1 2 #ifndef LIBISO_LIBISOFS_H_ 3 #define LIBISO_LIBISOFS_H_ 4 5 /* 6 * Copyright (c) 2007-2008 Vreixo Formoso, Mario Danic 7 * Copyright (c) 2009-2021 Thomas Schmitt 8 * 9 * This file is part of the libisofs project; you can redistribute it and/or 10 * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 11 * or later as published by the Free Software Foundation. 12 * See COPYING file for details. 13 */ 14 15 /* Important: If you add a public API function then add its name to file 16 libisofs/libisofs.ver 17 */ 18 19 #ifdef __cplusplus 20 extern "C" { 21 #endif 22 23 /* 24 * 25 * Applications must use 64 bit off_t. 26 * E.g. on 32-bit GNU/Linux by defining 27 * #define _LARGEFILE_SOURCE 28 * #define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64 29 * The minimum requirement is to interface with the library by 64 bit signed 30 * integers where libisofs.h or libisoburn.h prescribe off_t. 31 * Failure to do so may result in surprising malfunction or memory faults. 32 * 33 * Application files which include libisofs/libisofs.h must provide 34 * definitions for uint32_t and uint8_t. 35 * This can be achieved either: 36 * - by using autotools which will define HAVE_STDINT_H or HAVE_INTTYPES_H 37 * according to its ./configure tests, 38 * - or by defining the macros HAVE_STDINT_H or HAVE_INTTYPES_H according 39 * to the local situation, 40 * - or by appropriately defining uint32_t and uint8_t by other means, 41 * e.g. by including inttypes.h before including libisofs.h 42 */ 43 #ifdef HAVE_STDINT_H 44 #include <stdint.h> 45 #else 46 #ifdef HAVE_INTTYPES_H 47 #include <inttypes.h> 48 #endif 49 #endif 50 51 52 /* 53 * Normally this API is operated via public functions and opaque object 54 * handles. But it also exposes several C structures which may be used to 55 * provide custom functionality for the objects of the API. The same 56 * structures are used for internal objects of libisofs, too. 57 * You are not supposed to manipulate the entrails of such objects if they 58 * are not your own custom extensions. 59 * 60 * See for an example IsoStream = struct iso_stream below. 61 */ 62 63 64 #include <sys/stat.h> 65 66 #include <stdlib.h> 67 68 /* Because AIX defines "open" as "open64". 69 There are struct members named "open" in libisofs.h which get affected. 70 So all includers of libisofs.h must get included fcntl.h to see the same. 71 */ 72 #include <fcntl.h> 73 74 75 /** 76 * The following two functions and three macros are utilities to help ensuring 77 * version match of application, compile time header, and runtime library. 78 */ 79 /** 80 * These three release version numbers tell the revision of this header file 81 * and of the API it describes. They are memorized by applications at 82 * compile time. 83 * They must show the same values as these symbols in ./configure.ac 84 * LIBISOFS_MAJOR_VERSION=... 85 * LIBISOFS_MINOR_VERSION=... 86 * LIBISOFS_MICRO_VERSION=... 87 * Note to anybody who does own work inside libisofs: 88 * Any change of configure.ac or libisofs.h has to keep up this equality ! 89 * 90 * Before usage of these macros on your code, please read the usage discussion 91 * below. 92 * 93 * @since 0.6.2 94 */ 95 #define iso_lib_header_version_major 1 96 #define iso_lib_header_version_minor 5 97 #define iso_lib_header_version_micro 4 98 99 /** 100 * Get version of the libisofs library at runtime. 101 * NOTE: This function may be called before iso_init(). 102 * 103 * @since 0.6.2 104 */ 105 void iso_lib_version(int *major, int *minor, int *micro); 106 107 /** 108 * Check at runtime if the library is ABI compatible with the given version. 109 * NOTE: This function may be called before iso_init(). 110 * 111 * @return 112 * 1 lib is compatible, 0 is not. 113 * 114 * @since 0.6.2 115 */ 116 int iso_lib_is_compatible(int major, int minor, int micro); 117 118 /** 119 * Usage discussion: 120 * 121 * Some developers of the libburnia project have differing opinions how to 122 * ensure the compatibility of libraries and applications. 123 * 124 * It is about whether to use at compile time and at runtime the version 125 * numbers provided here. Thomas Schmitt advises to use them. Vreixo Formoso 126 * advises to use other means. 127 * 128 * At compile time: 129 * 130 * Vreixo Formoso advises to leave proper version matching to properly 131 * programmed checks in the the application's build system, which will 132 * eventually refuse compilation. 133 * 134 * Thomas Schmitt advises to use the macros defined here for comparison with 135 * the application's requirements of library revisions and to eventually 136 * break compilation. 137 * 138 * Both advises are combinable. I.e. be master of your build system and have 139 * #if checks in the source code of your application, nevertheless. 140 * 141 * At runtime (via iso_lib_is_compatible()): 142 * 143 * Vreixo Formoso advises to compare the application's requirements of 144 * library revisions with the runtime library. This is to allow runtime 145 * libraries which are young enough for the application but too old for 146 * the lib*.h files seen at compile time. 147 * 148 * Thomas Schmitt advises to compare the header revisions defined here with 149 * the runtime library. This is to enforce a strictly monotonous chain of 150 * revisions from app to header to library, at the cost of excluding some older 151 * libraries. 152 * 153 * These two advises are mutually exclusive. 154 */ 155 156 struct burn_source; 157 158 /** 159 * Context for image creation. It holds the files that will be added to image, 160 * and several options to control libisofs behavior. 161 * 162 * @since 0.6.2 163 */ 164 typedef struct Iso_Image IsoImage; 165 166 /* 167 * A node in the iso tree, i.e. a file that will be written to image. 168 * 169 * It can represent any kind of files. When needed, you can get the type with 170 * iso_node_get_type() and cast it to the appropriate subtype. Useful macros 171 * are provided, see below. 172 * 173 * @since 0.6.2 174 */ 175 typedef struct Iso_Node IsoNode; 176 177 /** 178 * A directory in the iso tree. It is an special type of IsoNode and can be 179 * casted to it in any case. 180 * 181 * @since 0.6.2 182 */ 183 typedef struct Iso_Dir IsoDir; 184 185 /** 186 * A symbolic link in the iso tree. It is an special type of IsoNode and can be 187 * casted to it in any case. 188 * 189 * @since 0.6.2 190 */ 191 typedef struct Iso_Symlink IsoSymlink; 192 193 /** 194 * A regular file in the iso tree. It is an special type of IsoNode and can be 195 * casted to it in any case. 196 * 197 * @since 0.6.2 198 */ 199 typedef struct Iso_File IsoFile; 200 201 /** 202 * An special file in the iso tree. This is used to represent any POSIX file 203 * other that regular files, directories or symlinks, i.e.: socket, block and 204 * character devices, and fifos. 205 * It is an special type of IsoNode and can be casted to it in any case. 206 * 207 * @since 0.6.2 208 */ 209 typedef struct Iso_Special IsoSpecial; 210 211 /** 212 * The type of an IsoNode. 213 * 214 * When an user gets an IsoNode from an image, (s)he can use 215 * iso_node_get_type() to get the current type of the node, and then 216 * cast to the appropriate subtype. For example: 217 * 218 * ... 219 * IsoNode *node; 220 * res = iso_dir_iter_next(iter, &node); 221 * if (res == 1 && iso_node_get_type(node) == LIBISO_DIR) { 222 * IsoDir *dir = (IsoDir *)node; 223 * ... 224 * } 225 * 226 * @since 0.6.2 227 */ 228 enum IsoNodeType { 229 LIBISO_DIR, 230 LIBISO_FILE, 231 LIBISO_SYMLINK, 232 LIBISO_SPECIAL, 233 LIBISO_BOOT 234 }; 235 236 /* macros to check node type */ 237 #define ISO_NODE_IS_DIR(n) (iso_node_get_type(n) == LIBISO_DIR) 238 #define ISO_NODE_IS_FILE(n) (iso_node_get_type(n) == LIBISO_FILE) 239 #define ISO_NODE_IS_SYMLINK(n) (iso_node_get_type(n) == LIBISO_SYMLINK) 240 #define ISO_NODE_IS_SPECIAL(n) (iso_node_get_type(n) == LIBISO_SPECIAL) 241 #define ISO_NODE_IS_BOOTCAT(n) (iso_node_get_type(n) == LIBISO_BOOT) 242 243 /* macros for safe downcasting */ 244 #define ISO_DIR(n) ((IsoDir*)(ISO_NODE_IS_DIR(n) ? n : NULL)) 245 #define ISO_FILE(n) ((IsoFile*)(ISO_NODE_IS_FILE(n) ? n : NULL)) 246 #define ISO_SYMLINK(n) ((IsoSymlink*)(ISO_NODE_IS_SYMLINK(n) ? n : NULL)) 247 #define ISO_SPECIAL(n) ((IsoSpecial*)(ISO_NODE_IS_SPECIAL(n) ? n : NULL)) 248 249 #define ISO_NODE(n) ((IsoNode*)n) 250 251 /** 252 * File section in an old image. 253 * 254 * @since 0.6.8 255 */ 256 struct iso_file_section 257 { 258 uint32_t block; 259 uint32_t size; 260 }; 261 262 /* If you get here because of a compilation error like 263 264 /usr/include/libisofs/libisofs.h:166: error: 265 expected specifier-qualifier-list before 'uint32_t' 266 267 then see the paragraph above about the definition of uint32_t. 268 */ 269 270 271 /** 272 * Context for iterate on directory children. 273 * @see iso_dir_get_children() 274 * 275 * @since 0.6.2 276 */ 277 typedef struct Iso_Dir_Iter IsoDirIter; 278 279 /** 280 * It represents an El-Torito boot image. 281 * 282 * @since 0.6.2 283 */ 284 typedef struct el_torito_boot_image ElToritoBootImage; 285 286 /** 287 * An special type of IsoNode that acts as a placeholder for an El-Torito 288 * boot catalog. Once written, it will appear as a regular file. 289 * 290 * @since 0.6.2 291 */ 292 typedef struct Iso_Boot IsoBoot; 293 294 /** 295 * Flag used to hide a file in the RR/ISO or Joliet tree. 296 * 297 * @see iso_node_set_hidden 298 * @since 0.6.2 299 */ 300 enum IsoHideNodeFlag { 301 /** Hide the node in the ECMA-119 / RR tree */ 302 LIBISO_HIDE_ON_RR = 1 << 0, 303 /** Hide the node in the Joliet tree, if Joliet extension are enabled */ 304 LIBISO_HIDE_ON_JOLIET = 1 << 1, 305 /** Hide the node in the ISO-9660:1999 tree, if that format is enabled */ 306 LIBISO_HIDE_ON_1999 = 1 << 2, 307 308 /** Hide the node in the HFS+ tree, if that format is enabled. 309 @since 1.2.4 310 */ 311 LIBISO_HIDE_ON_HFSPLUS = 1 << 4, 312 313 /** Hide the node in the FAT tree, if that format is enabled. 314 @since 1.2.4 315 */ 316 LIBISO_HIDE_ON_FAT = 1 << 5, 317 318 /** With IsoNode and IsoBoot: Write data content even if the node is 319 * not visible in any tree. 320 * With directory nodes : Write data content of IsoNode and IsoBoot 321 * in the directory's tree unless they are 322 * explicitly marked LIBISO_HIDE_ON_RR 323 * without LIBISO_HIDE_BUT_WRITE. 324 * @since 0.6.34 325 */ 326 LIBISO_HIDE_BUT_WRITE = 1 << 3 327 }; 328 329 /** 330 * El-Torito bootable image type. 331 * 332 * @since 0.6.2 333 */ 334 enum eltorito_boot_media_type { 335 ELTORITO_FLOPPY_EMUL, 336 ELTORITO_HARD_DISC_EMUL, 337 ELTORITO_NO_EMUL 338 }; 339 340 /** 341 * Replace mode used when adding a node to a directory. 342 * This controls how libisofs will act when you tried to add to a dir a file 343 * with the same name that an existing file. 344 * 345 * @since 0.6.2 346 */ 347 enum iso_replace_mode { 348 /** 349 * Never replace an existing node, and instead fail with 350 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE. 351 */ 352 ISO_REPLACE_NEVER, 353 /** 354 * Always replace the old node with the new. 355 */ 356 ISO_REPLACE_ALWAYS, 357 /** 358 * Replace with the new node if it is the same file type 359 */ 360 ISO_REPLACE_IF_SAME_TYPE, 361 /** 362 * Replace with the new node if it is the same file type and its ctime 363 * is newer than the old one. 364 */ 365 ISO_REPLACE_IF_SAME_TYPE_AND_NEWER, 366 /** 367 * Replace with the new node if its ctime is newer than the old one. 368 */ 369 ISO_REPLACE_IF_NEWER 370 /* 371 * TODO #00006 define more values 372 * -if both are dirs, add contents (and what to do with conflicts?) 373 */ 374 }; 375 376 /** 377 * Options for image written. 378 * @see iso_write_opts_new() 379 * @since 0.6.2 380 */ 381 typedef struct iso_write_opts IsoWriteOpts; 382 383 /** 384 * Options for image reading or import. 385 * @see iso_read_opts_new() 386 * @since 0.6.2 387 */ 388 typedef struct iso_read_opts IsoReadOpts; 389 390 /** 391 * Source for image reading. 392 * 393 * @see struct iso_data_source 394 * @since 0.6.2 395 */ 396 typedef struct iso_data_source IsoDataSource; 397 398 /** 399 * Data source used by libisofs for reading an existing image. 400 * 401 * It offers homogeneous read access to arbitrary blocks to different sources 402 * for images, such as .iso files, CD/DVD drives, etc... 403 * 404 * To create a multisession image, libisofs needs a IsoDataSource, that the 405 * user must provide. The function iso_data_source_new_from_file() constructs 406 * an IsoDataSource that uses POSIX I/O functions to access data. You can use 407 * it with regular .iso images, and also with block devices that represent a 408 * drive. 409 * 410 * @since 0.6.2 411 */ 412 struct iso_data_source 413 { 414 415 /* reserved for future usage, set to 0 */ 416 int version; 417 418 /** 419 * Reference count for the data source. Should be 1 when a new source 420 * is created. Don't access it directly, but with iso_data_source_ref() 421 * and iso_data_source_unref() functions. 422 */ 423 unsigned int refcount; 424 425 /** 426 * Opens the given source. You must open() the source before any attempt 427 * to read data from it. The open is the right place for grabbing the 428 * underlying resources. 429 * 430 * @return 431 * 1 if success, < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 432 */ 433 int (*open)(IsoDataSource *src); 434 435 /** 436 * Close a given source, freeing all system resources previously grabbed in 437 * open(). 438 * 439 * @return 440 * 1 if success, < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 441 */ 442 int (*close)(IsoDataSource *src); 443 444 /** 445 * Read an arbitrary block (2048 bytes) of data from the source. 446 * 447 * @param lba 448 * Block to be read. 449 * @param buffer 450 * Buffer where the data will be written. It should have at least 451 * 2048 bytes. 452 * @return 453 * 1 if success, 454 * < 0 if error. This function has to emit a valid libisofs error code. 455 * Predefined (but not mandatory) for this purpose are: 456 * ISO_DATA_SOURCE_SORRY , ISO_DATA_SOURCE_MISHAP, 457 * ISO_DATA_SOURCE_FAILURE , ISO_DATA_SOURCE_FATAL 458 */ 459 int (*read_block)(IsoDataSource *src, uint32_t lba, uint8_t *buffer); 460 461 /** 462 * Clean up the source specific data. Never call this directly, it is 463 * automatically called by iso_data_source_unref() when refcount reach 464 * 0. 465 */ 466 void (*free_data)(IsoDataSource *src); 467 468 /** Source specific data */ 469 void *data; 470 }; 471 472 /** 473 * Return information for image. This is optionally allocated by libisofs, 474 * as a way to inform user about the features of an existing image, such as 475 * extensions present, size, ... 476 * 477 * @see iso_image_import() 478 * @since 0.6.2 479 */ 480 typedef struct iso_read_image_features IsoReadImageFeatures; 481 482 /** 483 * POSIX abstraction for source files. 484 * 485 * @see struct iso_file_source 486 * @since 0.6.2 487 */ 488 typedef struct iso_file_source IsoFileSource; 489 490 /** 491 * Abstract for source filesystems. 492 * 493 * @see struct iso_filesystem 494 * @since 0.6.2 495 */ 496 typedef struct iso_filesystem IsoFilesystem; 497 498 /** 499 * Interface that defines the operations (methods) available for an 500 * IsoFileSource. 501 * 502 * @see struct IsoFileSource_Iface 503 * @since 0.6.2 504 */ 505 typedef struct IsoFileSource_Iface IsoFileSourceIface; 506 507 /** 508 * IsoFilesystem implementation to deal with ISO images, and to offer a way to 509 * access specific information of the image, such as several volume attributes, 510 * extensions being used, El-Torito artifacts... 511 * 512 * @since 0.6.2 513 */ 514 typedef IsoFilesystem IsoImageFilesystem; 515 516 /** 517 * See IsoFilesystem->get_id() for info about this. 518 * @since 0.6.2 519 */ 520 extern unsigned int iso_fs_global_id; 521 522 /** 523 * An IsoFilesystem is a handler for a source of files, or a "filesystem". 524 * That is defined as a set of files that are organized in a hierarchical 525 * structure. 526 * 527 * A filesystem allows libisofs to access files from several sources in 528 * an homogeneous way, thus abstracting the underlying operations needed to 529 * access and read file contents. Note that this doesn't need to be tied 530 * to the disc filesystem used in the partition being accessed. For example, 531 * we have an IsoFilesystem implementation to access any mounted filesystem, 532 * using standard POSIX functions. It is also legal, of course, to implement 533 * an IsoFilesystem to deal with a specific filesystem over raw partitions. 534 * That is what we do, for example, to access an ISO Image. 535 * 536 * Each file inside an IsoFilesystem is represented as an IsoFileSource object, 537 * that defines POSIX-like interface for accessing files. 538 * 539 * @since 0.6.2 540 */ 541 struct iso_filesystem 542 { 543 /** 544 * Type of filesystem. 545 * "file" -> local filesystem 546 * "iso " -> iso image filesystem 547 */ 548 char type[4]; 549 550 /* reserved for future usage, set to 0 */ 551 int version; 552 553 /** 554 * Get the root of a filesystem. 555 * 556 * @return 557 * 1 on success, < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 558 */ 559 int (*get_root)(IsoFilesystem *fs, IsoFileSource **root); 560 561 /** 562 * Retrieve a file from its absolute path inside the filesystem. 563 * @param file 564 * Returns a pointer to a IsoFileSource object representing the 565 * file. It has to be disposed by iso_file_source_unref() when 566 * no longer needed. 567 * @return 568 * 1 success, < 0 error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 569 * Error codes: 570 * ISO_FILE_ACCESS_DENIED 571 * ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 572 * ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 573 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 574 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 575 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 576 */ 577 int (*get_by_path)(IsoFilesystem *fs, const char *path, 578 IsoFileSource **file); 579 580 /** 581 * Get filesystem identifier. 582 * 583 * If the filesystem is able to generate correct values of the st_dev 584 * and st_ino fields for the struct stat of each file, this should 585 * return an unique number, greater than 0. 586 * 587 * To get a identifier for your filesystem implementation you should 588 * use iso_fs_global_id, incrementing it by one each time. 589 * 590 * Otherwise, if you can't ensure values in the struct stat are valid, 591 * this should return 0. 592 */ 593 unsigned int (*get_id)(IsoFilesystem *fs); 594 595 /** 596 * Opens the filesystem for several read operations. Calling this function 597 * is not needed at all, each time that the underlying system resource 598 * needs to be accessed, it is opened property. 599 * However, if you plan to execute several operations on the filesystem, 600 * it is a good idea to open it previously, to prevent several open/close 601 * operations to occur. 602 * 603 * @return 1 on success, < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 604 */ 605 int (*open)(IsoFilesystem *fs); 606 607 /** 608 * Close the filesystem, thus freeing all system resources. You should 609 * call this function if you have previously open() it. 610 * Note that you can open()/close() a filesystem several times. 611 * 612 * @return 1 on success, < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 613 */ 614 int (*close)(IsoFilesystem *fs); 615 616 /** 617 * Free implementation specific data. Should never be called by user. 618 * Use iso_filesystem_unref() instead. 619 */ 620 void (*free)(IsoFilesystem *fs); 621 622 /* internal usage, do never access them directly */ 623 unsigned int refcount; 624 void *data; 625 }; 626 627 /** 628 * Interface definition for an IsoFileSource. Defines the POSIX-like function 629 * to access files and abstract underlying source. 630 * 631 * @since 0.6.2 632 */ 633 struct IsoFileSource_Iface 634 { 635 /** 636 * Tells the version of the interface: 637 * Version 0 provides functions up to (*lseek)(). 638 * @since 0.6.2 639 * Version 1 additionally provides function *(get_aa_string)(). 