strmode
— convert
inode status information into a symbolic string
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include
<string.h>
void
strmode
(mode_t
mode, char
*bp);
The
strmode
()
function converts a file mode (the type and permission
information associated with an inode, see
stat(2))
into a symbolic string which is stored in the location referenced by
bp. This stored string is eleven characters in length
plus a trailing NUL
.
The first character is the inode type, and will be one of the
following:
- -
- regular file
- b
- block special
- c
- character special
- d
- directory
- l
- symbolic link
- p
- fifo
- s
- socket
- w
- whiteout
- ?
- unknown inode type
The next nine characters encode three sets of permissions, in
three characters each. The first three characters are the permissions for
the owner of the file, the second three for the group the file belongs to,
and the third for the ``other'', or default, set of users.
Permission checking is done as specifically as possible. If read
permission is denied to the owner of a file in the first set of permissions,
the owner of the file will not be able to read the file. This is true even
if the owner is in the file's group and the group permissions allow reading
or the ``other'' permissions allow reading.
If the first character of the three character set is an ``r'', the
file is readable for that set of users; if a dash ``-'', it is not
readable.
If the second character of the three character set is a ``w'', the
file is writable for that set of users; if a dash ``-'', it is not
writable.
The third character is the first of the following characters that
apply:
- S
- If the character is part of the owner permissions and the file is not
executable or the directory is not searchable by the owner, and the
set-user-id bit is set.
- S
- If the character is part of the group permissions and the file is not
executable or the directory is not searchable by the group, and the
set-group-id bit is set.
- T
- If the character is part of the other permissions and the file is not
executable or the directory is not searchable by others, and the
``sticky'' (
S_ISVTX
) bit is set.
- s
- If the character is part of the owner permissions and the file is
executable or the directory searchable by the owner, and the set-user-id
bit is set.
- s
- If the character is part of the group permissions and the file is
executable or the directory searchable by the group, and the set-group-id
bit is set.
- t
- If the character is part of the other permissions and the file is
executable or the directory searchable by others, and the ``sticky''
(
S_ISVTX
) bit is set.
- x
- The file is executable or the directory is searchable.
- -
- None of the above apply.
The last character will always be a space.
The strmode
() function first appeared in
4.4BSD.