On 08/08/2017 03:24 PM, Eric Blake wrote: > On 08/08/2017 03:10 PM, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote: >>> Technically, POSIX says (and 'man 2 open' agrees, modulo the fact that >>> Linux still lacks O_SEARCH) that you MUST provide one of the 5 access >>> modes (they are O_RDONLY, O_RDWR, O_WRONLY, O_EXEC, and O_SEARCH; >>> although POSIX allows O_EXEC and O_SEARCH to be the same bit pattern), >>> and then bitwise-or any additional flags. So the usage here is correct. >>> > >> Oh ok. I didn't think of that, just checked Linux manpage: >> >> O_PATH (since Linux 2.6.39) >> >> When O_PATH is specified in flags, flag bits other than >> O_CLOEXEC, O_DIRECTORY, and O_NOFOLLOW are ignored. > > There are access modes (5 in POSIX), and then flag bits (O_NONBLOCK > being one of the flag bits, and therefore ignored when O_PATH is true). > Presumably, the author was being careful by mentioning "flag bits" (and > thereby implicitly meaning that O_RDONLY is NOT ignored when using > O_PATH). But I'm not _quite_ sure whether O_PATH should be considered a > sixth access mode, or a flag bit, and the Linux man page doesn't help on > that front ;) Hmm - if you treat O_PATH as an access mode rather than a > flag bit, then O_RDONLY | O_PATH no longer makes sense at all (you can't > mix two modes at once). Maybe we should file a bug report against the > man page to get clarification.
Quoting my version of 'man 2 open' The argument flags must include one of the following access modes: O_RDONLY, O_WRONLY, or O_RDWR. These request opening the file read- only, write-only, or read/write, respectively. In addition, zero or more file creation flags and file status flags can be bitwise-or'd in flags. The file creation flags are O_CLOEXEC, O_CREAT, O_DIRECTORY, O_EXCL, O_NOCTTY, O_NOFOLLOW, O_TMPFILE, and O_TRUNC. The file status flags are all of the remaining flags listed below. The distinction between these two groups of flags is that the file status flags can be retrieved and (in some cases) modified; see fcntl(2) for details. and fcntl() lets you see whether an fd was opened with O_PATH, which makes it a file status flag. Well, except that fcntl() also lets you see which mode an fd was opened with (such as O_WRONLY). Hmm - still fuzzy. -- Eric Blake, Principal Software Engineer Red Hat, Inc. +1-919-301-3266 Virtualization: qemu.org | libvirt.org
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