640 * @since 0.6.14 641 * Version 2 additionally provides function *(clone_src)(). 642 * @since 1.0.2 643 */ 644 int version; 645 646 /** 647 * Get the absolute path in the filesystem this file source belongs to. 648 * 649 * @return 650 * the path of the FileSource inside the filesystem, it should be 651 * freed when no more needed. 652 */ 653 char* (*get_path)(IsoFileSource *src); 654 655 /** 656 * Get the name of the file, with the dir component of the path. 657 * 658 * @return 659 * the name of the file, it should be freed when no more needed. 660 */ 661 char* (*get_name)(IsoFileSource *src); 662 663 /** 664 * Get information about the file. It is equivalent to lstat(2). 665 * 666 * @return 667 * 1 success, < 0 error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 668 * Error codes: 669 * ISO_FILE_ACCESS_DENIED 670 * ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 671 * ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 672 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 673 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 674 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 675 */ 676 int (*lstat)(IsoFileSource *src, struct stat *info); 677 678 /** 679 * Get information about the file. If the file is a symlink, the info 680 * returned refers to the destination. It is equivalent to stat(2). 681 * 682 * @return 683 * 1 success, < 0 error 684 * Error codes: 685 * ISO_FILE_ACCESS_DENIED 686 * ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 687 * ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 688 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 689 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 690 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 691 */ 692 int (*stat)(IsoFileSource *src, struct stat *info); 693 694 /** 695 * Check if the process has access to read file contents. Note that this 696 * is not necessarily related with (l)stat functions. For example, in a 697 * filesystem implementation to deal with an ISO image, if the user has 698 * read access to the image it will be able to read all files inside it, 699 * despite of the particular permission of each file in the RR tree, that 700 * are what the above functions return. 701 * 702 * @return 703 * 1 if process has read access, < 0 on error (has to be a valid 704 * libisofs error code) 705 * Error codes: 706 * ISO_FILE_ACCESS_DENIED 707 * ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 708 * ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 709 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 710 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 711 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 712 */ 713 int (*access)(IsoFileSource *src); 714 715 /** 716 * Opens the source. 717 * @return 1 on success, < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 718 * Error codes: 719 * ISO_FILE_ALREADY_OPENED 720 * ISO_FILE_ACCESS_DENIED 721 * ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 722 * ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 723 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 724 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 725 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 726 */ 727 int (*open)(IsoFileSource *src); 728 729 /** 730 * Close a previously opened file 731 * @return 1 on success, < 0 on error 732 * Error codes: 733 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 734 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 735 * ISO_FILE_NOT_OPENED 736 */ 737 int (*close)(IsoFileSource *src); 738 739 /** 740 * Attempts to read up to count bytes from the given source into 741 * the buffer starting at buf. 742 * 743 * The file src must be open() before calling this, and close() when no 744 * more needed. Not valid for dirs. On symlinks it reads the destination 745 * file. 746 * 747 * @return 748 * number of bytes read, 0 if EOF, < 0 on error (has to be a valid 749 * libisofs error code) 750 * Error codes: 751 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 752 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 753 * ISO_FILE_NOT_OPENED 754 * ISO_WRONG_ARG_VALUE -> if count == 0 755 * ISO_FILE_IS_DIR 756 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 757 * ISO_INTERRUPTED 758 */ 759 int (*read)(IsoFileSource *src, void *buf, size_t count); 760 761 /** 762 * Read a directory. 763 * 764 * Each call to this function will return a new children, until we reach 765 * the end of file (i.e, no more children), in that case it returns 0. 766 * 767 * The dir must be open() before calling this, and close() when no more 768 * needed. Only valid for dirs. 769 * 770 * Note that "." and ".." children MUST NOT BE returned. 771 * 772 * @param child 773 * pointer to be filled with the given child. Undefined on error or OEF 774 * @return 775 * 1 on success, 0 if EOF (no more children), < 0 on error (has to be 776 * a valid libisofs error code) 777 * Error codes: 778 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 779 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 780 * ISO_FILE_NOT_OPENED 781 * ISO_FILE_IS_NOT_DIR 782 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 783 */ 784 int (*readdir)(IsoFileSource *src, IsoFileSource **child); 785 786 /** 787 * Read the destination of a symlink. You don't need to open the file 788 * to call this. 789 * 790 * @param buf 791 * allocated buffer of at least bufsiz bytes. 792 * The dest. will be copied there, and it will be NULL-terminated 793 * @param bufsiz 794 * characters to be copied. Destination link will be truncated if 795 * it is larger than given size. This include the 0x0 character. 796 * @return 797 * 1 on success, < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 798 * Error codes: 799 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 800 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 801 * ISO_WRONG_ARG_VALUE -> if bufsiz <= 0 802 * ISO_FILE_IS_NOT_SYMLINK 803 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 804 * ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 805 * ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 806 * 807 */ 808 int (*readlink)(IsoFileSource *src, char *buf, size_t bufsiz); 809 810 /** 811 * Get the filesystem for this source. No extra ref is added, so you 812 * must not unref the IsoFilesystem. 813 * 814 * @return 815 * The filesystem, NULL on error 816 */ 817 IsoFilesystem* (*get_filesystem)(IsoFileSource *src); 818 819 /** 820 * Free implementation specific data. Should never be called by user. 821 * Use iso_file_source_unref() instead. 822 */ 823 void (*free)(IsoFileSource *src); 824 825 /** 826 * Repositions the offset of the IsoFileSource (must be opened) to the 827 * given offset according to the value of flag. 828 * 829 * @param offset 830 * in bytes 831 * @param flag 832 * 0 The offset is set to offset bytes (SEEK_SET) 833 * 1 The offset is set to its current location plus offset bytes 834 * (SEEK_CUR) 835 * 2 The offset is set to the size of the file plus offset bytes 836 * (SEEK_END). 837 * @return 838 * Absolute offset position of the file, or < 0 on error. Cast the 839 * returning value to int to get a valid libisofs error. 840 * 841 * @since 0.6.4 842 */ 843 off_t (*lseek)(IsoFileSource *src, off_t offset, int flag); 844 845 /* Add-ons of .version 1 begin here */ 846 847 /** 848 * Valid only if .version is > 0. See above. 849 * Get the AAIP string with encoded ACL and xattr. 850 * (Not to be confused with ECMA-119 Extended Attributes). 851 * 852 * bit1 and bit2 of flag should be implemented so that freshly fetched 853 * info does not include the undesired ACL or xattr. Nevertheless if the 854 * aa_string is cached, then it is permissible that ACL and xattr are still 855 * delivered. 856 * 857 * @param flag Bitfield for control purposes 858 * bit0= Transfer ownership of AAIP string data. 859 * src will free the eventual cached data and might 860 * not be able to produce it again. 861 * bit1= No need to get ACL (no guarantee of exclusion) 862 * bit2= No need to get xattr (no guarantee of exclusion) 863 * @param aa_string Returns a pointer to the AAIP string data. If no AAIP 864 * string is available, *aa_string becomes NULL. 865 * (See doc/susp_aaip_*_*.txt for the meaning of AAIP and 866 * libisofs/aaip_0_2.h for encoding and decoding.) 867 * The caller is responsible for finally calling free() 868 * on non-NULL results. 869 * @return 1 means success (*aa_string == NULL is possible) 870 * 2 means success, but it is possible that attributes 871 * exist in non-user namespaces which could not be 872 * explored due to lack of permission. 873 * @since 1.5.0 874 * <0 means failure and must b a valid libisofs error code 875 * (e.g. ISO_FILE_ERROR if no better one can be found). 876 * @since 0.6.14 877 */ 878 int (*get_aa_string)(IsoFileSource *src, 879 unsigned char **aa_string, int flag); 880 881 /** 882 * Produce a copy of a source. It must be possible to operate both source 883 * objects concurrently. 884 * 885 * @param old_src 886 * The existing source object to be copied 887 * @param new_stream 888 * Will return a pointer to the copy 889 * @param flag 890 * Bitfield for control purposes. Submit 0 for now. 891 * The function shall return ISO_STREAM_NO_CLONE on unknown flag bits. 892 * 893 * @since 1.0.2 894 * Present if .version is 2 or higher. 895 */ 896 int (*clone_src)(IsoFileSource *old_src, IsoFileSource **new_src, 897 int flag); 898 899 /* 900 * TODO #00004 Add a get_mime_type() function. 901 * This can be useful for GUI apps, to choose the icon of the file 902 */ 903 }; 904 905 #ifndef __cplusplus 906 #ifndef Libisofs_h_as_cpluspluS 907 908 /** 909 * An IsoFile Source is a POSIX abstraction of a file. 910 * 911 * @since 0.6.2 912 */ 913 struct iso_file_source 914 { 915 const IsoFileSourceIface *class; 916 int refcount; 917 void *data; 918 }; 919 920 #endif /* ! Libisofs_h_as_cpluspluS */ 921 #endif /* ! __cplusplus */ 922 923 924 /* A class of IsoStream is implemented by a class description 925 * IsoStreamIface = struct IsoStream_Iface 926 * and a structure of data storage for each instance of IsoStream. 927 * This structure shall be known to the functions of the IsoStreamIface. 928 * To create a custom IsoStream class: 929 * - Define the structure of the custom instance data. 930 * - Implement the methods which are described by the definition of 931 * struct IsoStream_Iface (see below), 932 * - Create a static instance of IsoStreamIface which lists the methods as 933 * C function pointers. (Example in libisofs/stream.c : fsrc_stream_class) 934 * To create an instance of that class: 935 * - Allocate sizeof(IsoStream) bytes of memory and initialize it as 936 * struct iso_stream : 937 * - Point to the custom IsoStreamIface by member .class . 938 * - Set member .refcount to 1. 939 * - Let member .data point to the custom instance data. 940 * 941 * Regrettably the choice of the structure member name "class" makes it 942 * impossible to implement this generic interface in C++ language directly. 943 * If C++ is absolutely necessary then you will have to make own copies 944 * of the public API structures. Use other names but take care to maintain 945 * the same memory layout. 946 */ 947 948 /** 949 * Representation of file contents. It is an stream of bytes, functionally 950 * like a pipe. 951 * 952 * @since 0.6.4 953 */ 954 typedef struct iso_stream IsoStream; 955 956 /** 957 * Interface that defines the operations (methods) available for an 958 * IsoStream. 959 * 960 * @see struct IsoStream_Iface 961 * @since 0.6.4 962 */ 963 typedef struct IsoStream_Iface IsoStreamIface; 964 965 /** 966 * Serial number to be used when you can't get a valid id for a Stream by other 967 * means. If you use this, both fs_id and dev_id should be set to 0. 968 * This must be incremented each time you get a reference to it. 969 * 970 * @see IsoStreamIface->get_id() 971 * @since 0.6.4 972 */ 973 extern ino_t serial_id; 974 975 /** 976 * Interface definition for IsoStream methods. It is public to allow 977 * implementation of own stream types. 978 * The methods defined here typically make use of stream.data which points 979 * to the individual state data of stream instances. 980 * 981 * @since 0.6.4 982 */ 983 984 struct IsoStream_Iface 985 { 986 /* 987 * Current version of the interface. 988 * Version 0 (since 0.6.4) 989 * deprecated but still valid. 990 * Version 1 (since 0.6.8) 991 * update_size() added. 992 * Version 2 (since 0.6.18) 993 * get_input_stream() added. 994 * A filter stream must have version 2 at least. 995 * Version 3 (since 0.6.20) 996 * cmp_ino() added. 997 * A filter stream should have version 3 at least. 998 * Version 4 (since 1.0.2) 999 * clone_stream() added. 1000 */ 1001 int version; 1002 1003 /** 1004 * Type of Stream. 1005 * "fsrc" -> Read from file source 1006 * "cout" -> Cut out interval from disk file 1007 * "mem " -> Read from memory 1008 * "boot" -> Boot catalog 1009 * "extf" -> External filter program 1010 * "ziso" -> zisofs compression 1011 * "osiz" -> zisofs uncompression 1012 * "gzip" -> gzip compression 1013 * "pizg" -> gzip uncompression (gunzip) 1014 * "user" -> User supplied stream 1015 */ 1016 char type[4]; 1017 1018 /** 1019 * Opens the stream. 1020 * 1021 * @return 1022 * 1 on success, 2 file greater than expected, 3 file smaller than 1023 * expected, < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 1024 */ 1025 int (*open)(IsoStream *stream); 1026 1027 /** 1028 * Close the Stream. 1029 * @return 1030 * 1 on success, < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 1031 */ 1032 int (*close)(IsoStream *stream); 1033 1034 /** 1035 * Get the size (in bytes) of the stream. This function should always 1036 * return the same size, even if the underlying source size changes, 1037 * unless you call update_size() method. 1038 */ 1039 off_t (*get_size)(IsoStream *stream); 1040 1041 /** 1042 * Attempt to read up to count bytes from the given stream into 1043 * the buffer starting at buf. The implementation has to make sure that 1044 * either the full desired count of bytes is delivered or that the 1045 * next call to this function will return EOF or error. 1046 * I.e. only the last read block may be shorter than parameter count. 1047 * 1048 * The stream must be open() before calling this, and close() when no 1049 * more needed. 1050 * 1051 * @return 1052 * number of bytes read, 0 if EOF, < 0 on error (has to be a valid 1053 * libisofs error code) 1054 */ 1055 int (*read)(IsoStream *stream, void *buf, size_t count); 1056 1057 /** 1058 * Tell whether this IsoStream can be read several times, with the same 1059 * results. For example, a regular file is repeatable, you can read it 1060 * as many times as you want. However, a pipe is not. 1061 * 1062 * @return 1063 * 1 if stream is repeatable, 0 if not, 1064 * < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 1065 */ 1066 int (*is_repeatable)(IsoStream *stream); 1067 1068 /** 1069 * Get an unique identifier for the IsoStream. 1070 */ 1071 void (*get_id)(IsoStream *stream, unsigned int *fs_id, dev_t *dev_id, 1072 ino_t *ino_id); 1073 1074 /** 1075 * Free implementation specific data. Should never be called by user. 1076 * Use iso_stream_unref() instead. 1077 */ 1078 void (*free)(IsoStream *stream); 1079 1080 /** 1081 * Update the size of the IsoStream with the current size of the underlying 1082 * source, if the source is prone to size changes. After calling this, 1083 * get_size() shall eventually return the new size. 1084 * This will never be called after iso_image_create_burn_source() was 1085 * called and before the image was completely written. 1086 * (The API call to update the size of all files in the image is 1087 * iso_image_update_sizes()). 1088 * 1089 * @return 1090 * 1 if ok, < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code) 1091 * 1092 * @since 0.6.8 1093 * Present if .version is 1 or higher. 1094 */ 1095 int (*update_size)(IsoStream *stream); 1096 1097 /** 1098 * Retrieve the eventual input stream of a filter stream. 1099 * 1100 * @param stream 1101 * The eventual filter stream to be inquired. 1102 * @param flag 1103 * Bitfield for control purposes. 0 means normal behavior. 1104 * @return 1105 * The input stream, if one exists. Elsewise NULL. 1106 * No extra reference to the stream shall be taken by this call. 1107 * 1108 * @since 0.6.18 1109 * Present if .version is 2 or higher. 1110 */ 1111 IsoStream *(*get_input_stream)(IsoStream *stream, int flag); 1112 1113 /** 1114 * Compare two streams whether they are based on the same input and will 1115 * produce the same output. If in any doubt, then this comparison should 1116 * indicate no match. A match might allow hardlinking of IsoFile objects. 1117 * 1118 * A pointer value of NULL is permissible. In this case, function 1119 * iso_stream_cmp_ino() will decide on its own. 1120 * 1121 * If not NULL, this function .cmp_ino() will be called by 1122 * iso_stream_cmp_ino() if both compared streams point to it, and if not 1123 * flag bit0 of iso_stream_cmp_ino() prevents it. 1124 * So a .cmp_ino() function must be able to compare any pair of streams 1125 * which name it as their .cmp_ino(). A fallback to iso_stream_cmp_ino(,,1) 1126 * would endanger transitivity of iso_stream_cmp_ino(,,0). 1127 * 1128 * With filter streams, the decision whether the underlying chains of 1129 * streams match, should be delegated to 1130 * iso_stream_cmp_ino(iso_stream_get_input_stream(s1, 0), 1131 * iso_stream_get_input_stream(s2, 0), 0); 1132 * 1133 * The stream.cmp_ino() function has to establish an equivalence and order 1134 * relation: 1135 * cmp_ino(A,A) == 0 1136 * cmp_ino(A,B) == -cmp_ino(B,A) 1137 * if cmp_ino(A,B) == 0 && cmp_ino(B,C) == 0 then cmp_ino(A,C) == 0 1138 * Most tricky is the demand for transitivity: 1139 * if cmp_ino(A,B) < 0 && cmp_ino(B,C) < 0 then cmp_ino(A,C) < 0 1140 * 1141 * @param s1 1142 * The first stream to compare. Expect foreign stream types. 1143 * @param s2 1144 * The second stream to compare. Expect foreign stream types. 1145 * @return 1146 * -1 if s1 is smaller s2 , 0 if s1 matches s2 , 1 if s1 is larger s2 1147 * 1148 * @since 0.6.20 1149 * Present if .version is 3 or higher. 1150 */ 1151 int (*cmp_ino)(IsoStream *s1, IsoStream *s2); 1152 1153 /** 1154 * Produce a copy of a stream. It must be possible to operate both stream 1155 * objects concurrently. 1156 * 1157 * @param old_stream 1158 * The existing stream object to be copied 1159 * @param new_stream 1160 * Will return a pointer to the copy 1161 * @param flag 1162 * Bitfield for control purposes. 0 means normal behavior. 1163 * The function shall return ISO_STREAM_NO_CLONE on unknown flag bits. 1164 * @return 1165 * 1 in case of success, or an error code < 0 1166 * 1167 * @since 1.0.2 1168 * Present if .version is 4 or higher. 1169 */ 1170 int (*clone_stream)(IsoStream *old_stream, IsoStream **new_stream, 1171 int flag); 1172 1173 }; 1174 1175 #ifndef __cplusplus 1176 #ifndef Libisofs_h_as_cpluspluS 1177 1178 /** 1179 * Representation of file contents as a stream of bytes. 1180 * 1181 * @since 0.6.4 1182 */ 1183 struct iso_stream 1184 { 1185 IsoStreamIface *class; 1186 int refcount; 1187 void *data; 1188 }; 1189 1190 #endif /* ! Libisofs_h_as_cpluspluS */ 1191 #endif /* ! __cplusplus */ 1192 1193 1194 /** 1195 * Initialize libisofs. Before any usage of the library you must either call 1196 * this function or iso_init_with_flag(). 1197 * Only exception from this rule: iso_lib_version(), iso_lib_is_compatible(). 1198 * @return 1 on success, < 0 on error 1199 * 1200 * @since 0.6.2 1201 */ 1202 int iso_init(); 1203 1204 /** 1205 * Initialize libisofs. Before any usage of the library you must either call 1206 * this function or iso_init() which is equivalent to iso_init_with_flag(0). 1207 * Only exception from this rule: iso_lib_version(), iso_lib_is_compatible(). 1208 * @param flag 1209 * Bitfield for control purposes 1210 * bit0= do not set up locale by LC_* environment variables 1211 * @return 1 on success, < 0 on error 1212 * 1213 * @since 0.6.18 1214 */ 1215 int iso_init_with_flag(int flag); 1216 1217 /** 1218 * Finalize libisofs. 