NAME
dir
, dirent
— directory file
format
SYNOPSIS
#include
<dirent.h>
DESCRIPTION
Directories provide a convenient hierarchical method of grouping files while obscuring the underlying details of the storage medium. A directory file is differentiated from a plain file by a flag in its inode(5) entry. It consists of records (directory entries) each of which contains information about a file and a pointer to the file itself. Directory entries may contain other directories as well as plain files; such nested directories are referred to as subdirectories. A hierarchy of directories and files is formed in this manner and is called a file system (or referred to as a file system tree).
Each directory file contains two special directory entries; one is a pointer to the directory itself called dot (“.”) and the other a pointer to its parent directory called dot-dot (“..”). Dot and dot-dot are valid pathnames, however, the system root directory (“/”), has no parent and dot-dot points to itself like dot.
File system nodes are ordinary directory files on which has been grafted a file system object, such as a physical disk or a partitioned area of such a disk (see mount(8)).
The directory entry format is defined in the file
<dirent.h>
:
/* * A directory entry has a struct dirent at the front of it, containing * its inode number, the length of the entry, and the length of the name * contained in the entry. These are followed by the name padded to some * alignment (currently 8 bytes) with NUL bytes. All names are guaranteed * NUL terminated. The maximum length of a name in a directory is MAXNAMLEN. */ struct dirent { ino_t d_fileno; /* file number of entry */ off_t d_off; /* offset of next entry */ u_int16_t d_reclen; /* length of this record */ u_int8_t d_type; /* file type, see below */ u_int8_t d_namlen; /* length of string in d_name */ #define MAXNAMLEN 255 char d_name[MAXNAMLEN + 1]; /* maximum name length */ }; #define d_ino d_fileno /* backward compatibility */ /* * File types */ #define DT_UNKNOWN 0 #define DT_FIFO 1 #define DT_CHR 2 #define DT_DIR 4 #define DT_BLK 6 #define DT_REG 8 #define DT_LNK 10 #define DT_SOCK 12
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
A dir
file format appeared in
Version 7 AT&T UNIX. The
d_off member was added in OpenBSD
5.5.