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Revision: 1.6
Committed: Mon Dec 19 16:50:27 2005 UTC (18 years, 6 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rel-1_0, rel-1_01
Changes since 1.5: +35 -4 lines
Log Message:
*** empty log message ***

File Contents

# Content
1 NAME
2 Linux::Inotify2 - scalable directory/file change notification
3
4 SYNOPSIS
5 Callback interface
6 use Linux::Inotify2;
7
8 # create a new object
9 my $inotify = new Linux::Inotify2
10 or die "Unable to create new inotify object: $!";
11
12 # for Event:
13 Event->io (fd =>$inotify->fileno, poll => 'r', cb => sub { $inotify->poll });
14 # for Glib:
15 add_watch Glib::IO $inotify->fileno, in => sub { $inotify->poll };
16 # manually:
17 1 while $inotify->poll;
18
19 # add watchers
20 $inotify->watch ("/etc/passwd", IN_ACCESS, sub {
21 my $e = shift;
22 my $name = $e->fullname;
23 print "$name was accessed\n" if $e->IN_ACCESS;
24 print "$name is no longer mounted\n" if $e->IN_UNMOUNT;
25 print "$name is gone\n" if $e->IN_IGNORED;
26 print "events for $name have been lost\n" if $e->IN_Q_OVERFLOW;
27
28 # cancel this watcher: remove no further events
29 $e->w->cancel;
30 });
31
32 Streaming Interface
33 use Linux::Inotify2 ;
34
35 # create a new object
36 my $inotify = new Linux::Inotify2
37 or die "Unable to create new inotify object: $!" ;
38
39 # create watch
40 $inotify->watch ("/etc/passwd", IN_ACCESS)
41 or die "watch creation failed" ;
42
43 while () {
44 my @events = $inotify->read;
45 unless (@events > 0) {
46 print "read error: $!";
47 last ;
48 }
49 printf "mask\t%d\n", $_->mask foreach @events ;
50 }
51
52 DESCRIPTION
53 This module implements an interface to the Linux 2.6.13 and later
54 Inotify file/directory change notification sytem.
55
56 It has a number of advantages over the Linux::Inotify module:
57
58 - it is portable (Linux::Inotify only works on x86)
59 - the equivalent of fullname works correctly
60 - it is better documented
61 - it has callback-style interface, which is better suited for
62 integration.
63
64 The Linux::Inotify2 Class
65 my $inotify = new Linux::Inotify2
66 Create a new notify object and return it. A notify object is kind of
67 a container that stores watches on filesystem names and is
68 responsible for handling event data.
69
70 On error, "undef" is returned and $! will be set accordingly. The
71 followign errors are documented:
72
73 ENFILE The system limit on the total number of file descriptors has been reached.
74 EMFILE The user limit on the total number of inotify instances has been reached.
75 ENOMEM Insufficient kernel memory is available.
76
77 Example:
78
79 my $inotify = new Linux::Inotify2
80 or die "Unable to create new inotify object: $!";
81
82 $watch = $inotify->watch ($name, $mask[, $cb])
83 Add a new watcher to the given notifier. The watcher will create
84 events on the pathname $name as given in $mask, which can be any of
85 the following constants (all exported by default) ORed together.
86
87 "file" refers to any filesystem object in the watch'ed object
88 (always a directory), that is files, directories, symlinks, device
89 nodes etc., while "object" refers to the object the watch has been
90 set on itself:
91
92 IN_ACCESS object was accessed
93 IN_MODIFY object was modified
94 IN_ATTRIB object metadata changed
95 IN_CLOSE_WRITE writable fd to file / to object was closed
96 IN_CLOSE_NOWRITE readonly fd to file / to object closed
97 IN_OPEN object was opened
98 IN_MOVED_FROM file was moved from this object (directory)
99 IN_MOVED_TO file was moved to this object (directory)
100 IN_CREATE file was created in this object (directory)
101 IN_DELETE file was deleted from this object (directory)
102 IN_DELETE_SELF object itself was deleted
103 IN_MOVE_SELF object itself was moved
104 IN_ALL_EVENTS all of the above events
105
106 IN_ONESHOT only send event once
107
108 IN_CLOSE same as IN_CLOSE_WRITE | IN_CLOSE_NOWRITE
109 IN_MOVE same as IN_MOVED_FROM | IN_MOVED_TO
110
111 $cb is a perl code reference that, if given, is called for each
112 event. It receives a "Linux::Inotify2::Event" object.