1219 * 1220 * @since 0.6.2 1221 */ 1222 void iso_finish(); 1223 1224 /** 1225 * Override the reply of libc function nl_langinfo(CODESET) which may or may 1226 * not give the name of the character set which is in effect for your 1227 * environment. So this call can compensate for inconsistent terminal setups. 1228 * Another use case is to choose UTF-8 as intermediate character set for a 1229 * conversion from an exotic input character set to an exotic output set. 1230 * 1231 * @param name 1232 * Name of the character set to be assumed as "local" one. 1233 * @param flag 1234 * Unused yet. Submit 0. 1235 * @return 1236 * 1 indicates success, <=0 failure 1237 * 1238 * @since 0.6.12 1239 */ 1240 int iso_set_local_charset(char *name, int flag); 1241 1242 /** 1243 * Obtain the local charset as currently assumed by libisofs. 1244 * The result points to internal memory. It is volatile and must not be 1245 * altered. 1246 * 1247 * @param flag 1248 * Unused yet. Submit 0. 1249 * 1250 * @since 0.6.12 1251 */ 1252 char *iso_get_local_charset(int flag); 1253 1254 /** 1255 * Inquire and maybe define the time which is considered to be "now" and 1256 * used for timestamps of freshly created ISO nodes and as default of 1257 * image timestamps. 1258 * If ever, this should normally be enabled and defined before iso_image_new(). 1259 * If it is disabled, time(NULL) is considered to be "now". 1260 * 1261 * @param now 1262 * Returns the "now" value and maybe submits it as definition. 1263 * @param flag 1264 * Bitfield for control purposes 1265 * bit0= *now contains the time to be set as nowtime override. 1266 Enable the override if not bit1 is set, too. 1267 * bit1= Disable the nowtime override 1268 * @return 1= *now is not overridden , 2= *now is overridden 1269 * 1270 * @since 1.5.2 1271 */ 1272 int iso_nowtime(time_t *now, int flag); 1273 1274 1275 /** 1276 * Create a new image, empty. 1277 * 1278 * The image will be owned by you and should be unref() when no more needed. 1279 * 1280 * @param name 1281 * Name of the image. This will be used as volset_id and volume_id. 1282 * @param image 1283 * Location where the image pointer will be stored. 1284 * @return 1285 * 1 success, < 0 error 1286 * 1287 * @since 0.6.2 1288 */ 1289 int iso_image_new(const char *name, IsoImage **image); 1290 1291 1292 /** 1293 * Control whether ACL and xattr will be imported from external filesystems 1294 * (typically the local POSIX filesystem) when new nodes get inserted. If 1295 * enabled by iso_write_opts_set_aaip() they will later be written into the 1296 * image as AAIP extension fields. 1297 * 1298 * A change of this setting does neither affect existing IsoNode objects 1299 * nor the way how ACL and xattr are handled when loading an ISO image. 1300 * The latter is controlled by iso_read_opts_set_no_aaip(). 1301 * 1302 * @param image 1303 * The image of which the behavior is to be controlled 1304 * @param what 1305 * A bit field which sets the behavior: 1306 * bit0= ignore ACLs if the external file object bears some 1307 * bit1= ignore xattr if the external file object bears some 1308 * bit3= if not bit1: import all xattr namespaces, not only "user." 1309 * @since 1.5.0 1310 * all other bits are reserved 1311 * 1312 * @since 0.6.14 1313 */ 1314 void iso_image_set_ignore_aclea(IsoImage *image, int what); 1315 1316 1317 /** 1318 * Obtain the current setting of iso_image_set_ignore_aclea(). 1319 * 1320 * @param image 1321 * The image to be inquired 1322 * @return 1323 * The currently set value. 1324 * 1325 * @since 1.5.0 1326 */ 1327 int iso_image_get_ignore_aclea(IsoImage *image); 1328 1329 1330 /** 1331 * Creates an IsoWriteOpts for writing an image. You should set the options 1332 * desired with the correspondent setters. 1333 * 1334 * Options by default are determined by the selected profile. Fifo size is set 1335 * by default to 2 MB. 1336 * 1337 * @param opts 1338 * Pointer to the location where the newly created IsoWriteOpts will be 1339 * stored. You should free it with iso_write_opts_free() when no more 1340 * needed. 1341 * @param profile 1342 * Default profile for image creation. For now the following values are 1343 * defined: 1344 * ---> 0 [BASIC] 1345 * No extensions are enabled, and ISO level is set to 1. Only suitable 1346 * for usage for very old and limited systems (like MS-DOS), or by a 1347 * start point from which to set your custom options. 1348 * ---> 1 [BACKUP] 1349 * POSIX compatibility for backup. Simple settings, ISO level is set to 1350 * 3 and RR extensions are enabled. Useful for backup purposes. 1351 * Note that ACL and xattr are not enabled by default. 1352 * If you enable them, expect them not to show up in the mounted image. 1353 * They will have to be retrieved by libisofs applications like xorriso. 1354 * ---> 2 [DISTRIBUTION] 1355 * Setting for information distribution. Both RR and Joliet are enabled 1356 * to maximize compatibility with most systems. Permissions are set to 1357 * default values, and timestamps to the time of recording. 1358 * @return 1359 * 1 success, < 0 error 1360 * 1361 * @since 0.6.2 1362 */ 1363 int iso_write_opts_new(IsoWriteOpts **opts, int profile); 1364 1365 /** 1366 * Free an IsoWriteOpts previously allocated with iso_write_opts_new(). 1367 * 1368 * @since 0.6.2 1369 */ 1370 void iso_write_opts_free(IsoWriteOpts *opts); 1371 1372 /** 1373 * Announce that only the image size is desired, that the struct burn_source 1374 * which is set to consume the image output stream will stay inactive, 1375 * and that the write thread will be cancelled anyway by the .cancel() method 1376 * of the struct burn_source. 1377 * This avoids to create a write thread which would begin production of the 1378 * image stream and would generate a MISHAP event when burn_source.cancel() 1379 * gets into effect. 1380 * 1381 * @param opts 1382 * The option set to be manipulated. 1383 * @param will_cancel 1384 * 0= normal image generation 1385 * 1= prepare for being canceled before image stream output is completed 1386 * @return 1387 * 1 success, < 0 error 1388 * 1389 * @since 0.6.40 1390 */ 1391 int iso_write_opts_set_will_cancel(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int will_cancel); 1392 1393 /** 1394 * Set the ISO-9960 level to write at. 1395 * 1396 * @param opts 1397 * The option set to be manipulated. 1398 * @param level 1399 * -> 1 for higher compatibility with old systems. With this level 1400 * filenames are restricted to 8.3 characters. 1401 * -> 2 to allow up to 31 filename characters. 1402 * -> 3 to allow files greater than 4GB 1403 * @return 1404 * 1 success, < 0 error 1405 * 1406 * @since 0.6.2 1407 */ 1408 int iso_write_opts_set_iso_level(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int level); 1409 1410 /** 1411 * Whether to use or not Rock Ridge extensions. 1412 * 1413 * This are standard extensions to ECMA-119, intended to add POSIX filesystem 1414 * features to ECMA-119 images. Thus, usage of this flag is highly recommended 1415 * for images used on GNU/Linux systems. With the usage of RR extension, the 1416 * resulting image will have long filenames (up to 255 characters), deeper 1417 * directory structure, POSIX permissions and owner info on files and 1418 * directories, support for symbolic links or special files... All that 1419 * attributes can be modified/set with the appropriate function. 1420 * 1421 * @param opts 1422 * The option set to be manipulated. 1423 * @param enable 1424 * 1 to enable RR extension, 0 to not add them 1425 * @return 1426 * 1 success, < 0 error 1427 * 1428 * @since 0.6.2 1429 */ 1430 int iso_write_opts_set_rockridge(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int enable); 1431 1432 /** 1433 * Whether to add the non-standard Joliet extension to the image. 1434 * 1435 * This extensions are heavily used in Microsoft Windows systems, so if you 1436 * plan to use your disc on such a system you should add this extension. 1437 * Usage of Joliet supplies longer filesystem length (up to 64 unicode 1438 * characters), and deeper directory structure. 1439 * 1440 * @param opts 1441 * The option set to be manipulated. 1442 * @param enable 1443 * 1 to enable Joliet extension, 0 to not add them 1444 * @return 1445 * 1 success, < 0 error 1446 * 1447 * @since 0.6.2 1448 */ 1449 int iso_write_opts_set_joliet(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int enable); 1450 1451 /** 1452 * Whether to add a HFS+ filesystem to the image which points to the same 1453 * file content as the other directory trees. 1454 * It will get marked by an Apple Partition Map in the System Area of the ISO 1455 * image. This may collide with data submitted by 1456 * iso_write_opts_set_system_area() 1457 * and with settings made by 1458 * el_torito_set_isolinux_options() 1459 * The first 8 bytes of the System Area get overwritten by 1460 * {0x45, 0x52, 0x08 0x00, 0xeb, 0x02, 0xff, 0xff} 1461 * which can be executed as x86 machine code without negative effects. 1462 * So if an MBR gets combined with this feature, then its first 8 bytes 1463 * should contain no essential commands. 1464 * The next blocks of 2 KiB in the System Area will be occupied by APM entries. 1465 * The first one covers the part of the ISO image before the HFS+ filesystem 1466 * metadata. The second one marks the range from HFS+ metadata to the end 1467 * of file content data. If more ISO image data follow, then a third partition 1468 * entry gets produced. Other features of libisofs might cause the need for 1469 * more APM entries. 1470 * 1471 * @param opts 1472 * The option set to be manipulated. 1473 * @param enable 1474 * 1 to enable HFS+ extension, 0 to not add HFS+ metadata and APM 1475 * @return 1476 * 1 success, < 0 error 1477 * 1478 * @since 1.2.4 1479 */ 1480 int iso_write_opts_set_hfsplus(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int enable); 1481 1482 /** 1483 * >>> Production of FAT32 is not implemented yet. 1484 * >>> This call exists only as preparation for implementation. 1485 * 1486 * Whether to add a FAT32 filesystem to the image which points to the same 1487 * file content as the other directory trees. 1488 * 1489 * >>> FAT32 is planned to get implemented in co-existence with HFS+ 1490 * >>> Describe impact on MBR 1491 * 1492 * @param opts 1493 * The option set to be manipulated. 1494 * @param enable 1495 * 1 to enable FAT32 extension, 0 to not add FAT metadata 1496 * @return 1497 * 1 success, < 0 error 1498 * 1499 * @since 1.2.4 1500 */ 1501 int iso_write_opts_set_fat(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int enable); 1502 1503 /** 1504 * Supply a serial number for the HFS+ extension of the emerging image. 1505 * 1506 * @param opts 1507 * The option set to be manipulated. 1508 * @param serial_number 1509 * 8 bytes which should be unique to the image. 1510 * If all bytes are 0, then the serial number will be generated as 1511 * random number by libisofs. This is the default setting. 1512 * @return 1513 * 1 success, < 0 error 1514 * 1515 * @since 1.2.4 1516 */ 1517 int iso_write_opts_set_hfsp_serial_number(IsoWriteOpts *opts, 1518 uint8_t serial_number[8]); 1519 1520 /** 1521 * Set the block size for Apple Partition Map and for HFS+. 1522 * 1523 * @param opts 1524 * The option set to be manipulated. 1525 * @param hfsp_block_size 1526 * The allocation block size to be used by the HFS+ filesystem. 1527 * 0, 512, or 2048 1528 * @param apm_block_size 1529 * The block size to be used for and within the Apple Partition Map. 1530 * 0, 512, or 2048. 1531 * Size 512 is not compatible with options which produce GPT. 1532 * @return 1533 * 1 success, < 0 error 1534 * 1535 * @since 1.2.4 1536 */ 1537 int iso_write_opts_set_hfsp_block_size(IsoWriteOpts *opts, 1538 int hfsp_block_size, int apm_block_size); 1539 1540 1541 /** 1542 * Whether to use newer ISO-9660:1999 version. 1543 * 1544 * This is the second version of ISO-9660. It allows longer filenames and has 1545 * less restrictions than old ISO-9660. However, nobody is using it so there 1546 * are no much reasons to enable this. 1547 * 1548 * @since 0.6.2 1549 */ 1550 int iso_write_opts_set_iso1999(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int enable); 1551 1552 /** 1553 * Control generation of non-unique inode numbers for the emerging image. 1554 * Inode numbers get written as "file serial number" with PX entries as of 1555 * RRIP-1.12. They may mark families of hardlinks. 1556 * RRIP-1.10 prescribes a PX entry without file serial number.If not overridden 1557 * by iso_write_opts_set_rrip_1_10_px_ino() there will be no file serial number 1558 * written into RRIP-1.10 images. 1559 * 1560 * Inode number generation does not affect IsoNode objects which imported their 1561 * inode numbers from the old ISO image (see iso_read_opts_set_new_inos()) 1562 * and which have not been altered since import. It rather applies to IsoNode 1563 * objects which were newly added to the image, or to IsoNode which brought no 1564 * inode number from the old image, or to IsoNode where certain properties 1565 * have been altered since image import. 1566 * 1567 * If two IsoNode are found with same imported inode number but differing 1568 * properties, then one of them will get assigned a new unique inode number. 1569 * I.e. the hardlink relation between both IsoNode objects ends. 1570 * 1571 * @param opts 1572 * The option set to be manipulated. 1573 * @param enable 1574 * 1 = Collect IsoNode objects which have identical data sources and 1575 * properties. 1576 * 0 = Generate unique inode numbers for all IsoNode objects which do not 1577 * have a valid inode number from an imported ISO image. 1578 * All other values are reserved. 1579 * 1580 * @since 0.6.20 1581 */ 1582 int iso_write_opts_set_hardlinks(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int enable); 1583 1584 /** 1585 * Control writing of AAIP information for ACL and xattr. 1586 * For importing ACL and xattr when inserting nodes from external filesystems 1587 * (e.g. the local POSIX filesystem) see iso_image_set_ignore_aclea(). 1588 * For loading of this information from images see iso_read_opts_set_no_aaip(). 1589 * 1590 * @param opts 1591 * The option set to be manipulated. 1592 * @param enable 1593 * 1 = write AAIP information from nodes into the image 1594 * 0 = do not write AAIP information into the image 1595 * All other values are reserved. 1596 * 1597 * @since 0.6.14 1598 */ 1599 int iso_write_opts_set_aaip(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int enable); 1600 1601 /** 1602 * Use this only if you need to reproduce a suboptimal behavior of older 1603 * versions of libisofs. They used address 0 for links and device files, 1604 * and the address of the Volume Descriptor Set Terminator for empty data 1605 * files. 1606 * New versions let symbolic links, device files, and empty data files point 1607 * to a dedicated block of zero-bytes after the end of the directory trees. 1608 * (Single-pass reader libarchive needs to see all directory info before 1609 * processing any data files.) 1610 * 1611 * @param opts 1612 * The option set to be manipulated. 1613 * @param enable 1614 * 1 = use the suboptimal block addresses in the range of 0 to 115. 1615 * 0 = use the address of a block after the directory tree. (Default) 1616 * 1617 * @since 1.0.2 1618 */ 1619 int iso_write_opts_set_old_empty(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int enable); 1620 1621 /** 1622 * Caution: This option breaks any assumptions about names that 1623 * are supported by ECMA-119 specifications. 1624 * Try to omit any translation which would make a file name compliant to the 1625 * ECMA-119 rules. This includes and exceeds omit_version_numbers, 1626 * max_37_char_filenames, no_force_dots bit0, allow_full_ascii. Further it 1627 * prevents the conversion from local character set to ASCII. 1628 * The maximum name length is given by this call. If a filename exceeds 1629 * this length or cannot be recorded untranslated for other reasons, then 1630 * image production is aborted with ISO_NAME_NEEDS_TRANSL. 1631 * Currently the length limit is 96 characters, because an ECMA-119 directory 1632 * record may at most have 254 bytes and up to 158 other bytes must fit into 1633 * the record. Probably 96 more bytes can be made free for the name in future. 1634 * @param opts 1635 * The option set to be manipulated. 1636 * @param len 1637 * 0 = disable this feature and perform name translation according to 1638 * other settings. 1639 * >0 = Omit any translation. Eventually abort image production 1640 * if a name is longer than the given value. 1641 * -1 = Like >0. Allow maximum possible length (currently 96) 1642 * @return >=0 success, <0 failure 1643 * In case of >=0 the return value tells the effectively set len. 1644 * E.g. 96 after using len == -1. 1645 * @since 1.0.0 1646 */ 1647 int iso_write_opts_set_untranslated_name_len(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int len); 1648 1649 /** 1650 * Convert directory names for ECMA-119 similar to other file names, but do 1651 * not force a dot or add a version number. 1652 * This violates ECMA-119 by allowing one "." and especially ISO level 1 1653 * by allowing DOS style 8.3 names rather than only 8 characters. 1654 * (mkisofs and its clones seem to do this violation.) 1655 * @param opts 1656 * The option set to be manipulated. 1657 * @param allow 1658 * 1= allow dots , 0= disallow dots and convert them 1659 * @return 1660 * 1 success, < 0 error 1661 * @since 1.0.0 1662 */ 1663 int iso_write_opts_set_allow_dir_id_ext(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1664 1665 /** 1666 * Omit the version number (";1") at the end of the ISO-9660 identifiers. 1667 * This breaks ECMA-119 specification, but version numbers are usually not 1668 * used, so it should work on most systems. Use with caution. 1669 * @param opts 1670 * The option set to be manipulated. 1671 * @param omit 1672 * bit0= omit version number with ECMA-119 and Joliet 1673 * bit1= omit version number with Joliet alone (@since 0.6.30) 1674 * @since 0.6.2 1675 */ 1676 int iso_write_opts_set_omit_version_numbers(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int omit); 1677 1678 /** 1679 * Allow ISO-9660 directory hierarchy to be deeper than 8 levels. 1680 * This breaks ECMA-119 specification. Use with caution. 1681 * 1682 * @since 0.6.2 1683 */ 1684 int iso_write_opts_set_allow_deep_paths(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1685 1686 /** 1687 * This call describes the directory where to store Rock Ridge relocated 1688 * directories. 1689 * If not iso_write_opts_set_allow_deep_paths(,1) is in effect, then it may 1690 * become necessary to relocate directories so that no ECMA-119 file path 1691 * has more than 8 components. These directories are grafted into either 1692 * the root directory of the ISO image or into a dedicated relocation 1693 * directory. 1694 * For Rock Ridge, the relocated directories are linked forth and back to 1695 * placeholders at their original positions in path level 8. Directories 1696 * marked by Rock Ridge entry RE are to be considered artefacts of relocation 1697 * and shall not be read into a Rock Ridge tree. Instead they are to be read 1698 * via their placeholders and their links. 1699 * For plain ECMA-119, the relocation directory and the relocated directories 1700 * are just normal directories which contain normal files and directories. 1701 * @param opts 1702 * The option set to be manipulated. 1703 * @param name 1704 * The name of the relocation directory in the root directory. Do not 1705 * prepend "/". An empty name or NULL will direct relocated directories 1706 * into the root directory. This is the default. 1707 * If the given name does not exist in the root directory when 1708 * iso_image_create_burn_source() is called, and if there are directories 1709 * at path level 8, then directory /name will be created automatically. 