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     STATFS(S)                 UNIX System V                 STATFS(S)



     Name
          statfs, fstatfs - get file system information

     Syntax
          #include <sys/types.h>
          #include <sys/statfs.h>

          int statfs (path, buf, len, fstyp)
          char *path;
          struct statfs *buf;
          int len, fstyp;

          int fstatfs (fildes, buf, len, fstyp)
          int fildes;
          struct statfs *buf;
          int len, fstyp;

     Description
          The statfs system call returns a ``generic superblock''
          describing a file system.  It can be used to acquire
          information about mounted as well as unmounted file systems,
          and usage is slightly different in the two cases.  In all
          cases, buf is a pointer to a structure (described below)
          which will be filled by the system call, and len is the
          number of bytes of information which the system should
          return in the structure.  len must be no greater than sizeof
          (struct statfs) and ordinarily it will contain exactly that
          value; if it holds a smaller value, the system will fill the
          structure with that number of bytes.  (This allows future
          versions of the system to grow the structure without
          invalidating older binary programs.)

          If the file system of interest is currently mounted, path
          should name a file which resides on that file system.  In
          this case the file system type is known to the operating
          system and the fstyp argument must be zero.  For an
          unmounted file system path must name the block special file
          containing it and fstyp must contain the (non-zero) file
          system type.  In both cases read, write, or execute
          permission of the named file is not required, but all
          directories listed in the path name leading to the file must
          be searchable.

          The statfs structure pointed to by buf includes the
          following members:

               short   f_fstyp;    /* File system type */
               short   f_bsize;    /* Block size */
               short   f_frsize;   /* Fragment size */
               long    f_blocks;   /* Total number of blocks */
               long    f_bfree;    /* Count of free blocks */
               long    f_files;    /* Total number of file nodes */
               long    f_ffree;    /* Count of free file nodes */
               char    f_fname[6]; /* Volume name */
               char    f_fpack[6]; /* Pack name */

          The fstatfs system call is similar, except that the file
          named by path in statfs is instead identified by an open
          file descriptor fildes obtained from a successful open(S),
          creat(S), dup(S), fcntl(S), or pipe(S) system call.

          The statfs system call obsoletes ustat(S) and should be used
          in preference to it in new programs.

          The statfs and fstatfs system calls will fail if one or more
          of the following is true:

          [ENOTDIR]      A component of the path prefix is not a
                         directory.

          [ENOENT]       The named file does not exist.

          [EACCES]       Search permission is denied for a component
                         of the path prefix.

          [EFAULT]       buf or path points to an invalid address.

          [EBADF]        fildes is not a valid open file descriptor.

          [EINVAL]       fstyp is an invalid file system type; path is
                         not a block special file and fstyp is
                         nonzero; len is negative or is greater than
                         sizeof (struct statfs).

          [ENOLINK]      path points to a remote machine, and the link
                         to that machine is no longer active.

          [EMULTIHOP]    Components of path require hopping to
                         multiple remote machines.

     See Also
          chmod(S), chown(S), creat(S), link(S), mknod(S), pipe(S),
          read(S), time(S), unlink(S), utime(S), write(S), fs(F)

     Diagnostics
          Upon successful completion a value of 0 is returned.
          Otherwise, a value of -1 is returned, and errno is set to
          indicate the error.

                                             (printed 6/20/89)

Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026