113
114 The returned $watch object is of class "Linux::Inotify2::Watch".
115
116 On error, "undef" is returned and $! will be set accordingly. The
117 following errors are documented:
118
119 EBADF The given file descriptor is not valid.
120 EINVAL The given event mask contains no legal events.
121 ENOMEM Insufficient kernel memory was available.
122 ENOSPC The user limit on the total number of inotify watches was reached or the kernel failed to allocate a needed resource.
123 EACCESS Read access to the given file is not permitted.
124
125 Example, show when "/etc/passwd" gets accessed and/or modified once:
126
127 $inotify->watch ("/etc/passwd", IN_ACCESS | IN_MODIFY, sub {
128 my $e = shift;
129 print "$e->{w}{name} was accessed\n" if $e->IN_ACCESS;
130 print "$e->{w}{name} was modified\n" if $e->IN_MODIFY;
131 print "$e->{w}{name} is no longer mounted\n" if $e->IN_UNMOUNT;
132 print "events for $e->{w}{name} have been lost\n" if $e->IN_Q_OVERFLOW;
133
134 $e->w->cancel;
135 });
136
137 $inotify->fileno
138 Returns the fileno for this notify object. You are responsible for
139 calling the "poll" method when this fileno becomes ready for
140 reading.
141
142 $inotify->blocking ($blocking)
143 Clears ($blocking true) or sets ($blocking false) the "O_NONBLOCK"
144 flag on the file descriptor.
145
146 $count = $inotify->poll
147 Reads events from the kernel and handles them. If the notify fileno
148 is blocking (the default), then this method waits for at least one
149 event (and thus returns true unless an error occurs). Otherwise it
150 returns immediately when no pending events could be read.
151
152 Returns the count of events that have been handled.
153
154 $count = $inotify->read
155 Reads events from the kernel. Blocks in blocking mode (default)
156 until any event arrives. Returns list of "Linux::Inotify2::Event"
157 objects or empty list if none (non-blocking mode) or error occured
158 ($! should be checked).
159
160 The Linux::Inotify2::Event Class
161 Objects of this class are handed as first argument to the watch
162 callback. It has the following members and methods:
163
164 $event->w
165 $event->{w}
166 The watcher object for this event.
167
168 $event->name
169 $event->{name}
170 The path of the filesystem object, relative to the watch name.
171
172 $watch->fullname
173 Returns the "full" name of the relevant object, i.e. including the
174 "name" member of the watcher (if the the watch is on a directory and
175 a dir entry is affected), or simply the "name" member itself when
176 the object is the watch object itself.
177
178 $event->mask
179 $event->{mask}
180 The received event mask. In addition the the events described for
181 "$inotify-"watch>, the following flags (exported by default) can be
182 set:
183
184 IN_ISDIR event object is a directory
185 IN_Q_OVERFLOW event queue overflowed
186
187 # when any of the following flags are set,
188 # then watchers for this event are automatically canceled
189 IN_UNMOUNT filesystem for watch'ed object was unmounted
190 IN_IGNORED file was ignored/is gone (no more events are delivered)
191 IN_ONESHOT only one event was generated
192
193 $event->IN_xxx
194 Returns a boolean that returns true if the event mask matches the
195 event. All of the "IN_xxx" constants can be used as methods.
196
197 $event->cookie
198 $event->{cookie}
199 The event cookie to "synchronize two events". Normally zero, this
200 value is set when two events relating to the same file are
201 generated. As far as I know, this only happens for "IN_MOVED_FROM"
202 and "IN_MOVED_TO" events, to identify the old and new name of a
203 file.
204
205 The Linux::Inotify2::Watch Class
206 Watch objects are created by calling the "watch" method of a notifier.
207
208 It has the following members and methods:
209
210 $watch->name
211 $watch->{name}
212 The name as specified in the "watch" call. For the object itself, this
213 is the empty string. For directory watches, this is the name of the
214 entry without leading path elements.
215
216 $watch->mask
217 $watch->{mask}
218 The mask as specified in the "watch" call.
219
220 $watch->cb ([new callback])
221 $watch->{cb}
222 The callback as specified in the "watch" call. Can optionally be
223 changed.
224
225 $watch->cancel
226 Cancels/removes this watch. Future events, even if already queued
227 queued, will not be handled and resources will be freed.
228
229 SEE ALSO
230 Linux::Inotify.
231
232 AUTHOR
233 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
234 http://home.schmorp.de/
235