1710 * The name given by this call will be compared with iso_node_get_name() 1711 * of the directories in the root directory, not with the final ECMA-119 1712 * names of those directories. 1713 * @param flags 1714 * Bitfield for control purposes. 1715 * bit0= Mark the relocation directory by a Rock Ridge RE entry, if it 1716 * gets created during iso_image_create_burn_source(). This will 1717 * make it invisible for most Rock Ridge readers. 1718 * bit1= not settable via API (used internally) 1719 * @return 1720 * 1 success, < 0 error 1721 * @since 1.2.2 1722 */ 1723 int iso_write_opts_set_rr_reloc(IsoWriteOpts *opts, char *name, int flags); 1724 1725 /** 1726 * Allow path in the ISO-9660 tree to have more than 255 characters. 1727 * This breaks ECMA-119 specification. Use with caution. 1728 * 1729 * @since 0.6.2 1730 */ 1731 int iso_write_opts_set_allow_longer_paths(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1732 1733 /** 1734 * Allow a single file or directory identifier to have up to 37 characters. 1735 * This is larger than the 31 characters allowed by ISO level 2, and the 1736 * extra space is taken from the version number, so this also forces 1737 * omit_version_numbers. 1738 * This breaks ECMA-119 specification and could lead to buffer overflow 1739 * problems on old systems. Use with caution. 1740 * 1741 * @since 0.6.2 1742 */ 1743 int iso_write_opts_set_max_37_char_filenames(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1744 1745 /** 1746 * ISO-9660 forces filenames to have a ".", that separates file name from 1747 * extension. libisofs adds it if original filename doesn't has one. Set 1748 * this to 1 to prevent this behavior. 1749 * This breaks ECMA-119 specification. Use with caution. 1750 * 1751 * @param opts 1752 * The option set to be manipulated. 1753 * @param no 1754 * bit0= no forced dot with ECMA-119 1755 * bit1= no forced dot with Joliet (@since 0.6.30) 1756 * 1757 * @since 0.6.2 1758 */ 1759 int iso_write_opts_set_no_force_dots(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int no); 1760 1761 /** 1762 * Allow lowercase characters in ISO-9660 filenames. By default, only 1763 * uppercase characters, numbers and a few other characters are allowed. 1764 * This breaks ECMA-119 specification. Use with caution. 1765 * If lowercase is not allowed then those letters get mapped to uppercase 1766 * letters. 1767 * 1768 * @since 0.6.2 1769 */ 1770 int iso_write_opts_set_allow_lowercase(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1771 1772 /** 1773 * Allow all 8-bit characters to appear on an ISO-9660 filename. Note 1774 * that "/" and 0x0 characters are never allowed, even in RR names. 1775 * This breaks ECMA-119 specification. Use with caution. 1776 * 1777 * @since 0.6.2 1778 */ 1779 int iso_write_opts_set_allow_full_ascii(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1780 1781 /** 1782 * If not iso_write_opts_set_allow_full_ascii() is set to 1: 1783 * Allow all 7-bit characters that would be allowed by allow_full_ascii, but 1784 * map lowercase to uppercase if iso_write_opts_set_allow_lowercase() 1785 * is not set to 1. 1786 * @param opts 1787 * The option set to be manipulated. 1788 * @param allow 1789 * If not zero, then allow what is described above. 1790 * 1791 * @since 1.2.2 1792 */ 1793 int iso_write_opts_set_allow_7bit_ascii(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1794 1795 /** 1796 * Allow all characters to be part of Volume and Volset identifiers on 1797 * the Primary Volume Descriptor. This breaks ISO-9660 constraints, but 1798 * should work on modern systems. 1799 * 1800 * @since 0.6.2 1801 */ 1802 int iso_write_opts_set_relaxed_vol_atts(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1803 1804 /** 1805 * Allow paths in the Joliet tree to have more than 240 characters. 1806 * This breaks Joliet specification. Use with caution. 1807 * 1808 * @since 0.6.2 1809 */ 1810 int iso_write_opts_set_joliet_longer_paths(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1811 1812 /** 1813 * Allow leaf names in the Joliet tree to have up to 103 characters. 1814 * Normal limit is 64. 1815 * This breaks Joliet specification. Use with caution. 1816 * 1817 * @since 1.0.6 1818 */ 1819 int iso_write_opts_set_joliet_long_names(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1820 1821 /** 1822 * Use character set UTF-16BE with Joliet, which is a superset of the 1823 * actually prescribed character set UCS-2. 1824 * This breaks Joliet specification with exotic characters which would 1825 * elsewise be mapped to underscore '_'. Use with caution. 1826 * 1827 * @since 1.3.6 1828 */ 1829 int iso_write_opts_set_joliet_utf16(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1830 1831 /** 1832 * Write Rock Ridge info as of specification RRIP-1.10 rather than RRIP-1.12: 1833 * signature "RRIP_1991A" rather than "IEEE_1282", field PX without file 1834 * serial number. 1835 * 1836 * @since 0.6.12 1837 */ 1838 int iso_write_opts_set_rrip_version_1_10(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int oldvers); 1839 1840 /** 1841 * Write field PX with file serial number (i.e. inode number) even if 1842 * iso_write_opts_set_rrip_version_1_10(,1) is in effect. 1843 * This clearly violates the RRIP-1.10 specs. But it is done by mkisofs since 1844 * a while and no widespread protest is visible in the web. 1845 * If this option is not enabled, then iso_write_opts_set_hardlinks() will 1846 * only have an effect with iso_write_opts_set_rrip_version_1_10(,0). 1847 * 1848 * @since 0.6.20 1849 */ 1850 int iso_write_opts_set_rrip_1_10_px_ino(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int enable); 1851 1852 /** 1853 * Write AAIP as extension according to SUSP 1.10 rather than SUSP 1.12. 1854 * I.e. without announcing it by an ER field and thus without the need 1855 * to precede the RRIP fields and the AAIP field by ES fields. 1856 * This saves 5 to 10 bytes per file and might avoid problems with readers 1857 * which dislike ER fields other than the ones for RRIP. 1858 * On the other hand, SUSP 1.12 frowns on such unannounced extensions 1859 * and prescribes ER and ES. It does this since the year 1994. 1860 * 1861 * In effect only if above iso_write_opts_set_aaip() enables writing of AAIP. 1862 * 1863 * @since 0.6.14 1864 */ 1865 int iso_write_opts_set_aaip_susp_1_10(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int oldvers); 1866 1867 /** 1868 * Store as ECMA-119 Directory Record timestamp the mtime of the source node 1869 * rather than the image creation time. 1870 * If storing of mtime is enabled, then the settings of 1871 * iso_write_opts_set_replace_timestamps() apply. (replace==1 will revoke, 1872 * replace==2 will override mtime by iso_write_opts_set_default_timestamp(). 1873 * 1874 * Since version 1.2.0 this may apply also to Joliet and ISO 9660:1999. To 1875 * reduce the probability of unwanted behavior changes between pre-1.2.0 and 1876 * post-1.2.0, the bits for Joliet and ISO 9660:1999 also enable ECMA-119. 1877 * The hopefully unlikely bit14 may then be used to disable mtime for ECMA-119. 1878 * 1879 * To enable mtime for all three directory trees, submit 7. 1880 * To disable this feature completely, submit 0. 1881 * 1882 * @param opts 1883 * The option set to be manipulated. 1884 * @param allow 1885 * If this parameter is negative, then mtime is enabled only for ECMA-119. 1886 * With positive numbers, the parameter is interpreted as bit field : 1887 * bit0= enable mtime for ECMA-119 1888 * bit1= enable mtime for Joliet and ECMA-119 1889 * bit2= enable mtime for ISO 9660:1999 and ECMA-119 1890 * bit14= disable mtime for ECMA-119 although some of the other bits 1891 * would enable it 1892 * @since 1.2.0 1893 * Before version 1.2.0 this applied only to ECMA-119 : 1894 * 0 stored image creation time in ECMA-119 tree. 1895 * Any other value caused storing of mtime. 1896 * Joliet and ISO 9660:1999 always stored the image creation time. 1897 * @since 0.6.12 1898 */ 1899 int iso_write_opts_set_dir_rec_mtime(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int allow); 1900 1901 /** 1902 * Whether to sort files based on their weight. 1903 * 1904 * @see iso_node_set_sort_weight 1905 * @since 0.6.2 1906 */ 1907 int iso_write_opts_set_sort_files(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int sort); 1908 1909 /** 1910 * Whether to compute and record MD5 checksums for the whole session and/or 1911 * for each single IsoFile object. The checksums represent the data as they 1912 * were written into the image output stream, not necessarily as they were 1913 * on hard disk at any point of time. 1914 * See also calls iso_image_get_session_md5() and iso_file_get_md5(). 1915 * @param opts 1916 * The option set to be manipulated. 1917 * @param session 1918 * If bit0 set: Compute session checksum 1919 * @param files 1920 * If bit0 set: Compute a checksum for each single IsoFile object which 1921 * gets its data content written into the session. Copy 1922 * checksums from files which keep their data in older 1923 * sessions. 1924 * If bit1 set: Check content stability (only with bit0). I.e. before 1925 * writing the file content into to image stream, read it 1926 * once and compute a MD5. Do a second reading for writing 1927 * into the image stream. Afterwards compare both MD5 and 1928 * issue a MISHAP event ISO_MD5_STREAM_CHANGE if they do not 1929 * match. 1930 * Such a mismatch indicates content changes between the 1931 * time point when the first MD5 reading started and the 1932 * time point when the last block was read for writing. 1933 * So there is high risk that the image stream was fed from 1934 * changing and possibly inconsistent file content. 1935 * 1936 * @since 0.6.22 1937 */ 1938 int iso_write_opts_set_record_md5(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int session, int files); 1939 1940 /** 1941 * Set the parameters "name" and "timestamp" for a scdbackup checksum tag. 1942 * It will be appended to the libisofs session tag if the image starts at 1943 * LBA 0 (see iso_write_opts_set_ms_block()). The scdbackup tag can be used 1944 * to verify the image by command scdbackup_verify device -auto_end. 1945 * See scdbackup/README appendix VERIFY for its inner details. 1946 * 1947 * @param opts 1948 * The option set to be manipulated. 1949 * @param name 1950 * A word of up to 80 characters. Typically volno_totalno telling 1951 * that this is volume volno of a total of totalno volumes. 1952 * @param timestamp 1953 * A string of 13 characters YYMMDD.hhmmss (e.g. A90831.190324). 1954 * A9 = 2009, B0 = 2010, B1 = 2011, ... C0 = 2020, ... 1955 * @param tag_written 1956 * Either NULL or the address of an array with at least 512 characters. 1957 * In the latter case the eventually produced scdbackup tag will be 1958 * copied to this array when the image gets written. This call sets 1959 * scdbackup_tag_written[0] = 0 to mark its preliminary invalidity. 1960 * @return 1961 * 1 indicates success, <0 is error 1962 * 1963 * @since 0.6.24 1964 */ 1965 int iso_write_opts_set_scdbackup_tag(IsoWriteOpts *opts, 1966 char *name, char *timestamp, 1967 char *tag_written); 1968 1969 /** 1970 * Whether to set default values for files and directory permissions, gid and 1971 * uid. All these take one of three values: 0, 1 or 2. 1972 * 1973 * If 0, the corresponding attribute will be kept as set in the IsoNode. 1974 * Unless you have changed it, it corresponds to the value on disc, so it 1975 * is suitable for backup purposes. If set to 1, the corresponding attrib. 1976 * will be changed by a default suitable value. Finally, if you set it to 1977 * 2, the attrib. will be changed with the value specified by the functioins 1978 * below. Note that for mode attributes, only the permissions are set, the 1979 * file type remains unchanged. 1980 * 1981 * @see iso_write_opts_set_default_dir_mode 1982 * @see iso_write_opts_set_default_file_mode 1983 * @see iso_write_opts_set_default_uid 1984 * @see iso_write_opts_set_default_gid 1985 * @since 0.6.2 1986 */ 1987 int iso_write_opts_set_replace_mode(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int dir_mode, 1988 int file_mode, int uid, int gid); 1989 1990 /** 1991 * Set the mode to use on dirs when you set the replace_mode of dirs to 2. 1992 * 1993 * @see iso_write_opts_set_replace_mode 1994 * @since 0.6.2 1995 */ 1996 int iso_write_opts_set_default_dir_mode(IsoWriteOpts *opts, mode_t dir_mode); 1997 1998 /** 1999 * Set the mode to use on files when you set the replace_mode of files to 2. 2000 * 2001 * @see iso_write_opts_set_replace_mode 2002 * @since 0.6.2 2003 */ 2004 int iso_write_opts_set_default_file_mode(IsoWriteOpts *opts, mode_t file_mode); 2005 2006 /** 2007 * Set the uid to use when you set the replace_uid to 2. 2008 * 2009 * @see iso_write_opts_set_replace_mode 2010 * @since 0.6.2 2011 */ 2012 int iso_write_opts_set_default_uid(IsoWriteOpts *opts, uid_t uid); 2013 2014 /** 2015 * Set the gid to use when you set the replace_gid to 2. 2016 * 2017 * @see iso_write_opts_set_replace_mode 2018 * @since 0.6.2 2019 */ 2020 int iso_write_opts_set_default_gid(IsoWriteOpts *opts, gid_t gid); 2021 2022 /** 2023 * 0 to use IsoNode timestamps, 1 to use recording time, 2 to use 2024 * values from timestamp field. This applies to the timestamps of Rock Ridge 2025 * and if the use of mtime is enabled by iso_write_opts_set_dir_rec_mtime(). 2026 * In the latter case, value 1 will revoke the recording of mtime, value 2027 * 2 will override mtime by iso_write_opts_set_default_timestamp(). 2028 * 2029 * @see iso_write_opts_set_default_timestamp 2030 * @since 0.6.2 2031 */ 2032 int iso_write_opts_set_replace_timestamps(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int replace); 2033 2034 /** 2035 * Set the timestamp to use when you set the replace_timestamps to 2. 2036 * 2037 * @see iso_write_opts_set_replace_timestamps 2038 * @since 0.6.2 2039 */ 2040 int iso_write_opts_set_default_timestamp(IsoWriteOpts *opts, time_t timestamp); 2041 2042 /** 2043 * Whether to always record timestamps in GMT. 2044 * 2045 * By default, libisofs stores local time information on image. You can set 2046 * this to always store timestamps converted to GMT. This prevents any 2047 * discrimination of the timezone of the image preparer by the image reader. 2048 * 2049 * It is useful if you want to hide your timezone, or you live in a timezone 2050 * that can't be represented in ECMA-119. These are timezones with an offset 2051 * from GMT greater than +13 hours, lower than -12 hours, or not a multiple 2052 * of 15 minutes. 2053 * Negative timezones (west of GMT) can trigger bugs in some operating systems 2054 * which typically appear in mounted ISO images as if the timezone shift from 2055 * GMT was applied twice (e.g. in New York 22:36 becomes 17:36). 2056 * 2057 * @since 0.6.2 2058 */ 2059 int iso_write_opts_set_always_gmt(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int gmt); 2060 2061 /** 2062 * Set the charset to use for the RR names of the files that will be created 2063 * on the image. 2064 * NULL to use default charset, that is the locale charset. 2065 * You can obtain the list of charsets supported on your system executing 2066 * "iconv -l" in a shell. 2067 * 2068 * @since 0.6.2 2069 */ 2070 int iso_write_opts_set_output_charset(IsoWriteOpts *opts, const char *charset); 2071 2072 /** 2073 * Set the type of image creation in case there was already an existing 2074 * image imported. Libisofs supports two types of creation: 2075 * stand-alone and appended. 2076 * 2077 * A stand-alone image is an image that does not need the old image any more 2078 * for being mounted by the operating system or imported by libisofs. It may 2079 * be written beginning with byte 0 of optical media or disk file objects. 2080 * There will be no distinction between files from the old image and those 2081 * which have been added by the new image generation. 2082 * 2083 * On the other side, an appended image is not self contained. It may refer 2084 * to files that stay stored in the imported existing image. 2085 * This usage model is inspired by CD multi-session. It demands that the 2086 * appended image is finally written to the same media or disk file 2087 * as the imported image at an address behind the end of that imported image. 2088 * The exact address may depend on media peculiarities and thus has to be 2089 * announced by the application via iso_write_opts_set_ms_block(). 2090 * The real address where the data will be written is under control of the 2091 * consumer of the struct burn_source which takes the output of libisofs 2092 * image generation. It may be the one announced to libisofs or an intermediate 2093 * one. Nevertheless, the image will be readable only at the announced address. 2094 * 2095 * If you have not imported a previous image by iso_image_import(), then the 2096 * image will always be a stand-alone image, as there is no previous data to 2097 * refer to. 2098 * 2099 * @param opts 2100 * The option set to be manipulated. 2101 * @param append 2102 * 1 to create an appended image, 0 for an stand-alone one. 2103 * 2104 * @since 0.6.2 2105 */ 2106 int iso_write_opts_set_appendable(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int append); 2107 2108 /** 2109 * Set the start block of the image. It is supposed to be the lba where the 2110 * first block of the image will be written on disc. All references inside the 2111 * ISO image will take this into account, thus providing a mountable image. 2112 * 2113 * For appendable images, that are written to a new session, you should 2114 * pass here the lba of the next writable address on disc. 2115 * 2116 * In stand alone images this is usually 0. However, you may want to 2117 * provide a different ms_block if you don't plan to burn the image in the 2118 * first session on disc, such as in some CD-Extra disc whether the data 2119 * image is written in a new session after some audio tracks. 2120 * 2121 * @since 0.6.2 2122 */ 2123 int iso_write_opts_set_ms_block(IsoWriteOpts *opts, uint32_t ms_block); 2124 2125 /** 2126 * Sets the buffer where to store the descriptors which shall be written 2127 * at the beginning of an overwritable media to point to the newly written 2128 * image. 2129 * This is needed if the write start address of the image is not 0. 2130 * In this case the first 64 KiB of the media have to be overwritten 2131 * by the buffer content after the session was written and the buffer 2132 * was updated by libisofs. Otherwise the new session would not be 2133 * found by operating system function mount() or by libisoburn. 2134 * (One could still mount that session if its start address is known.) 2135 * 2136 * If you do not need this information, for example because you are creating a 2137 * new image for LBA 0 or because you will create an image for a true 2138 * multisession media, just do not use this call or set buffer to NULL. 2139 * 2140 * Use cases: 2141 * 2142 * - Together with iso_write_opts_set_appendable(opts, 1) the buffer serves 2143 * for the growing of an image as done in growisofs by Andy Polyakov. 2144 * This allows appending of a new session to non-multisession media, such 2145 * as DVD+RW. The new session will refer to the data of previous sessions 2146 * on the same media. 2147 * libisoburn emulates multisession appendability on overwritable media 2148 * and disk files by performing this use case. 2149 * 2150 * - Together with iso_write_opts_set_appendable(opts, 0) the buffer allows 2151 * to write the first session on overwritable media to start addresses 2152 * other than 0. 2153 * This address must not be smaller than 32 blocks plus the eventual 2154 * partition offset as defined by iso_write_opts_set_part_offset(). 2155 * libisoburn in most cases writes the first session on overwritable media 2156 * and disk files to LBA (32 + partition_offset) in order to preserve its 2157 * descriptors from the subsequent overwriting by the descriptor buffer of 2158 * later sessions. 2159 * 2160 * @param opts 2161 * The option set to be manipulated. 