/* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later */ #pragma once #include #include #include #include "stdio-util.h" int parse_devnum(const char *s, dev_t *ret); /* glibc and the Linux kernel have different ideas about the major/minor size. These calls will check whether the * specified major is valid by the Linux kernel's standards, not by glibc's. Linux has 20bits of minor, and 12 bits of * major space. See MINORBITS in linux/kdev_t.h in the kernel sources. (If you wonder why we define _y here, instead of * comparing directly >= 0: it's to trick out -Wtype-limits, which would otherwise complain if the type is unsigned, as * such a test would be pointless in such a case.) */ #define DEVICE_MAJOR_VALID(x) \ ({ \ typeof(x) _x = (x), _y = 0; \ _x >= _y && _x < (UINT32_C(1) << 12); \ \ }) #define DEVICE_MINOR_VALID(x) \ ({ \ typeof(x) _x = (x), _y = 0; \ _x >= _y && _x < (UINT32_C(1) << 20); \ }) int device_path_make_major_minor(mode_t mode, dev_t devnum, char **ret); int device_path_make_inaccessible(mode_t mode, char **ret); int device_path_make_canonical(mode_t mode, dev_t devnum, char **ret); int device_path_parse_major_minor(const char *path, mode_t *ret_mode, dev_t *ret_devnum); static inline bool devnum_set_and_equal(dev_t a, dev_t b) { /* Returns true if a and b definitely refer to the same device. If either is zero, this means "don't * know" and we'll return false */ return a == b && a != 0; } /* Maximum string length for a major:minor string. (Note that DECIMAL_STR_MAX includes space for a trailing NUL) */ #define DEVNUM_STR_MAX (DECIMAL_STR_MAX(dev_t)-1+1+DECIMAL_STR_MAX(dev_t)) #define DEVNUM_FORMAT_STR "%u:%u" #define DEVNUM_FORMAT_VAL(d) major(d), minor(d) static inline char *format_devnum(dev_t d, char buf[static DEVNUM_STR_MAX]) { return ASSERT_PTR(snprintf_ok(buf, DEVNUM_STR_MAX, DEVNUM_FORMAT_STR, DEVNUM_FORMAT_VAL(d))); } #define FORMAT_DEVNUM(d) format_devnum((d), (char[DEVNUM_STR_MAX]) {})