sg_get_fs_stats, sg_get_fs_stats_r, sg_get_fs_stats_diff,
sg_get_fs_stats_diff_between, sg_free_fs_stats, sg_get_valid_filesystems,
sg_set_valid_filesystems, sg_fs_compare_device_name, sg_fs_compare_mnt_point
- get file system statistics
#include <statgrab.h>
sg_fs_stats *sg_get_fs_stats
(size_t *entries);
sg_fs_stats *sg_get_fs_stats_r
(size_t *entries);
sg_fs_stats *sg_get_fs_stats_diff
(size_t *entries);
sg_fs_stats *sg_get_fs_stats_diff_between
(const sg_fs_stats *cur, const sg_fs_stats *last, size_t
*entries);
sg_error sg_free_fs_stats
(sg_fs_stats *data);
const char **sg_get_valid_filesystems
(size_t *entries);
sg_error sg_set_valid_filesystems
(const char *valid_fs[]);
int sg_fs_compare_device_name
(const void *va, const void *vb);
int sg_fs_compare_mnt_point
(const void *va, const void *vb);
The sg_get_fs_stats functions provide statistics of mounted
file systems. Both functions take an optional entries parameter, which
points (when given) to a size_t to take the number of returned vector
entries.
The sg_get_fs_stats() and sg_get_fs_stats_r()
functions deliver the file system statistics of the moment the function is
called. The sg_get_fs_stats_diff() and
sg_get_fs_stats_diff_between() deliver the difference between two
calls of sg_get_fs_stats() or sg_get_fs_stats_r(),
respectively.
API Shortcut
function |
returns |
data owner |
sg_get_fs_stats |
sg_fs_stats * |
libstatgrab (thread local) |
sg_get_fs_stats_r |
sg_fs_stats * |
caller |
sg_get_fs_stats_diff |
sg_fs_stats * |
libstatgrab (thread local) |
sg_get_fs_stats_diff_between |
sg_fs_stats * |
caller |
sg_get_valid_filesystems |
char ** |
libstatgrab (global) |
The sg_fs_stats vectors received from sg_get_fs_stats_r()
or sg_get_fs_stats_diff_between() must be freed using
sg_free_fs_stats() when not needed anymore. The caller is responsible
for doing it.
The statgrab library comes with a built-in list of valid file
system types depending on the operating system it was compiled for. Some
operating systems additionally provide an API to learn the file system types
known or valid to the running OS instance, which is used when detected.
Nevertheless there are known problems when collecting file system
statistics: network file systems are mounted from delaunched servers, file
system developers run an experimental driver etc.
To prevent processes hang in getting file system statistics or
allow developers to test their drivers, the processes may modify the list of
valid file systems using the sg_get_valid_filesystems() and the
sg_set_valid_filesystems(). The list of char * parameters both
functions work with is always finished with an element pointing to NULL.
The returned list of sg_get_valid_filesystems() must not be
modified. Always copy the list into an own structure, if you plan to extend
or reduce the list:
Remove Network FS Example
int compare_fs_type(const void *va, const void *vb) {
const char **a = (const char **)va;
const char **b = (const char **)vb;
return strcmp( *a, *b );
}
void filter_network_fs_types(void) {
/* known network file system names on different platforms */
const char *nfs_types[] = { "nfs", "nfs3", "nfs4", "cifs", "smbfs", "samba" };
const size_t nfs_types_count = sizeof(nfs_types) / sizeof(nfs_types[0])
size_t fs_entries = 0;
const char **orig_valid_fs = sg_get_valid_filesystems(&fs_entries);
/* duplicate into own memory to modify list */
char **valid_fs = calloc( entries + 1, sizeof(valid_fs[0]) );
memcpy( valid_fs, orig_valid_fs, (entries + 1) * sizeof(valid_fs[0]) );
size_t i;
for( i = 0; i < nfs_types_count; ++i ) {
char **inv_fs = bsearch( &nfs_types[i], &valid_fs[0],
fs_entries, sizeof(valid_fs[0]),
compare_fs_type );
if( NULL != inv_fs ) {
/* copy including trailing NULL pointer */
memmove( inv_fs, inv_fs + 1, fs_entries - (inv_fs - valid_fs) );
--fs_entries;
}
}
sg_set_valid_filesystems( valid_fs );
free( valid_fs );
}
Note that there's no need to duplicate the strings contained in
the list of valid file systems in the above example - they aren't
modified.