2162 * @param overwrite 2163 * When not NULL, it should point to at least 64KiB of memory, where 2164 * libisofs will install the contents that shall be written at the 2165 * beginning of overwritable media. 2166 * You should initialize the buffer either with 0s, or with the contents 2167 * of the first 32 blocks of the image you are growing. In most cases, 2168 * 0 is good enough. 2169 * IMPORTANT: If you use iso_write_opts_set_part_offset() then the 2170 * overwrite buffer must be larger by the offset defined there. 2171 * 2172 * @since 0.6.2 2173 */ 2174 int iso_write_opts_set_overwrite_buf(IsoWriteOpts *opts, uint8_t *overwrite); 2175 2176 /** 2177 * Set the size, in number of blocks, of the ring buffer used between the 2178 * writer thread and the burn_source. You have to provide at least a 32 2179 * blocks buffer. Default value is set to 2MB, if that is ok for you, you 2180 * don't need to call this function. 2181 * 2182 * @since 0.6.2 2183 */ 2184 int iso_write_opts_set_fifo_size(IsoWriteOpts *opts, size_t fifo_size); 2185 2186 /* 2187 * Attach 32 kB of binary data which shall get written to the first 32 kB 2188 * of the ISO image, the ECMA-119 System Area. This space is intended for 2189 * system dependent boot software, e.g. a Master Boot Record which allows to 2190 * boot from USB sticks or hard disks. ECMA-119 makes no own assumptions or 2191 * prescriptions about the byte content. 2192 * 2193 * If system area data are given or options bit0 is set, then bit1 of 2194 * el_torito_set_isolinux_options() is automatically disabled. 2195 * 2196 * @param opts 2197 * The option set to be manipulated. 2198 * @param data 2199 * Either NULL or 32 kB of data. Do not submit less bytes ! 2200 * @param options 2201 * Can cause manipulations of submitted data before they get written: 2202 * bit0= Only with System area type 0 = MBR 2203 * Apply a --protective-msdos-label as of grub-mkisofs. 2204 * This means to patch bytes 446 to 512 of the system area so 2205 * that one partition is defined which begins at the second 2206 * 512-byte block of the image and ends where the image ends. 2207 * This works with and without system_area_data. 2208 * Modern GRUB2 system areas get also treated by bit14. See below. 2209 * bit1= Only with System area type 0 = MBR 2210 * Apply isohybrid MBR patching to the system area. 2211 * This works only with system area data from SYSLINUX plus an 2212 * ISOLINUX boot image as first submitted boot image 2213 * (see iso_image_set_boot_image()) and only if not bit0 is set. 2214 * bit2-7= System area type 2215 * 0= with bit0 or bit1: MBR 2216 * else: type depends on bits bit10-13: System area sub type 2217 * 1= MIPS Big Endian Volume Header 2218 * @since 0.6.38 2219 * Submit up to 15 MIPS Big Endian boot files by 2220 * iso_image_add_mips_boot_file(). 2221 * This will overwrite the first 512 bytes of the submitted 2222 * data. 2223 * 2= DEC Boot Block for MIPS Little Endian 2224 * @since 0.6.38 2225 * The first boot file submitted by 2226 * iso_image_add_mips_boot_file() will be activated. 2227 * This will overwrite the first 512 bytes of the submitted 2228 * data. 2229 * 3= SUN Disk Label for SUN SPARC 2230 * @since 0.6.40 2231 * Submit up to 7 SPARC boot images by 2232 * iso_write_opts_set_partition_img() for partition numbers 2 2233 * to 8. 2234 * This will overwrite the first 512 bytes of the submitted 2235 * data. 2236 * 4= HP-PA PALO boot sector version 4 for HP PA-RISC 2237 * @since 1.3.8 2238 * Suitable for older PALO of e.g. Debian 4 and 5. 2239 * Submit all five parameters of iso_image_set_hppa_palo(): 2240 * cmdline, bootloader, kernel_32, kernel_64, ramdisk 2241 * 5= HP-PA PALO boot sector version 5 for HP PA-RISC 2242 * @since 1.3.8 2243 * Suitable for newer PALO, where PALOHDRVERSION in 2244 * lib/common.h is defined as 5. 2245 * Submit all five parameters of iso_image_set_hppa_palo(): 2246 * cmdline, bootloader, kernel_32, kernel_64, ramdisk 2247 * 6= DEC Alpha SRM boot sector 2248 * @since 1.4.0 2249 * Submit bootloader path in ISO by iso_image_set_alpha_boot(). 2250 * bit8-9= Only with System area type 0 = MBR 2251 * @since 1.0.4 2252 * Cylinder alignment mode eventually pads the image to make it 2253 * end at a cylinder boundary. 2254 * 0 = auto (align if bit1) 2255 * 1 = always align to cylinder boundary 2256 * 2 = never align to cylinder boundary 2257 * 3 = always align, additionally pad up and align partitions 2258 * which were appended by iso_write_opts_set_partition_img() 2259 * @since 1.2.6 2260 * bit10-13= System area sub type 2261 * @since 1.2.4 2262 * With type 0: 2263 * if options bit0 ... MBR with partition start at block 1 2264 * if options bit1 ... ISOLINUX isohybrid MBR 2265 * else: 2266 * 0 = no particular sub type, use unaltered 2267 * 1 = CHRP: A single MBR partition of type 0x96 covers the 2268 * ISO image. Not compatible with any other feature 2269 * which needs to have own MBR partition entries. 2270 * 2 = generic MBR @since 1.3.8 2271 * bit14= Only with System area type 0 = MBR 2272 * GRUB2 boot provisions: 2273 * @since 1.3.0 2274 * Patch system area at byte 0x1b0 to 0x1b7 with 2275 * (512-block address + 4) of the first boot image file. 2276 * Little-endian 8-byte. 2277 * Is normally combined with options bit0. 2278 * Will not be in effect if options bit1 is set. 2279 * bit15= Only with System area type MBR but not with CHRP 2280 * Enforce MBR "bootable/active" flag. In worst case by dummy 2281 * partition of type 0x00 which occupies block 0. 2282 * @since 1.4.4 2283 * @param flag 2284 * bit0 = invalidate any attached system area data. Same as data == NULL 2285 * (This re-activates eventually loaded image System Area data. 2286 * To erase those, submit 32 kB of zeros without flag bit0.) 2287 * bit1 = keep data unaltered 2288 * bit2 = keep options unaltered 2289 * @return 2290 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2291 * @since 0.6.30 2292 */ 2293 int iso_write_opts_set_system_area(IsoWriteOpts *opts, char data[32768], 2294 int options, int flag); 2295 2296 /** 2297 * Set a name for the system area. This setting is ignored unless system area 2298 * type 3 "SUN Disk Label" is in effect by iso_write_opts_set_system_area(). 2299 * In this case it will replace the default text at the start of the image: 2300 * "CD-ROM Disc with Sun sparc boot created by libisofs" 2301 * 2302 * @param opts 2303 * The option set to be manipulated. 2304 * @param label 2305 * A text of up to 128 characters. 2306 * @return 2307 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2308 * @since 0.6.40 2309 */ 2310 int iso_write_opts_set_disc_label(IsoWriteOpts *opts, char *label); 2311 2312 /** 2313 * Explicitly set the four timestamps of the emerging Primary Volume 2314 * Descriptor and in the volume descriptors of Joliet and ISO 9660:1999, 2315 * if those are to be generated. 2316 * Default with all parameters is 0. 2317 * 2318 * ECMA-119 defines them as: 2319 * @param opts 2320 * The option set to be manipulated. 2321 * @param vol_creation_time 2322 * When "the information in the volume was created." 2323 * A value of 0 means that the timepoint of write start is to be used. 2324 * @param vol_modification_time 2325 * When "the information in the volume was last modified." 2326 * A value of 0 means that the timepoint of write start is to be used. 2327 * @param vol_expiration_time 2328 * When "the information in the volume may be regarded as obsolete." 2329 * A value of 0 means that the information never shall expire. 2330 * @param vol_effective_time 2331 * When "the information in the volume may be used." 2332 * A value of 0 means that not such retention is intended. 2333 * @param vol_uuid 2334 * If this text is not empty, then it overrides vol_creation_time and 2335 * vol_modification_time by copying the first 16 decimal digits from 2336 * uuid, eventually padding up with decimal '1', and writing a NUL-byte 2337 * as timezone. 2338 * Other than with vol_*_time the resulting string in the ISO image 2339 * is fully predictable and free of timezone pitfalls. 2340 * It should express a reasonable time in form YYYYMMDDhhmmsscc. 2341 * The timezone will always be recorded as GMT. 2342 * E.g.: "2010040711405800" = 7 Apr 2010 11:40:58 (+0 centiseconds) 2343 * @return 2344 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2345 * 2346 * @since 0.6.30 2347 */ 2348 int iso_write_opts_set_pvd_times(IsoWriteOpts *opts, 2349 time_t vol_creation_time, time_t vol_modification_time, 2350 time_t vol_expiration_time, time_t vol_effective_time, 2351 char *vol_uuid); 2352 2353 2354 /* 2355 * Control production of a second set of volume descriptors (superblock) 2356 * and directory trees, together with a partition table in the MBR where the 2357 * first partition has non-zero start address and the others are zeroed. 2358 * The first partition stretches to the end of the whole ISO image. 2359 * The additional volume descriptor set and trees will allow to mount the 2360 * ISO image at the start of the first partition, while it is still possible 2361 * to mount it via the normal first volume descriptor set and tree at the 2362 * start of the image or storage device. 2363 * This makes few sense on optical media. But on USB sticks it creates a 2364 * conventional partition table which makes it mountable on e.g. Linux via 2365 * /dev/sdb and /dev/sdb1 alike. 2366 * IMPORTANT: When submitting memory by iso_write_opts_set_overwrite_buf() 2367 * then its size must be at least 64 KiB + partition offset. 2368 * 2369 * @param opts 2370 * The option set to be manipulated. 2371 * @param block_offset_2k 2372 * The offset of the partition start relative to device start. 2373 * This is counted in 2 kB blocks. The partition table will show the 2374 * according number of 512 byte sectors. 2375 * Default is 0 which causes no special partition table preparations. 2376 * If it is not 0 then it must not be smaller than 16. 2377 * @param secs_512_per_head 2378 * Number of 512 byte sectors per head. 1 to 63. 0=automatic. 2379 * @param heads_per_cyl 2380 * Number of heads per cylinder. 1 to 255. 0=automatic. 2381 * @return 2382 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2383 * 2384 * @since 0.6.36 2385 */ 2386 int iso_write_opts_set_part_offset(IsoWriteOpts *opts, 2387 uint32_t block_offset_2k, 2388 int secs_512_per_head, int heads_per_cyl); 2389 2390 2391 /** The minimum version of libjte to be used with this version of libisofs 2392 at compile time. The use of libjte is optional and depends on configure 2393 tests. It can be prevented by ./configure option --disable-libjte . 2394 @since 0.6.38 2395 */ 2396 #define iso_libjte_req_major 2 2397 #define iso_libjte_req_minor 0 2398 #define iso_libjte_req_micro 0 2399 2400 /** 2401 * Associate a libjte environment object to the upcoming write run. 2402 * libjte implements Jigdo Template Extraction as of Steve McIntyre and 2403 * Richard Atterer. 2404 * The call will fail if no libjte support was enabled at compile time. 2405 * @param opts 2406 * The option set to be manipulated. 2407 * @param libjte_handle 2408 * Pointer to a struct libjte_env e.g. created by libjte_new(). 2409 * It must stay existent from the start of image generation by 2410 * iso_image_create_burn_source() until the write thread has ended. 2411 * This can be inquired by iso_image_generator_is_running(). 2412 * In order to keep the libisofs API identical with and without 2413 * libjte support the parameter type is (void *). 2414 * @return 2415 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2416 * 2417 * @since 0.6.38 2418 */ 2419 int iso_write_opts_attach_jte(IsoWriteOpts *opts, void *libjte_handle); 2420 2421 /** 2422 * Remove eventual association to a libjte environment handle. 2423 * The call will fail if no libjte support was enabled at compile time. 2424 * @param opts 2425 * The option set to be manipulated. 2426 * @param libjte_handle 2427 * If not submitted as NULL, this will return the previously set 2428 * libjte handle. 2429 * @return 2430 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2431 * 2432 * @since 0.6.38 2433 */ 2434 int iso_write_opts_detach_jte(IsoWriteOpts *opts, void **libjte_handle); 2435 2436 2437 /** 2438 * Cause a number of blocks with zero bytes to be written after the payload 2439 * data, but before the eventual checksum data. Unlike libburn tail padding, 2440 * these blocks are counted as part of the image and covered by eventual 2441 * image checksums. 2442 * A reason for such padding can be the wish to prevent the Linux read-ahead 2443 * bug by sacrificial data which still belong to image and Jigdo template. 2444 * Normally such padding would be the job of the burn program which should know 2445 * that it is needed with CD write type TAO if Linux read(2) shall be able 2446 * to read all payload blocks. 2447 * 150 blocks = 300 kB is the traditional sacrifice to the Linux kernel. 2448 * @param opts 2449 * The option set to be manipulated. 2450 * @param num_blocks 2451 * Number of extra 2 kB blocks to be written. 2452 * @return 2453 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2454 * 2455 * @since 0.6.38 2456 */ 2457 int iso_write_opts_set_tail_blocks(IsoWriteOpts *opts, uint32_t num_blocks); 2458 2459 2460 /** 2461 * The libisofs interval reader is used internally and offered by libisofs API: 2462 * @since 1.4.0 2463 * The functions iso_write_opts_set_prep_img(), iso_write_opts_set_efi_bootp(), 2464 * and iso_write_opts_set_partition_img() accept with their flag bit0 an 2465 * interval reader description string instead of a disk path. 2466 * The API calls are iso_interval_reader_new(), iso_interval_reader_read(), 2467 * and iso_interval_reader_destroy(). 2468 * The data may be cut out and optionally partly zeroized. 2469 * 2470 * An interval reader description string has the form: 2471 * $flags:$interval:$zeroizers:$source 2472 * The component $flags modifies the further interpretation: 2473 * "local_fs" ....... demands to read from a file depicted by the path in 2474 * $source. 2475 * "imported_iso" ... demands to read from the IsoDataSource object that was 2476 * used with iso_image_import() when 2477 * iso_read_opts_keep_import_src() was enabled. 2478 * The text in $source is ignored. 2479 * The application has to ensure that reading from the 2480 * import source does not disturb production of the new 2481 * ISO session. Especially this would be the case if the 2482 * import source is the same libburn drive with a 2483 * sequential optical medium to which the new session shall 2484 * get burned. 2485 * The component $interval consists of two byte address numbers separated 2486 * by a "-" character. E.g. "0-429" means to read bytes 0 to 429. 2487 * The component $zeroizers consists of zero or more comma separated strings. 2488 * They define which part of the read data to zeroize. Byte number 0 means 2489 * the byte read from the $interval start address. 2490 * Each string may be either 2491 * "zero_mbrpt" ..... demands to zeroize bytes 446 to 509 of the read data if 2492 * bytes 510 and 511 bear the MBR signature 0x55 0xaa. 2493 * "zero_gpt" ....... demands to check for a GPT header in bytes 512 to 1023, 2494 * to zeroize it and its partition table blocks. 2495 * "zero_apm" ....... demands to check for an APM block 0 and to zeroize 2496 * its partition table blocks. But not the block 0 itself, 2497 * because it could be actually MBR x86 machine code. 2498 * $zero_start"-"$zero_end ... demands to zeroize the read-in bytes beginning 2499 * with number $zero_start and ending after $zero_end. 2500 * The component $source is the file path with "local_fs", and ignored with 2501 * "imported_iso". 2502 * Byte numbers may be scaled by a suffix out of {k,m,g,t,s,d} meaning 2503 * multiplication by {1024, 1024k, 1024m, 1024g, 2048, 512}. A scaled value 2504 * as end number depicts the last byte of the scaled range. 2505 * E.g. "0d-0d" is "0-511". 2506 * Examples: 2507 * "local_fs:0-32767:zero_mbrpt,zero_gpt,440-443:/tmp/template.iso" 2508 * "imported_iso:45056d-47103d::" 2509 */ 2510 struct iso_interval_reader; 2511 2512 /** 2513 * Create an interval reader object. 2514 * 2515 * @param img 2516 * The IsoImage object which can provide the "imported_iso" data source. 2517 * @param path 2518 * The interval reader description string. See above. 2519 * @param ivr 2520 * Returns in case of success a pointer to the created object. 2521 * Dispose it by iso_interval_reader_destroy() when no longer needed. 2522 * @param byte_count 2523 * Returns in case of success the number of bytes in the interval. 2524 * @param flag 2525 * bit0= tolerate (src == NULL) with "imported_iso". 2526 * (Will immediately cause eof of interval input.) 2527 * @return 2528 * ISO_SUCCESS or error (which is < 0) 2529 * 2530 * @since 1.4.0 2531 */ 2532 int iso_interval_reader_new(IsoImage *img, char *path, 2533 struct iso_interval_reader **ivr, 2534 off_t *byte_count, int flag); 2535 2536 /** 2537 * Dispose an interval reader object. 2538 * 2539 * @param ivr 2540 * The reader object to be disposed. *ivr will be set to NULL. 2541 * @param flag 2542 * Unused yet. Submit 0. 2543 * @return 2544 * ISO_SUCCESS or error (which is < 0) 2545 * 2546 * @since 1.4.0 2547 */ 2548 int iso_interval_reader_destroy(struct iso_interval_reader **ivr, int flag); 2549 2550 /** 2551 * Read the next block of 2048 bytes from an interval reader object. 2552 * If end-of-input happens, the interval will get filled up with 0 bytes. 2553 * 2554 * @param ivr 2555 * The object to read from. 2556 * @param buf 2557 * Pointer to memory for filling in at least 2048 bytes. 2558 * @param buf_fill 2559 * Will in case of success return the number of valid bytes. 2560 * If this is smaller than 2048, then end-of-interval has occurred. 2561 * @param flag 2562 * Unused yet. Submit 0. 2563 * @return 2564 * ISO_SUCCESS if data were read, 0 if not, < 0 if error 2565 * 2566 * @since 1.4.0 2567 */ 2568 int iso_interval_reader_read(struct iso_interval_reader *ivr, uint8_t *buf, 2569 int *buf_fill, int flag); 2570 2571 2572 /** 2573 * Copy a data file from the local filesystem into the emerging ISO image. 2574 * Mark it by an MBR partition entry as PreP partition and also cause 2575 * protective MBR partition entries before and after this partition. 2576 * Vladimir Serbinenko stated aboy PreP = PowerPC Reference Platform : 2577 * "PreP [...] refers mainly to IBM hardware. PreP boot is a partition 2578 * containing only raw ELF and having type 0x41." 2579 * 2580 * This feature is only combinable with system area type 0 2581 * and currently not combinable with ISOLINUX isohybrid production. 2582 * It overrides --protective-msdos-label. See iso_write_opts_set_system_area(). 2583 * Only partition 4 stays available for iso_write_opts_set_partition_img(). 2584 * It is compatible with HFS+/FAT production by storing the PreP partition 2585 * before the start of the HFS+/FAT partition. 2586 * 2587 * @param opts 2588 * The option set to be manipulated. 2589 * @param image_path 2590 * File address in the local file system or instructions for interval 2591 * reader. See flag bit0. 2592 * NULL revokes production of the PreP partition. 2593 * @param flag 2594 * bit0= The path contains instructions for the interval reader. 2595 * See above. 2596 * @since 1.4.0 2597 * All other bits are reserved for future usage. Set them to 0. 2598 * @return 2599 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2600 * 2601 * @since 1.2.4 2602 */ 2603 int iso_write_opts_set_prep_img(IsoWriteOpts *opts, char *image_path, 2604 int flag); 2605 2606 /** 2607 * Copy a data file from the local filesystem into the emerging ISO image. 2608 * Mark it by an GPT partition entry as EFI System partition, and also cause 2609 * protective GPT partition entries before and after the partition. 2610 * GPT = Globally Unique Identifier Partition Table 2611 * 2612 * This feature may collide with data submitted by 2613 * iso_write_opts_set_system_area() 2614 * and with settings made by 2615 * el_torito_set_isolinux_options() 2616 * It is compatible with HFS+/FAT production by storing the EFI partition 2617 * before the start of the HFS+/FAT partition. 