in the newlib-cygwin/winsup/cygwin C++ source code
providing the emulation, any MS Windows documentation that the vendor cares to
make available, and perhaps other MS Windows emulation based open source
projects like Wine, mingw64, msys2, etc.
--
Take care. Thanks, Brian Inglis Calgary, Alberta, Canada
La perfection est atteinte Perfection is achieved
non pas lorsqu'il n'y a plus rien à ajouter not when there is no more to add
mais lorsqu'il n'y a plus rien à retirer but when there is no more to cut
-- Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
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