The list returned by sg_get_valid_filesystems() might
become invalid when used while the process makes calls to
sg_set_valid_filesystems(). None of the sg_fs_stats functions protect
the access to the globally used storage where the own copy of the list of
the valid file systems is held. It's the responsibility of the caller not to
mix configuration calls with calls to fetch statistics.
Additionally two support functions for qsort(3) are
available: sg_fs_compare_device_name() and
sg_fs_compare_mnt_point().
Sort Example
size_t entries;
sg_fs_stats *fs_stats = NULL;
while( NULL != ( fs_stats = sg_get_fs_stats_diff(&entries) ) ) {
/* order entries alphabetically using the mountpoint */
qsort( fs_stats, entries, sizeof(fs_stats[0]), &sg_fs_compare_mnt_point );
show_fs_stats( fs_stats );
}
sg_get_fs_stats returns a pointer to a structure of type
sg_fs_stats.
typedef enum {
sg_fs_unknown = 0,
sg_fs_regular = 1 << 0,
sg_fs_special = 1 << 1,
sg_fs_loopback = 1 << 2,
sg_fs_remote = 1 << 3,
sg_fs_local = (sg_fs_regular | sg_fs_special),
sg_fs_alltypes = (sg_fs_regular | sg_fs_special | sg_fs_loopback | sg_fs_remote)
} sg_fs_device_type;
typedef struct {
char *device_name;
char *fs_type;
char *mnt_point;
sg_fs_device_type device_type;
unsigned long long size;
unsigned long long used;
unsigned long long free;
unsigned long long avail;
unsigned long long total_inodes;
unsigned long long used_inodes;
unsigned long long free_inodes;
unsigned long long avail_inodes;
unsigned long long io_size;
unsigned long long block_size;
unsigned long long total_blocks;
unsigned long long free_blocks;
unsigned long long used_blocks;
unsigned long long avail_blocks;
time_t systime;
} sg_fs_stats;
- device_name
- The name known to the operating system. (eg. on linux it might be
hda)
- fs_type
- The file system type of the file system (eg. hpfs or ufs).
- mnt_point
- The mount point at which the file system is mounted.
- device_type
- The device type of the file system, currently not filled and always
sg_fs_unknown.
- size
- The total size, in bytes, of the file system.
size = used + free
- used
- The amount of space, in bytes, used on the file system.
- avail
- The amount of space, in bytes, available on the file system for
non-privileged users/processes (free space less reserved space).
avail = free - reserved
- free
- The amount of space, in bytes, free on the file system.
- total_inodes
- The total number of inodes in the file system.
- used_inodes
- The number of used inodes in the file system.
- free_inodes
- The number of free inodes in the file system.
- avail_inodes
- The number of free inodes available to non-privileged processes.
- io_size
- A suggested optimal block size for I/O operations -- if you're reading or
writing lots of data, do it in chunks of this size.
- block_size
- The size in bytes of the minimum unit of allocation on this file
system.
- total_blocks
- The total number of blocks in the file system.
- free_blocks
- The number of free blocks in the file system.
- used_blocks
- The number of used blocks in the file system.
- avail_blocks
- The number of free blocks available to non-privileged processes.
- systime
- The time in seconds since epoch when the statistic was retrieved from
kernel.
Only mounted file systems are recognised.
Some file systems might be reported twice when mounted on
different mount points.
The compare functions exist rather for backward compatibility than
for functionality enhancements. Limited flexibility (e.g. reverse order) and
lack of optimising opportunities for the compiler leads to the
recommendation to implement the required compare routines locally.
Calling sg_set_valid_filesystems with an empty list with
clear the internal list of valid file systems. There's currently no way to
reset to the initial list.
⟨https://libstatgrab.org/⟩