2618 * The GPT overwrites byte 0x0200 to 0x03ff of the system area and all 2619 * further bytes above 0x0800 which are not used by an Apple Partition Map. 2620 * 2621 * @param opts 2622 * The option set to be manipulated. 2623 * @param image_path 2624 * File address in the local file system or instructions for interval 2625 * reader. See flag bit0. 2626 * NULL revokes production of the EFI boot partition. 2627 * @param flag 2628 * bit0= The path contains instructions for the interval reader 2629 * See above. 2630 * @since 1.4.0 2631 * All other bits are reserved for future usage. Set them to 0. 2632 * @return 2633 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2634 * 2635 * @since 1.2.4 2636 */ 2637 int iso_write_opts_set_efi_bootp(IsoWriteOpts *opts, char *image_path, 2638 int flag); 2639 2640 /** 2641 * Control whether the emerging GPT gets a pseudo-randomly generated disk GUID 2642 * or whether it gets a user supplied GUID. 2643 * The partition GUIDs will be generated in a reproducible way by exoring the 2644 * little-endian 32 bit partition number with the disk GUID beginning at byte 2645 * offset 9. 2646 * 2647 * @param opts 2648 * The option set to be manipulated. 2649 * @param guid 2650 * 16 bytes of user supplied GUID. Readily byte-swapped from the text 2651 * form as prescribed by UEFI specs: 2652 * 4 byte, 2 byte, 2 byte as little-endian. 2653 * 2 byte, 6 byte as big-endian. 2654 * The upper 4 bit of guid[7] should bear the value 4 to express the 2655 * RFC 4122 version 4. Bit 7 of byte[8] should be set to 1 and bit 6 2656 * be set to 0, in order to express the RFC 4122 variant of UUID, 2657 * where version 4 means "pseudo-random uuid". 2658 * @param mode 2659 * 0 = ignore parameter guid and produce the GPT disk GUID by a 2660 * pseudo-random algorithm. This is the default setting. 2661 * 1 = use parameter guid as GPT disk GUID 2662 * 2 = ignore parameter guid and derive the GPT disk GUID from 2663 * parameter vol_uuid of iso_write_opts_set_pvd_times(). 2664 * The 16 bytes of vol_uuid get copied and bytes 7, 8 get their 2665 * upper bits changed to comply to RFC 4122 and UEFI. 2666 * Error ISO_GPT_NO_VOL_UUID will occur if image production begins 2667 * before vol_uuid was set. 2668 * 2669 * @return 2670 * ISO_SUCCESS or ISO_BAD_GPT_GUID_MODE 2671 * 2672 * @since 1.4.6 2673 */ 2674 int iso_write_opts_set_gpt_guid(IsoWriteOpts *opts, uint8_t guid[16], 2675 int mode); 2676 2677 /** 2678 * Generate a pseudo-random GUID suitable for iso_write_opts_set_gpt_guid(). 2679 * 2680 * @param guid 2681 * Will be filled by 16 bytes of generated GUID. 2682 * 2683 * @since 1.4.6 2684 */ 2685 void iso_generate_gpt_guid(uint8_t guid[16]); 2686 2687 /** 2688 * Cause an arbitrary data file to be appended to the ISO image and to be 2689 * described by a partition table entry in an MBR or SUN Disk Label at the 2690 * start of the ISO image. 2691 * The partition entry will bear the size of the image file rounded up to 2692 * the next multiple of 2048 bytes. 2693 * MBR or SUN Disk Label are selected by iso_write_opts_set_system_area() 2694 * system area type: 0 selects MBR partition table. 3 selects a SUN partition 2695 * table with 320 kB start alignment. 2696 * 2697 * @param opts 2698 * The option set to be manipulated. 2699 * @param partition_number 2700 * Depicts the partition table entry which shall describe the 2701 * appended image. 2702 * Range with MBR: 1 to 4. 1 will cause the whole ISO image to be 2703 * unclaimable space before partition 1. 2704 * Range with SUN Disk Label: 2 to 8. 2705 * @param partition_type 2706 * The MBR partition type. E.g. FAT12 = 0x01 , FAT16 = 0x06, 2707 * Linux Native Partition = 0x83. See fdisk command L. 2708 * This parameter is ignored with SUN Disk Label. 2709 * @param image_path 2710 * File address in the local file system or instructions for interval 2711 * reader. See flag bit0. 2712 * With SUN Disk Label: an empty name causes the partition to become 2713 * a copy of the next lower partition. 2714 * @param flag 2715 * bit0= The path contains instructions for the interval reader 2716 * See above. 2717 * @since 1.4.0 2718 * All other bits are reserved for future usage. Set them to 0. 2719 * @return 2720 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2721 * 2722 * @since 0.6.38 2723 */ 2724 int iso_write_opts_set_partition_img(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int partition_number, 2725 uint8_t partition_type, char *image_path, int flag); 2726 2727 /** 2728 * Control whether partitions created by iso_write_opts_set_partition_img() 2729 * are to be represented in MBR or as GPT partitions. 2730 * 2731 * @param opts 2732 * The option set to be manipulated. 2733 * @param gpt 2734 * 0= represent as MBR partition; as GPT only if other GPT partitions 2735 * are present 2736 * 1= represent as GPT partition and cause protective MBR with a single 2737 * partition which covers the whole output data. 2738 * This may fail if other settings demand MBR partitions. 2739 * @return 2740 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2741 * 2742 * @since 1.4.0 2743 */ 2744 int iso_write_opts_set_appended_as_gpt(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int gpt); 2745 2746 /** 2747 * Set the GPT Type GUID for a partition defined by 2748 * iso_write_opts_set_partition_img(). 2749 * 2750 * @param opts 2751 * The option set to be manipulated. 2752 * @param partition_number 2753 * Depicts the partition table entry which shall get the Type GUID. 2754 * @param guid 2755 * 16 bytes of user supplied GUID. Readily byte-swapped from the text 2756 * form as prescribed by UEFI specs: 2757 * 4 byte, 2 byte, 2 byte as little-endian. 2758 * 2 byte, 6 byte as big-endian. 2759 * @param valid 2760 * Set to 1 to make this Type GUID valid. 2761 * Set to 0 in order to invalidate a previously made setting. In this 2762 * case MBR type 0xEF will become the EFI Type GUID. All others will 2763 * become the Basic Data Partition Type GUID. 2764 * @return 2765 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2766 * 2767 * @since 1.5.2 2768 */ 2769 int iso_write_opts_set_part_type_guid(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int partition_number, 2770 uint8_t guid[16], int valid); 2771 2772 /** 2773 * Control whether partitions created by iso_write_opts_set_partition_img() 2774 * are to be represented in Apple Partition Map. 2775 * 2776 * @param opts 2777 * The option set to be manipulated. 2778 * @param apm 2779 * 0= do not represent appended partitions in APM 2780 * 1= represent in APM, even if not 2781 * iso_write_opts_set_part_like_isohybrid() enables it and no 2782 * other APM partitions emerge. 2783 * @return 2784 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2785 * 2786 * @since 1.4.4 2787 */ 2788 int iso_write_opts_set_appended_as_apm(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int apm); 2789 2790 /** 2791 * Control whether bits 2 to 8 of el_torito_set_isolinux_options() 2792 * shall apply even if not isohybrid MBR patching is enabled (bit1 of 2793 * parameter options of iso_write_opts_set_system_area()): 2794 * - Mentioning of El Torito boot images in GPT. 2795 * - Mentioning of El Torito boot images in APM. 2796 * 2797 * In this case some other behavior from isohybrid processing will apply too: 2798 * - No MBR partition of type 0xee emerges, even if GPT gets produced. 2799 * - Gaps between GPT and APM partitions will not be filled by more partitions. 2800 * 2801 * An extra feature towards isohybrid is enabled: 2802 * - Appended partitions get mentioned in APM if other APM partitions emerge. 2803 * 2804 * @param opts 2805 * The option set to be manipulated. 2806 * @param alike 2807 * 0= Apply the described behavior only with ISOLINUX isohybrid. 2808 * Do not mention appended partitions in APM unless 2809 * iso_write_opts_set_appended_as_apm() is enabled. 2810 * 1= Apply the described behavior even without ISOLINUX isohybrid. 2811 * 2812 * @return 2813 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2814 * 2815 * @since 1.4.4 2816 */ 2817 int iso_write_opts_set_part_like_isohybrid(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int alike); 2818 2819 /** 2820 * Set the partition type of the MBR partition which represents the ISO 2821 * filesystem or at least protects it. 2822 * This is without effect if no such partition emerges by other settings or 2823 * if the partition type is prescribed mandatorily like 0xee for GPT protective 2824 * MBR or 0x96 for CHRP. 2825 * @param opts 2826 * The option set to be manipulated. 2827 * @param part_type 2828 * 0x00 to 0xff as desired partition type. 2829 * Any other value (e.g. -1) enables the default types of the various 2830 * occasions. 2831 * @return 2832 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2833 * @since 1.4.8 2834 */ 2835 int iso_write_opts_set_iso_mbr_part_type(IsoWriteOpts *opts, int part_type); 2836 2837 /** 2838 * Set the GPT Type GUID for the partition which represents the ISO 9660 2839 * filesystem, if such a partition emerges in GPT. 2840 * @param opts 2841 * The option set to be manipulated. 2842 * @param guid 2843 * 16 bytes of user supplied GUID. Readily byte-swapped from the text 2844 * form as prescribed by UEFI specs: 2845 * 4 byte, 2 byte, 2 byte as little-endian. 2846 * 2 byte, 6 byte as big-endian. 2847 * @param valid 2848 * Set to 1 to make this Type GUID valid. 2849 * Set to 0 in order to invalidate a previously made setting. In this 2850 * case the setting of iso_write_opts_set_iso_mbr_part_type() or its 2851 * default will get into effect. 2852 * @return 2853 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 2854 * 2855 * @since 1.5.2 2856 */ 2857 int iso_write_opts_set_iso_type_guid(IsoWriteOpts *opts, uint8_t guid[16], 2858 int valid); 2859 2860 /** 2861 * Inquire the start address of the file data blocks after having used 2862 * IsoWriteOpts with iso_image_create_burn_source(). 2863 * @param opts 2864 * The option set that was used when starting image creation 2865 * @param data_start 2866 * Returns the logical block address if it is already valid 2867 * @param flag 2868 * Reserved for future usage, set to 0. 2869 * @return 2870 * 1 indicates valid data_start, <0 indicates invalid data_start 2871 * 2872 * @since 0.6.16 2873 */ 2874 int iso_write_opts_get_data_start(IsoWriteOpts *opts, uint32_t *data_start, 2875 int flag); 2876 2877 /** 2878 * Update the sizes of all files added to image. 2879 * 2880 * This may be called just before iso_image_create_burn_source() to force 2881 * libisofs to check the file sizes again (they're already checked when added 2882 * to IsoImage). It is useful if you have changed some files after adding then 2883 * to the image. 2884 * 2885 * @return 2886 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 2887 * @since 0.6.8 2888 */ 2889 int iso_image_update_sizes(IsoImage *image); 2890 2891 /** 2892 * Create a burn_source and a thread which immediately begins to generate 2893 * the image. That burn_source can be used with libburn as a data source 2894 * for a track. A copy of its public declaration in libburn.h can be found 2895 * further below in this text. 2896 * 2897 * If image generation shall be aborted by the application program, then 2898 * the .cancel() method of the burn_source must be called to end the 2899 * generation thread: burn_src->cancel(burn_src); 2900 * 2901 * @param image 2902 * The image to write. 2903 * @param opts 2904 * The options for image generation. All needed data will be copied, so 2905 * you can free the given struct once this function returns. 2906 * @param burn_src 2907 * Location where the pointer to the burn_source will be stored 2908 * @return 2909 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 2910 * 2911 * @since 0.6.2 2912 */ 2913 int iso_image_create_burn_source(IsoImage *image, IsoWriteOpts *opts, 2914 struct burn_source **burn_src); 2915 2916 /** 2917 * Inquire whether the image generator thread is still at work. As soon as the 2918 * reply is 0, the caller of iso_image_create_burn_source() may assume that 2919 * the image generation has ended. 2920 * Nevertheless there may still be readily formatted output data pending in 2921 * the burn_source or its consumers. So the final delivery of the image has 2922 * also to be checked at the data consumer side,e.g. by burn_drive_get_status() 2923 * in case of libburn as consumer. 2924 * @param image 2925 * The image to inquire. 2926 * @return 2927 * 1 generating of image stream is still in progress 2928 * 0 generating of image stream has ended meanwhile 2929 * 2930 * @since 0.6.38 2931 */ 2932 int iso_image_generator_is_running(IsoImage *image); 2933 2934 /** 2935 * Creates an IsoReadOpts for reading an existent image. You should set the 2936 * options desired with the correspondent setters. Note that you may want to 2937 * set the start block value. 2938 * 2939 * Options by default are determined by the selected profile. 2940 * 2941 * @param opts 2942 * Pointer to the location where the newly created IsoReadOpts will be 2943 * stored. You should free it with iso_read_opts_free() when no more 2944 * needed. 2945 * @param profile 2946 * Default profile for image reading. For now the following values are 2947 * defined: 2948 * ---> 0 [STANDARD] 2949 * Suitable for most situations. Most extension are read. When both 2950 * Joliet and RR extension are present, RR is used. 2951 * AAIP for ACL and xattr is not enabled by default. 2952 * @return 2953 * 1 success, < 0 error 2954 * 2955 * @since 0.6.2 2956 */ 2957 int iso_read_opts_new(IsoReadOpts **opts, int profile); 2958 2959 /** 2960 * Free an IsoReadOpts previously allocated with iso_read_opts_new(). 2961 * 2962 * @since 0.6.2 2963 */ 2964 void iso_read_opts_free(IsoReadOpts *opts); 2965 2966 /** 2967 * Set the block where the image begins. It is usually 0, but may be different 2968 * on a multisession disc. 2969 * 2970 * @since 0.6.2 2971 */ 2972 int iso_read_opts_set_start_block(IsoReadOpts *opts, uint32_t block); 2973 2974 /** 2975 * Do not read Rock Ridge extensions. 2976 * In most cases you don't want to use this. It could be useful if RR info 2977 * is damaged, or if you want to use the Joliet tree. 2978 * 2979 * @since 0.6.2 2980 */ 2981 int iso_read_opts_set_no_rockridge(IsoReadOpts *opts, int norr); 2982 2983 /** 2984 * Do not read Joliet extensions. 2985 * 2986 * @since 0.6.2 2987 */ 2988 int iso_read_opts_set_no_joliet(IsoReadOpts *opts, int nojoliet); 2989 2990 /** 2991 * Do not read ISO 9660:1999 enhanced tree 2992 * 2993 * @since 0.6.2 2994 */ 2995 int iso_read_opts_set_no_iso1999(IsoReadOpts *opts, int noiso1999); 2996 2997 /** 2998 * Control reading of AAIP information about ACL and xattr when loading 2999 * existing images. 3000 * For importing ACL and xattr when inserting nodes from external filesystems 3001 * (e.g. the local POSIX filesystem) see iso_image_set_ignore_aclea(). 3002 * For eventual writing of this information see iso_write_opts_set_aaip(). 3003 * 3004 * @param opts 3005 * The option set to be manipulated 3006 * @param noaaip 3007 * 1 = Do not read AAIP information 3008 * 0 = Read AAIP information if available 3009 * All other values are reserved. 3010 * @since 0.6.14 3011 */ 3012 int iso_read_opts_set_no_aaip(IsoReadOpts *opts, int noaaip); 3013 3014 /** 3015 * Control reading of an array of MD5 checksums which is eventually stored 3016 * at the end of a session. See also iso_write_opts_set_record_md5(). 3017 * Important: Loading of the MD5 array will only work if AAIP is enabled 3018 * because its position and layout is recorded in xattr "isofs.ca". 3019 * 3020 * @param opts 3021 * The option set to be manipulated 3022 * @param no_md5 3023 * 0 = Read MD5 array if available, refuse on non-matching MD5 tags 3024 * 1 = Do not read MD5 checksum array 3025 * 2 = Read MD5 array, but do not check MD5 tags 3026 * @since 1.0.4 3027 * All other values are reserved. 3028 * 3029 * @since 0.6.22 3030 */ 3031 int iso_read_opts_set_no_md5(IsoReadOpts *opts, int no_md5); 3032 3033 3034 /** 3035 * Control discarding of eventual inode numbers from existing images. 3036 * Such numbers may come from RRIP 1.12 entries PX. If not discarded they 3037 * get written unchanged when the file object gets written into an ISO image. 3038 * If this inode number is missing with a file in the imported image, 3039 * or if it has been discarded during image reading, then a unique inode number 3040 * will be generated at some time before the file gets written into an ISO 3041 * image. 3042 * Two image nodes which have the same inode number represent two hardlinks 3043 * of the same file object. So discarding the numbers splits hardlinks. 3044 * 3045 * @param opts 3046 * The option set to be manipulated 3047 * @param new_inos 3048 * 1 = Discard imported inode numbers and finally hand out a unique new 3049 * one to each single file before it gets written into an ISO image. 3050 * 0 = Keep eventual inode numbers from PX entries. 3051 * All other values are reserved. 3052 * @since 0.6.20 3053 */ 3054 int iso_read_opts_set_new_inos(IsoReadOpts *opts, int new_inos); 3055 3056 /** 3057 * Whether to prefer Joliet over RR. libisofs usually prefers RR over 3058 * Joliet, as it give us much more info about files. So, if both extensions 3059 * are present, RR is used. You can set this if you prefer Joliet, but 3060 * note that this is not very recommended. This doesn't mean than RR 3061 * extensions are not read: if no Joliet is present, libisofs will read 3062 * RR tree. 3063 * 3064 * @since 0.6.2 3065 */ 3066 int iso_read_opts_set_preferjoliet(IsoReadOpts *opts, int preferjoliet); 3067 3068 /** 3069 * How to convert file names if neither Rock Ridge nor Joliet names 3070 * are present and acceptable. 3071 * 3072 * @param opts 3073 * The option set to be manipulated 3074 * @param ecma119_map 3075 * The conversion mode to apply: 3076 * 0 = unmapped: Take name as recorded in ECMA-119 directory record 3077 * (not suitable for writing it to a new ISO filesystem) 3078 * 1 = stripped: Like unmapped, but strip off trailing ";1" or ".;1" 3079 * 2 = uppercase: Like stripped, but map {a-z} to {A-Z} 3080 * 3 = lowercase: Like stripped, but map {A-Z} to {a-z} 3081 * @return 3082 * ISO_SUCCESS if ecma119_map was accepted 3083 * 0 if the value was out of range 3084 * < 0 if other error 3085 * 3086 * @since 1.4.2 3087 */ 3088 int iso_read_opts_set_ecma119_map(IsoReadOpts *opts, int ecma119_map); 3089 3090 /** 3091 * How to convert Joliet file names. 3092 * 3093 * @param opts 3094 * The option set to be manipulated 3095 * @param ecma119_map 3096 * The conversion mode to apply: 3097 * 0 = unmapped: Take name as recorded in Joliet directory record 3098 * (not suitable for writing it to a new ISO filesystem) 3099 * 1 = stripped: Strip off trailing ";1" or ".;1" 3100 * @return 3101 * ISO_SUCCESS if joliet_map was accepted 3102 * 0 if the value was out of range 3103 * < 0 if other error 3104 * 3105 * @since 1.5.4 3106 */ 3107 int iso_read_opts_set_joliet_map(IsoReadOpts *opts, int joliet_map); 3108 3109 /** 3110 * Set default uid for files when RR extensions are not present. 3111 * 3112 * @since 0.6.2 3113 */ 3114 int iso_read_opts_set_default_uid(IsoReadOpts *opts, uid_t uid); 3115 3116 /** 3117 * Set default gid for files when RR extensions are not present. 3118 * 3119 * @since 0.6.2 3120 */ 3121 int iso_read_opts_set_default_gid(IsoReadOpts *opts, gid_t gid); 3122 3123 /** 3124 * Set default permissions for files when RR extensions are not present. 3125 * 3126 * @param opts 3127 * The option set to be manipulated 3128 * @param file_perm 3129 * Permissions for files. 3130 * @param dir_perm 3131 * Permissions for directories. 3132 * 3133 * @since 0.6.2 3134 */ 3135 int iso_read_opts_set_default_permissions(IsoReadOpts *opts, mode_t file_perm, 3136 mode_t dir_perm); 3137 3138 /** 3139 * Set the input charset of the file names on the image. NULL to use locale 3140 * charset. You have to specify a charset if the image filenames are encoded 3141 * in a charset different that the local one. This could happen, for example, 3142 * if the image was created on a system with different charset. 