From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: kaushal Subject: Re: how to the filename Date: Thu, 14 Apr 2005 17:09:51 +0530 Message-ID: <1113478791.5720.34.camel@localhost.localdomain> References: <1113472539.5952.62.camel@localhost.localdomain> <6a00c8d5050414033770f1ab96@mail.gmail.com> Reply-To: kaushal@rocsys.com Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Return-path: In-Reply-To: <6a00c8d5050414033770f1ab96@mail.gmail.com> Sender: linux-c-programming-owner@vger.kernel.org List-Id: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" To: Steve Graegert Cc: linux prg Hi Steve, Thanks for the response.But how will lsof work for a particular PID.If lsof can print all the files by their names then why can't any c program?The idea was to prove that the file /dev/pts/9 or some no. is opened by the bash and to it are the stdin,stdout and stderr associated.For that ,the fds 0,1,and 2 are supposed to point to the same file /dev/pts/9 or say /dev/tty3 .... This can be proved using lsof -p .But how to prove that from within a c program?This lead to the sol if we can get the filename from the file descriptor and print it on the screen. regards- kaushal. On Thu, 2005-04-14 at 16:07, Steve Graegert wrote: > On 4/14/05, kaushal wrote: > > Hello all, > > How can I get the filename/pathname given the open file descriptor?Does > > fstat provide this feature internally?Can somebody give the code snippet > > for this. > > There is no such thing. It is not possible to obtain a FD's filename > reliably. Unless you are absolutely sure that this particular FD > points to a file (or directory) and not to a socket, pipe or > something similar, you will not be able to use fstat reliably. Which > of stat's fields are suggesting to be helpful reagarding to your > problem? st_ino? How would you locate a file based on its file ID? > This would require scanning the complete file system (and probably > more than one). Another problem is, that an FD might be associated > with other files at the same time or files can be stored inside a > directory that you can't read due to lack of sufficient permissions. > What you are looking for is some kind of reverse lookup to unwind the > many-to-one relationship of files and inodes. > > A couple of years ago Floyd Davidson suggested some code that may > point you to the right direction (not tested): > > /* A demo program to locate file names related to an inode number */ > > #include > #include > #include > #include > #include > #include > #include > > void scan_list(char *curdir, struct dirent **ptr_nl, int dirs); > int file_select(const struct dirent *nl); > > ino_t inode; > char curdir[PATH_MAX] = "."; /* default search directory */ > > int > main(int argc, char **argv) > { > struct dirent **namelist; > struct stat st; > > if (argc < 2 || argc > 3) { > fprintf(stderr,"usage: %s inode [directory]\n", argv[0]); > exit(EXIT_FAILURE); > } > inode = strtoul(argv[1], NULL, 10); > if (!inode) { > fprintf(stderr,"Error: invalid inode\n"); > exit(EXIT_FAILURE); > } > if (argc == 3 && !lstat(argv[2], &st) && S_ISDIR(st.st_mode)) { > strcpy(curdir, argv[2]); > } > > scan_list(curdir, namelist, > scandir(curdir, &namelist, file_select, alphasort)); > return EXIT_SUCCESS; > } > > /* > * returns 1 for directories, otherwise 0 > * and displays any filename which matches inode. > */ > int > file_select(const struct dirent *nl) > { > struct stat st; > char curfile[PATH_MAX]; > > sprintf(curfile, "%s/%s", curdir, nl->d_name); > if (0 == lstat(curfile, &st)) { > /* report a matching inode number */ > if (st.st_ino == inode) { > printf(" %6lu %-20s \n", (unsigned long) st.st_ino, curfile); > } > /* skip these directories */ > if (!strcmp(nl->d_name, ".") || !strcmp(nl->d_name, "..")) { > return 0; > } > /* otherwise list all directories */ > if (S_ISDIR(st.st_mode)) { > return 1; > } > } return 0; > } > > /* descend through all directories */ > void > scan_list(char *olddir, struct dirent **ptr_nl, int dirs) > { > char savedir[PATH_MAX]; > int i; > struct dirent **namelist; > > if (dirs > 0) { > for (i = 0; i < dirs; ++i) { > strcpy(savedir, curdir); > sprintf(curdir,"%s/%s", olddir, ptr_nl[i]->d_name); > scan_list(curdir, namelist, > scandir(curdir, &namelist, file_select, alphasort)); > strcpy(curdir, savedir); > } > } > } > > /* End of demo program */ > > Kind Regards > > \Steve > > -- > > Steve Graegert > Independent Software Consultant {C/C++ && Java && .NET} > Mobile: +49 (176) 21 24 88 69 > Office: +49 (9131) 71 26 40 9