3143 * 3144 * @param opts 3145 * The option set to be manipulated 3146 * @param charset 3147 * The charset to use as input charset. You can obtain the list of 3148 * charsets supported on your system executing "iconv -l" in a shell. 3149 * 3150 * @since 0.6.2 3151 */ 3152 int iso_read_opts_set_input_charset(IsoReadOpts *opts, const char *charset); 3153 3154 /** 3155 * Enable or disable methods to automatically choose an input charset. 3156 * This eventually overrides the name set via iso_read_opts_set_input_charset() 3157 * 3158 * @param opts 3159 * The option set to be manipulated 3160 * @param mode 3161 * Bitfield for control purposes: 3162 * bit0= Allow to use the input character set name which is eventually 3163 * stored in attribute "isofs.cs" of the root directory. 3164 * Applications may attach this xattr by iso_node_set_attrs() to 3165 * the root node, call iso_write_opts_set_output_charset() with the 3166 * same name and enable iso_write_opts_set_aaip() when writing 3167 * an image. 3168 * Submit any other bits with value 0. 3169 * 3170 * @since 0.6.18 3171 * 3172 */ 3173 int iso_read_opts_auto_input_charset(IsoReadOpts *opts, int mode); 3174 3175 /** 3176 * Enable or disable loading of the first 32768 bytes of the session. 3177 * 3178 * @param opts 3179 * The option set to be manipulated 3180 * @param mode 3181 * Bitfield for control purposes: 3182 * bit0= Load System Area data and attach them to the image so that they 3183 * get written by the next session, if not overridden by 3184 * iso_write_opts_set_system_area(). 3185 * Submit any other bits with value 0. 3186 * 3187 * @since 0.6.30 3188 * 3189 */ 3190 int iso_read_opts_load_system_area(IsoReadOpts *opts, int mode); 3191 3192 /** 3193 * Control whether to keep a reference to the IsoDataSource object which 3194 * allows access to the blocks of the imported ISO 9660 filesystem. 3195 * This is needed if the interval reader shall read from "imported_iso". 3196 * 3197 * @param opts 3198 * The option set to be manipulated 3199 * @param mode 3200 * Bitfield for control purposes: 3201 * bit0= Keep a reference to the IsoDataSource until the IsoImage object 3202 * gets disposed by its final iso_image_unref(). 3203 * Submit any other bits with value 0. 3204 * 3205 * @since 1.4.0 3206 * 3207 */ 3208 int iso_read_opts_keep_import_src(IsoReadOpts *opts, int mode); 3209 3210 /** 3211 * Import a previous session or image, for growing or modify. 3212 * 3213 * @param image 3214 * The image context to which old image will be imported. Note that all 3215 * files added to image, and image attributes, will be replaced with the 3216 * contents of the old image. 3217 * TODO #00025 support for merging old image files 3218 * @param src 3219 * Data Source from which old image will be read. A extra reference is 3220 * added, so you still need to iso_data_source_unref() yours. 3221 * @param opts 3222 * Options for image import. All needed data will be copied, so you 3223 * can free the given struct once this function returns. 3224 * @param features 3225 * If not NULL, a new IsoReadImageFeatures will be allocated and filled 3226 * with the features of the old image. It should be freed with 3227 * iso_read_image_features_destroy() when no more needed. You can pass 3228 * NULL if you're not interested on them. 3229 * @return 3230 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 3231 * 3232 * @since 0.6.2 3233 */ 3234 int iso_image_import(IsoImage *image, IsoDataSource *src, IsoReadOpts *opts, 3235 IsoReadImageFeatures **features); 3236 3237 /** 3238 * Destroy an IsoReadImageFeatures object obtained with iso_image_import. 3239 * 3240 * @since 0.6.2 3241 */ 3242 void iso_read_image_features_destroy(IsoReadImageFeatures *f); 3243 3244 /** 3245 * Get the size (in 2048 byte block) of the image, as reported in the PVM. 3246 * 3247 * @since 0.6.2 3248 */ 3249 uint32_t iso_read_image_features_get_size(IsoReadImageFeatures *f); 3250 3251 /** 3252 * Whether RockRidge extensions are present in the image imported. 3253 * 3254 * @since 0.6.2 3255 */ 3256 int iso_read_image_features_has_rockridge(IsoReadImageFeatures *f); 3257 3258 /** 3259 * Whether Joliet extensions are present in the image imported. 3260 * 3261 * @since 0.6.2 3262 */ 3263 int iso_read_image_features_has_joliet(IsoReadImageFeatures *f); 3264 3265 /** 3266 * Whether the image is recorded according to ISO 9660:1999, i.e. it has 3267 * a version 2 Enhanced Volume Descriptor. 3268 * 3269 * @since 0.6.2 3270 */ 3271 int iso_read_image_features_has_iso1999(IsoReadImageFeatures *f); 3272 3273 /** 3274 * Whether El-Torito boot record is present present in the image imported. 3275 * 3276 * @since 0.6.2 3277 */ 3278 int iso_read_image_features_has_eltorito(IsoReadImageFeatures *f); 3279 3280 /** 3281 * Tells what directory tree was loaded: 3282 * 0= ISO 9660 , 1 = Joliet , 2 = ISO 9660:1999 3283 * 3284 * @since 1.5.4 3285 */ 3286 int iso_read_image_features_tree_loaded(IsoReadImageFeatures *f); 3287 3288 /** 3289 * Tells whether Rock Ridge information was used while loading the tree: 3290 * 1= yes, 0= no 3291 * 3292 * @since 1.5.4 3293 */ 3294 int iso_read_image_features_rr_loaded(IsoReadImageFeatures *f); 3295 3296 /** 3297 * Increments the reference counting of the given image. 3298 * 3299 * @since 0.6.2 3300 */ 3301 void iso_image_ref(IsoImage *image); 3302 3303 /** 3304 * Decrements the reference counting of the given image. 3305 * If it reaches 0, the image is free, together with its tree nodes (whether 3306 * their refcount reach 0 too, of course). 3307 * 3308 * @since 0.6.2 3309 */ 3310 void iso_image_unref(IsoImage *image); 3311 3312 /** 3313 * Attach user defined data to the image. Use this if your application needs 3314 * to store addition info together with the IsoImage. If the image already 3315 * has data attached, the old data will be freed. 3316 * 3317 * @param image 3318 * The image to which data shall be attached. 3319 * @param data 3320 * Pointer to application defined data that will be attached to the 3321 * image. You can pass NULL to remove any already attached data. 3322 * @param give_up 3323 * Function that will be called when the image does not need the data 3324 * any more. It receives the data pointer as an argumente, and eventually 3325 * causes data to be freed. It can be NULL if you don't need it. 3326 * @return 3327 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 3328 * 3329 * @since 0.6.2 3330 */ 3331 int iso_image_attach_data(IsoImage *image, void *data, void (*give_up)(void*)); 3332 3333 /** 3334 * The the data previously attached with iso_image_attach_data() 3335 * 3336 * @since 0.6.2 3337 */ 3338 void *iso_image_get_attached_data(IsoImage *image); 3339 3340 /** 3341 * Set the name truncation mode and the maximum name length for nodes from 3342 * image importing, creation of new IsoNode objects, and name changing image 3343 * manipulations. 3344 * 3345 * Truncated names are supposed to be nearly unique because they end by the MD5 3346 * of the first 4095 characters of the untruncated name. One should treat them 3347 * as if they were the untruncated original names. 3348 * 3349 * For proper processing of truncated names it is necessary to use 3350 * iso_image_set_node_name() instead of iso_node_set_name() 3351 * iso_image_add_new_dir() iso_tree_add_new_dir() 3352 * iso_image_add_new_file() iso_tree_add_new_file() 3353 * iso_image_add_new_special() iso_tree_add_new_special() 3354 * iso_image_add_new_symlink() iso_tree_add_new_symlink() 3355 * iso_image_tree_clone() iso_tree_clone() 3356 * iso_image_dir_get_node() iso_dir_get_node() 3357 * iso_image_path_to_node() iso_tree_path_to_node() 3358 * 3359 * Beware of ambiguities if both, the full name and the truncated name, 3360 * exist in the same directory. Best is to only set truncation parameters 3361 * once with an ISO filesystem and to never change them later. 3362 * 3363 * If writing of AAIP is enabled, then the mode and length are recorded in 3364 * xattr "isofs.nt" of the root node. 3365 * If reading of AAIP is enabled and "isofs.nt" is found, then it gets into 3366 * effect if both, the truncate mode value from "isofs.nt" and the current 3367 * truncate mode of the IsoImage are 1, and the length is between 64 and 255. 3368 * 3369 * @param img 3370 * The image which shall be manipulated. 3371 * @param mode 3372 * 0= Do not truncate but throw error ISO_RR_NAME_TOO_LONG if a file name 3373 * is longer than parameter length. 3374 * 1= Truncate to length and overwrite the last 33 bytes of that length 3375 * by a colon ':' and the hex representation of the MD5 of the first 3376 * 4095 bytes of the whole oversized name. 3377 * Potential incomplete UTF-8 characters will get their leading bytes 3378 * replaced by '_'. 3379 * Mode 1 is the default. 3380 * @param length 3381 * Maximum byte count of a file name. Permissible values are 64 to 255. 3382 * Default is 255. 3383 * @return 3384 * ISO_SUCCESS or ISO_WRONG_ARG_VALUE 3385 * 3386 * @since 1.4.2 3387 */ 3388 int iso_image_set_truncate_mode(IsoImage *img, int mode, int length); 3389 3390 /** 3391 * Inquire the current setting of iso_image_set_truncate_mode(). 3392 * 3393 * @param img 3394 * The image which shall be inquired. 3395 * @param mode 3396 * Returns the mode value. 3397 * @param length 3398 * Returns the length value. 3399 * @return 3400 * ISO_SUCCESS or <0 = error 3401 * 3402 * @since 1.4.2 3403 */ 3404 int iso_image_get_truncate_mode(IsoImage *img, int *mode, int *length); 3405 3406 /** 3407 * Immediately apply the given truncate mode and length to the given string. 3408 * 3409 * @param mode 3410 * See iso_image_set_truncate_mode() 3411 * @param length 3412 * See iso_image_set_truncate_mode() 3413 * @param name 3414 * The string to be inspected and truncated if mode says so. 3415 * @param flag 3416 * Bitfield for control purposes. Unused yet. Submit 0. 3417 * @return 3418 * ISO_SUCCESS, ISO_WRONG_ARG_VALUE, ISO_RR_NAME_TOO_LONG 3419 * 3420 * @since 1.4.2 3421 */ 3422 int iso_truncate_leaf_name(int mode, int length, char *name, int flag); 3423 3424 /** 3425 * Get the root directory of the image. 3426 * No extra ref is added to it, so you must not unref it. Use iso_node_ref() 3427 * if you want to get your own reference. 3428 * 3429 * @since 0.6.2 3430 */ 3431 IsoDir *iso_image_get_root(const IsoImage *image); 3432 3433 /** 3434 * Fill in the volset identifier for a image. 3435 * 3436 * @since 0.6.2 3437 */ 3438 void iso_image_set_volset_id(IsoImage *image, const char *volset_id); 3439 3440 /** 3441 * Get the volset identifier. 3442 * The returned string is owned by the image and must not be freed nor 3443 * changed. 3444 * 3445 * @since 0.6.2 3446 */ 3447 const char *iso_image_get_volset_id(const IsoImage *image); 3448 3449 /** 3450 * Fill in the volume identifier for a image. 3451 * 3452 * @since 0.6.2 3453 */ 3454 void iso_image_set_volume_id(IsoImage *image, const char *volume_id); 3455 3456 /** 3457 * Get the volume identifier. 3458 * The returned string is owned by the image and must not be freed nor 3459 * changed. 3460 * 3461 * @since 0.6.2 3462 */ 3463 const char *iso_image_get_volume_id(const IsoImage *image); 3464 3465 /** 3466 * Fill in the publisher for a image. 3467 * 3468 * @since 0.6.2 3469 */ 3470 void iso_image_set_publisher_id(IsoImage *image, const char *publisher_id); 3471 3472 /** 3473 * Get the publisher of a image. 3474 * The returned string is owned by the image and must not be freed nor 3475 * changed. 3476 * 3477 * @since 0.6.2 3478 */ 3479 const char *iso_image_get_publisher_id(const IsoImage *image); 3480 3481 /** 3482 * Fill in the data preparer for a image. 3483 * 3484 * @since 0.6.2 3485 */ 3486 void iso_image_set_data_preparer_id(IsoImage *image, 3487 const char *data_preparer_id); 3488 3489 /** 3490 * Get the data preparer of a image. 3491 * The returned string is owned by the image and must not be freed nor 3492 * changed. 3493 * 3494 * @since 0.6.2 3495 */ 3496 const char *iso_image_get_data_preparer_id(const IsoImage *image); 3497 3498 /** 3499 * Fill in the system id for a image. Up to 32 characters. 3500 * 3501 * @since 0.6.2 3502 */ 3503 void iso_image_set_system_id(IsoImage *image, const char *system_id); 3504 3505 /** 3506 * Get the system id of a image. 3507 * The returned string is owned by the image and must not be freed nor 3508 * changed. 3509 * 3510 * @since 0.6.2 3511 */ 3512 const char *iso_image_get_system_id(const IsoImage *image); 3513 3514 /** 3515 * Fill in the application id for a image. Up to 128 chars. 3516 * 3517 * @since 0.6.2 3518 */ 3519 void iso_image_set_application_id(IsoImage *image, const char *application_id); 3520 3521 /** 3522 * Get the application id of a image. 3523 * The returned string is owned by the image and must not be freed nor 3524 * changed. 3525 * 3526 * @since 0.6.2 3527 */ 3528 const char *iso_image_get_application_id(const IsoImage *image); 3529 3530 /** 3531 * Fill copyright information for the image. Usually this refers 3532 * to a file on disc. Up to 37 characters. 3533 * 3534 * @since 0.6.2 3535 */ 3536 void iso_image_set_copyright_file_id(IsoImage *image, 3537 const char *copyright_file_id); 3538 3539 /** 3540 * Get the copyright information of a image. 3541 * The returned string is owned by the image and must not be freed nor 3542 * changed. 3543 * 3544 * @since 0.6.2 3545 */ 3546 const char *iso_image_get_copyright_file_id(const IsoImage *image); 3547 3548 /** 3549 * Fill abstract information for the image. Usually this refers 3550 * to a file on disc. Up to 37 characters. 3551 * 3552 * @since 0.6.2 3553 */ 3554 void iso_image_set_abstract_file_id(IsoImage *image, 3555 const char *abstract_file_id); 3556 3557 /** 3558 * Get the abstract information of a image. 3559 * The returned string is owned by the image and must not be freed nor 3560 * changed. 3561 * 3562 * @since 0.6.2 3563 */ 3564 const char *iso_image_get_abstract_file_id(const IsoImage *image); 3565 3566 /** 3567 * Fill biblio information for the image. Usually this refers 3568 * to a file on disc. Up to 37 characters. 3569 * 3570 * @since 0.6.2 3571 */ 3572 void iso_image_set_biblio_file_id(IsoImage *image, const char *biblio_file_id); 3573 3574 /** 3575 * Get the biblio information of a image. 3576 * The returned string is owned by the image and must not be freed or changed. 3577 * 3578 * @since 0.6.2 3579 */ 3580 const char *iso_image_get_biblio_file_id(const IsoImage *image); 3581 3582 /** 3583 * Fill Application Use field of the Primary Volume Descriptor. 3584 * ECMA-119 8.4.32 Application Use (BP 884 to 1395) 3585 * "This field shall be reserved for application use. Its content 3586 * is not specified by this Standard." 3587 * 3588 * @param image 3589 * The image to manipulate. 3590 * @param app_use_data 3591 * Up to 512 bytes of data. 3592 * @param count 3593 * The number of bytes in app_use_data. If the number is smaller than 512, 3594 * then the remaining bytes will be set to 0. 3595 * @since 1.3.2 3596 */ 3597 void iso_image_set_app_use(IsoImage *image, const char *app_use_data, 3598 int count); 3599 3600 /** 3601 * Get the current setting for the Application Use field of the Primary Volume 3602 * Descriptor. 3603 * The returned char array of 512 bytes is owned by the image and must not 3604 * be freed or changed. 3605 * 3606 * @param image 3607 * The image to inquire 3608 * @since 1.3.2 3609 */ 3610 const char *iso_image_get_app_use(IsoImage *image); 3611 3612 /** 3613 * Get the four timestamps from the Primary Volume Descriptor of the imported 3614 * ISO image. The timestamps are strings which are either empty or consist 3615 * of 16 digits of the form YYYYMMDDhhmmsscc, plus a signed byte in the range 3616 * of -48 to +52, which gives the timezone offset in steps of 15 minutes. 3617 * None of the returned string pointers shall be used for altering or freeing 3618 * data. They are just for reading. 3619 * 3620 * @param image 3621 * The image to be inquired. 3622 * @param creation_time 3623 * Returns a pointer to the Volume Creation time: 3624 * When "the information in the volume was created." 3625 * @param modification_time 3626 * Returns a pointer to Volume Modification time: 3627 * When "the information in the volume was last modified." 3628 * @param expiration_time 3629 * Returns a pointer to Volume Expiration time: 3630 * When "the information in the volume may be regarded as obsolete." 3631 * @param effective_time 3632 * Returns a pointer to Volume Expiration time: 3633 * When "the information in the volume may be used." 3634 * @return 3635 * ISO_SUCCESS or error 3636 * 3637 * @since 1.2.8 3638 */ 3639 int iso_image_get_pvd_times(IsoImage *image, 3640 char **creation_time, char **modification_time, 3641 char **expiration_time, char **effective_time); 3642 3643 /** 3644 * Create a new set of El-Torito bootable images by adding a boot catalog 3645 * and the default boot image. 3646 * Further boot images may then be added by iso_image_add_boot_image(). 3647 * 3648 * @param image 3649 * The image to make bootable. If it was already bootable this function 3650 * returns an error and the image remains unmodified. 3651 * @param image_path 3652 * The absolute path of a IsoFile to be used as default boot image or 3653 * --interval:appended_partition_$number[_start_$start_size_$size]:... 3654 * if type is ELTORITO_NO_EMUL. $number gives the partition number. 3655 * If _start_$start_size_$size is present, then it overrides the 2 KiB 3656 * start block of the partition and the partition size counted in 3657 * blocks of 512 bytes. 3658 * @param type 3659 * The boot media type. This can be one of 3 types: 3660 * - ELTORITO_FLOPPY_EMUL. 3661 * Floppy emulation: Boot image file must be exactly 3662 * 1200 KiB, 1440 KiB or 2880 KiB. 3663 * - ELTORITO_HARD_DISC_EMUL. 3664 * Hard disc emulation: The image must begin with a master 3665 * boot record with a single image. 3666 * - ELTORITO_NO_EMUL. 3667 * No emulation. You should specify load segment and load size 3668 * of image. 3669 * @param catalog_path 3670 * The absolute path in the image tree where the catalog will be stored. 3671 * The directory component of this path must be a directory existent on 3672 * the image tree, and the filename component must be unique among all 3673 * children of that directory on image. Otherwise a correspodent error 3674 * code will be returned. This function will add an IsoBoot node that acts 3675 * as a placeholder for the real catalog, that will be generated at image 3676 * creation time. 3677 * @param boot 3678 * Location where a pointer to the added boot image will be stored. That 3679 * object is owned by the IsoImage and must not be freed by the user, 3680 * nor dereferenced once the last reference to the IsoImage was disposed 3681 * via iso_image_unref(). A NULL value is allowed if you don't need a 3682 * reference to the boot image. 3683 * @return 3684 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 3685 * 3686 * @since 0.6.2 3687 */ 3688 int iso_image_set_boot_image(IsoImage *image, const char *image_path, 3689 enum eltorito_boot_media_type type, 3690 const char *catalog_path, 3691 ElToritoBootImage **boot); 3692 3693 /** 3694 * Add a further boot image to the set of El-Torito bootable images. 3695 * This set has already to be created by iso_image_set_boot_image(). 3696 * Up to 31 further boot images may be added. 3697 * 3698 * @param image 3699 * The image to which the boot image shall be added. 3700 * returns an error and the image remains unmodified. 3701 * @param image_path 3702 * The absolute path of a IsoFile to be used as boot image or 3703 * --interval:appended_partition_$number[_start_$start_size_$size]:... 3704 * if type is ELTORITO_NO_EMUL. See iso_image_set_boot_image. 3705 * @param type 3706 * The boot media type. See iso_image_set_boot_image. 3707 * @param flag 3708 * Bitfield for control purposes. Unused yet. Submit 0. 3709 * @param boot 3710 * Location where a pointer to the added boot image will be stored. 3711 * See iso_image_set_boot_image 3712 * @return 3713 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 3714 * ISO_BOOT_NO_CATALOG means iso_image_set_boot_image() 3715 * was not called first. 3716 * 3717 * @since 0.6.32 3718 */ 3719 int iso_image_add_boot_image(IsoImage *image, const char *image_path, 3720 enum eltorito_boot_media_type type, int flag, 3721 ElToritoBootImage **boot); 3722 3723 /** 3724 * Get the El-Torito boot catalog and the default boot image of an ISO image. 3725 * 3726 * This can be useful, for example, to check if a volume read from a previous 3727 * session or an existing image is bootable. It can also be useful to get 3728 * the image and catalog tree nodes. An application would want those, for 3729 * example, to prevent the user removing it. 3730 * 3731 * Both nodes are owned by libisofs and must not be freed. You can get your 3732 * own ref with iso_node_ref(). You can also check if the node is already 3733 * on the tree by getting its parent (note that when reading El-Torito info 3734 * from a previous image, the nodes might not be on the tree even if you haven't 3735 * removed them). Remember that you'll need to get a new ref 3736 * (with iso_node_ref()) before inserting them again to the tree, and probably 3737 * you will also need to set the name or permissions. 3738 * 3739 * @param image 3740 * The image from which to get the boot image. 3741 * @param boot 3742 * If not NULL, it will be filled with a pointer to the boot image, if 3743 * any. That object is owned by the IsoImage and must not be freed by 3744 * the user, nor dereferenced once the last reference to the IsoImage was 3745 * disposed via iso_image_unref(). 3746 * @param imgnode 3747 * When not NULL, it will be filled with the image tree node. No extra ref 3748 * is added, you can use iso_node_ref() to get one if you need it. 3749 * The returned value is NULL if the boot image source is no IsoFile. 3750 * @param catnode 3751 * When not NULL, it will be filled with the catnode tree node. No extra 3752 * ref is added, you can use iso_node_ref() to get one if you need it. 3753 * @return 3754 * 1 on success, 0 is the image is not bootable (i.e., it has no El-Torito 3755 * image), < 0 error. 3756 * 3757 * @since 0.6.2 3758 */ 3759 int iso_image_get_boot_image(IsoImage *image, ElToritoBootImage **boot, 3760 IsoFile **imgnode, IsoBoot **catnode); 3761 3762 /** 3763 * Get detailed information about the boot catalog that was loaded from 3764 * an ISO image. 3765 * The boot catalog links the El Torito boot record at LBA 17 with the 3766 * boot images which are IsoFile objects in the image. The boot catalog 3767 * itself is not a regular file and thus will not deliver an IsoStream. 3768 * Its content is usually quite short and can be obtained by this call. 3769 * 3770 * @param image 3771 * The image to inquire. 3772 * @param catnode 3773 * Will return the boot catalog tree node. No extra ref is taken. 3774 * @param lba 3775 * Will return the block address of the boot catalog in the image. 3776 * @param content 3777 * Will return either NULL or an allocated memory buffer with the 3778 * content bytes of the boot catalog. 3779 * Dispose it by free() when no longer needed. 3780 * @param size 3781 * Will return the number of bytes in content. 3782 * @return 3783 * 1 if reply is valid, 0 if not boot catalog was loaded, < 0 on error. 3784 * 3785 * @since 1.1.2 3786 */ 3787 int iso_image_get_bootcat(IsoImage *image, IsoBoot **catnode, uint32_t *lba, 3788 char **content, off_t *size); 3789 3790 3791 /** 3792 * Get all El-Torito boot images of an ISO image. 3793 * 3794 * The first of these boot images is the same as returned by 3795 * iso_image_get_boot_image(). The others are alternative boot images. 3796 * 3797 * @param image 3798 * The image from which to get the boot images. 3799 * @param num_boots 3800 * The number of available array elements in boots and bootnodes. 3801 * @param boots 3802 * Returns NULL or an allocated array of pointers to boot images. 3803 * Apply system call free(boots) to dispose it. 3804 * @param bootnodes 3805 * Returns NULL or an allocated array of pointers to the IsoFile nodes 3806 * which bear the content of the boot images in boots. 3807 * An array entry is NULL if the boot image source is no IsoFile. 3808 3809 >>> Need getter for partition index 3810 3811 * @param flag 3812 * Bitfield for control purposes. Unused yet. Submit 0. 3813 * @return 3814 * 1 on success, 0 no El-Torito catalog and boot image attached, 3815 * < 0 error. 3816 * 3817 * @since 0.6.32 3818 */ 3819 int iso_image_get_all_boot_imgs(IsoImage *image, int *num_boots, 3820 ElToritoBootImage ***boots, IsoFile ***bootnodes, int flag); 3821 3822 3823 /** 3824 * Removes all El-Torito boot images from the ISO image. 3825 * 3826 * The IsoBoot node that acts as placeholder for the catalog is also removed 3827 * for the image tree, if there. 3828 * If the image is not bootable (don't have el-torito boot image) this function 3829 * just returns. 3830 * 3831 * @since 0.6.2 3832 */ 3833 void iso_image_remove_boot_image(IsoImage *image); 3834 3835 /** 3836 * Sets the sort weight of the boot catalog that is attached to an IsoImage. 3837 * 3838 * For the meaning of sort weights see iso_node_set_sort_weight(). 3839 * That function cannot be applied to the emerging boot catalog because 3840 * it is not represented by an IsoFile. 3841 * 3842 * @param image 3843 * The image to manipulate. 3844 * @param sort_weight 3845 * The larger this value, the lower will be the block address of the 3846 * boot catalog record. 3847 * @return 3848 * 0= no boot catalog attached , 1= ok , <0 = error 3849 * 3850 * @since 0.6.32 3851 */ 3852 int iso_image_set_boot_catalog_weight(IsoImage *image, int sort_weight); 3853 3854 /** 3855 * Hides the boot catalog file from directory trees. 3856 * 3857 * For the meaning of hiding files see iso_node_set_hidden(). 3858 * 3859 * 3860 * @param image 3861 * The image to manipulate. 3862 * @param hide_attrs 3863 * Or-combination of values from enum IsoHideNodeFlag to set the trees 3864 * in which the record. 3865 * @return 3866 * 0= no boot catalog attached , 1= ok , <0 = error 3867 * 3868 * @since 0.6.34 3869 */ 3870 int iso_image_set_boot_catalog_hidden(IsoImage *image, int hide_attrs); 3871 3872 3873 /** 3874 * Get the boot media type as of parameter "type" of iso_image_set_boot_image() 3875 * or iso_image_add_boot_image(). 3876 * 3877 * @param bootimg 3878 * The image to inquire 3879 * @param media_type 3880 * Returns the media type 3881 * @return 3882 * 1 = ok , < 0 = error 3883 * 3884 * @since 0.6.32 3885 */ 3886 int el_torito_get_boot_media_type(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, 3887 enum eltorito_boot_media_type *media_type); 3888 3889 /** 3890 * Sets the platform ID of the boot image. 3891 * 3892 * The Platform ID gets written into the boot catalog at byte 1 of the 3893 * Validation Entry, or at byte 1 of a Section Header Entry. 3894 * If Platform ID and ID String of two consecutive bootimages are the same 3895 * 3896 * @param bootimg 3897 * The image to manipulate. 3898 * @param id 3899 * A Platform ID as of 3900 * El Torito 1.0 : 0x00= 80x86, 0x01= PowerPC, 0x02= Mac 3901 * Others : 0xef= EFI 3902 * @return 3903 * 1 ok , <=0 error 3904 * 3905 * @since 0.6.32 3906 */ 3907 int el_torito_set_boot_platform_id(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, uint8_t id); 3908 3909 /** 3910 * Get the platform ID value. See el_torito_set_boot_platform_id(). 3911 * 3912 * @param bootimg 3913 * The image to inquire 3914 * @return 3915 * 0 - 255 : The platform ID 3916 * < 0 : error 3917 * 3918 * @since 0.6.32 3919 */ 3920 int el_torito_get_boot_platform_id(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg); 3921 3922 /** 3923 * Sets the load segment for the initial boot image. This is only for 3924 * no emulation boot images, and is a NOP for other image types. 3925 * 3926 * @param bootimg 3927 * The image to to manipulate 3928 * @param segment 3929 * Load segment address. 3930 * The data type of this parameter is not fully suitable. You may submit 3931 * negative numbers in the range ((short) 0x8000) to ((short) 0xffff) 3932 * in order to express the non-negative numbers 0x8000 to 0xffff. 3933 * 3934 * @since 0.6.2 3935 */ 3936 void el_torito_set_load_seg(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, short segment); 3937 3938 /** 3939 * Get the load segment value. See el_torito_set_load_seg(). 3940 * 3941 * @param bootimg 3942 * The image to inquire 3943 * @return 3944 * 0 - 65535 : The load segment value 3945 * < 0 : error 3946 * 3947 * @since 0.6.32 3948 */ 3949 int el_torito_get_load_seg(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg); 3950 3951 /** 3952 * Sets the number of sectors (512b) to be load at load segment during 3953 * the initial boot procedure. This is only for 3954 * no emulation boot images, and is a NOP for other image types. 3955 * 3956 * @param bootimg 3957 * The image to to manipulate 3958 * @param sectors 3959 * Number of 512-byte blocks to be loaded by the BIOS. 3960 * The data type of this parameter is not fully suitable. You may submit 3961 * negative numbers in the range ((short) 0x8000) to ((short) 0xffff) 3962 * in order to express the non-negative numbers 0x8000 to 0xffff. 3963 * 3964 * @since 0.6.2 3965 */ 3966 void el_torito_set_load_size(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, short sectors); 3967 3968 /** 3969 * Get the load size. See el_torito_set_load_size(). 3970 * 3971 * @param bootimg 3972 * The image to inquire 3973 * @return 3974 * 0 - 65535 : The load size value 3975 * < 0 : error 3976 * 3977 * @since 0.6.32 3978 */ 3979 int el_torito_get_load_size(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg); 3980 3981 /** 3982 * State that the load size shall be the size of the boot image automatically. 3983 * This overrides el_torito_set_load_size(). 3984 * @param bootimg 3985 * The image to to manipulate 3986 * @param mode 3987 * 0= use value of el_torito_set_load_size() 3988 * 1= determine value from boot image 3989 */ 3990 void el_torito_set_full_load(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, int mode); 3991 3992 /** 3993 * Inquire the setting of el_torito_set_full_load(). 3994 * @param bootimg 3995 * The image to inquire 3996 * @return 3997 * The mode set with el_torito_set_full_load(). 3998 */ 3999 int el_torito_get_full_load(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg); 4000 4001 /** 4002 * Marks the specified boot image as not bootable 4003 * 4004 * @since 0.6.2 4005 */ 4006 void el_torito_set_no_bootable(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg); 4007 4008 /** 4009 * Get the bootability flag. See el_torito_set_no_bootable(). 4010 * 4011 * @param bootimg 4012 * The image to inquire 4013 * @return 4014 * 0 = not bootable, 1 = bootable , <0 = error 4015 * 4016 * @since 0.6.32 4017 */ 4018 int el_torito_get_bootable(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg); 4019 4020 /** 4021 * Set the id_string of the Validation Entry or Sector Header Entry which 4022 * will govern the boot image Section Entry in the El Torito Catalog. 4023 * 4024 * @param bootimg 4025 * The image to manipulate. 4026 * @param id_string 4027 * The first boot image puts 24 bytes of ID string into the Validation 4028 * Entry, where they shall "identify the manufacturer/developer of 4029 * the CD-ROM". 4030 * Further boot images put 28 bytes into their Section Header. 4031 * El Torito 1.0 states that "If the BIOS understands the ID string, it 4032 * may choose to boot the system using one of these entries in place 4033 * of the INITIAL/DEFAULT entry." (The INITIAL/DEFAULT entry points to the 4034 * first boot image.) 4035 * @return 4036 * 1 = ok , <0 = error 4037 * 4038 * @since 0.6.32 4039 */ 4040 int el_torito_set_id_string(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, uint8_t id_string[28]); 4041 4042 /** 4043 * Get the id_string as of el_torito_set_id_string(). 4044 * 4045 * @param bootimg 4046 * The image to inquire 4047 * @param id_string 4048 * Returns 28 bytes of id string 4049 * @return 4050 * 1 = ok , <0 = error 4051 * 4052 * @since 0.6.32 4053 */ 4054 int el_torito_get_id_string(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, uint8_t id_string[28]); 4055 4056 /** 4057 * Set the Selection Criteria of a boot image. 4058 * 4059 * @param bootimg 4060 * The image to manipulate. 4061 * @param crit 4062 * The first boot image has no selection criteria. They will be ignored. 4063 * Further boot images put 1 byte of Selection Criteria Type and 19 4064 * bytes of data into their Section Entry. 4065 * El Torito 1.0 states that "The format of the selection criteria is 4066 * a function of the BIOS vendor. In the case of a foreign language 4067 * BIOS three bytes would be used to identify the language". 4068 * Type byte == 0 means "no criteria", 4069 * type byte == 1 means "Language and Version Information (IBM)". 4070 * @return 4071 * 1 = ok , <0 = error 4072 * 4073 * @since 0.6.32 4074 */ 4075 int el_torito_set_selection_crit(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, uint8_t crit[20]); 4076 4077 /** 4078 * Get the Selection Criteria bytes as of el_torito_set_selection_crit(). 4079 * 4080 * @param bootimg 4081 * The image to inquire 4082 * @param crit 4083 * Returns 20 bytes of type and data 4084 * @return 4085 * 1 = ok , <0 = error 4086 * 4087 * @since 0.6.32 4088 */ 4089 int el_torito_get_selection_crit(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, uint8_t crit[20]); 4090 4091 4092 /** 4093 * Makes a guess whether the boot image was patched by a boot information 4094 * table. It is advisable to patch such boot images if their content gets 4095 * copied to a new location. See el_torito_set_isolinux_options(). 4096 * Note: The reply can be positive only if the boot image was imported 4097 * from an existing ISO image. 4098 * 4099 * @param bootimg 4100 * The image to inquire 4101 * @param flag 4102 * Bitfield for control purposes: 4103 * bit0 - bit3= mode 4104 * 0 = inquire for classic boot info table as described in man mkisofs 4105 * @since 0.6.32 4106 * 1 = inquire for GRUB2 boot info as of bit9 of options of 4107 * el_torito_set_isolinux_options() 4108 * @since 1.3.0 4109 * @return 4110 * 1 = seems to contain the inquired boot info, 0 = quite surely not 4111 * @since 0.6.32 4112 */ 4113 int el_torito_seems_boot_info_table(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, int flag); 4114 4115 /** 4116 * Specifies options for ISOLINUX or GRUB boot images. This should only be used 4117 * if the type of boot image is known. 4118 * 4119 * @param bootimg 4120 * The image to set options on 4121 * @param options 4122 * bitmask style flag. The following values are defined: 4123 * 4124 * bit0= Patch the boot info table of the boot image. 4125 * This does the same as mkisofs option -boot-info-table. 4126 * Needed for ISOLINUX or GRUB boot images with platform ID 0. 4127 * The table is located at byte 8 of the boot image file. 4128 * Its size is 56 bytes. 4129 * The original boot image file on disk will not be modified. 4130 * 4131 * One may use el_torito_seems_boot_info_table() for a 4132 * qualified guess whether a boot info table is present in 4133 * the boot image. If the result is 1 then it should get bit0 4134 * set if its content gets copied to a new LBA. 4135 * 4136 * bit1= Generate a ISOLINUX isohybrid image with MBR. 4137 * ---------------------------------------------------------- 4138 * @deprecated since 31 Mar 2010: 4139 * The author of syslinux, H. Peter Anvin requested that this 4140 * feature shall not be used any more. He intends to cease 4141 * support for the MBR template that is included in libisofs. 4142 * ---------------------------------------------------------- 4143 * A hybrid image is a boot image that boots from either 4144 * CD/DVD media or from disk-like media, e.g. USB stick. 4145 * For that you need isolinux.bin from SYSLINUX 3.72 or later. 4146 * IMPORTANT: The application has to take care that the image 4147 * on media gets padded up to the next full MB. 4148 * Under seiveral circumstances it might get aligned 4149 * automatically. But there is no warranty. 4150 * bit2-7= Mentioning in isohybrid GPT 4151 * 0= Do not mention in GPT 4152 * 1= Mention as Basic Data partition. 4153 * This cannot be combined with GPT partitions as of 4154 * iso_write_opts_set_efi_bootp() 4155 * @since 1.2.4 4156 * 2= Mention as HFS+ partition. 4157 * This cannot be combined with HFS+ production by 4158 * iso_write_opts_set_hfsplus(). 4159 * @since 1.2.4 4160 * Primary GPT and backup GPT get written if at least one 4161 * ElToritoBootImage shall be mentioned. 4162 * The first three mentioned GPT partitions get mirrored in the 4163 * the partition table of the isohybrid MBR. They get type 0xfe. 4164 * The MBR partition entry for PC-BIOS gets type 0x00 rather 4165 * than 0x17. 4166 * Often it is one of the further MBR partitions which actually 4167 * gets used by EFI. 4168 * @since 1.2.4 4169 * bit8= Mention in isohybrid Apple partition map 4170 * APM get written if at least one ElToritoBootImage shall be 4171 * mentioned. The ISOLINUX MBR must look suitable or else an error 4172 * event will happen at image generation time. 4173 * @since 1.2.4 4174 * bit9= GRUB2 boot info 4175 * Patch the boot image file at byte 1012 with the 512-block 4176 * address + 2. Two little endian 32-bit words. Low word first. 4177 * This is combinable with bit0. 4178 * @since 1.3.0 4179 * @param flag 4180 * Reserved for future usage, set to 0. 4181 * @return 4182 * 1 success, < 0 on error 4183 * @since 0.6.12 4184 */ 4185 int el_torito_set_isolinux_options(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, 4186 int options, int flag); 4187 4188 /** 4189 * Get the options as of el_torito_set_isolinux_options(). 4190 * 4191 * @param bootimg 4192 * The image to inquire 4193 * @param flag 4194 * Reserved for future usage, set to 0. 4195 * @return 4196 * >= 0 returned option bits , <0 = error 4197 * 4198 * @since 0.6.32 4199 */ 4200 int el_torito_get_isolinux_options(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg, int flag); 4201 4202 /** Deprecated: 4203 * Specifies that this image needs to be patched. This involves the writing 4204 * of a 16 bytes boot information table at offset 8 of the boot image file. 4205 * The original boot image file won't be modified. 4206 * This is needed for isolinux boot images. 4207 * 4208 * @since 0.6.2 4209 * @deprecated Use el_torito_set_isolinux_options() instead 4210 */ 4211 void el_torito_patch_isolinux_image(ElToritoBootImage *bootimg); 4212 4213 /** 4214 * Obtain a copy of the eventually loaded first 32768 bytes of the imported 4215 * session, the System Area. 4216 * It will be written to the start of the next session unless it gets 4217 * overwritten by iso_write_opts_set_system_area(). 4218 * 4219 * @param img 4220 * The image to be inquired. 4221 * @param data 4222 * A byte array of at least 32768 bytes to take the loaded bytes. 4223 * @param options 4224 * The option bits which will be applied if not overridden by 4225 * iso_write_opts_set_system_area(). See there. 4226 * @param flag 4227 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 4228 * @return 4229 * 1 on success, 0 if no System Area was loaded, < 0 error. 4230 * @since 0.6.30 4231 */ 4232 int iso_image_get_system_area(IsoImage *img, char data[32768], 4233 int *options, int flag); 4234 4235 /** 4236 * The maximum length of a single line in the output of function 4237 * iso_image_report_system_area() and iso_image_report_el_torito(). 4238 * This number includes the trailing 0. 4239 * @since 1.3.8 4240 */ 4241 #define ISO_MAX_SYSAREA_LINE_LENGTH 4096 4242 4243 /** 4244 * Texts which describe the output format of iso_image_report_system_area(). 4245 * They are publicly defined here only as part of the API description. 4246 * Do not use these macros in your application but rather call 4247 * iso_image_report_system_area() with flag bit0. 4248 */ 4249 #define ISO_SYSAREA_REPORT_DOC \ 4250 \ 4251 "Report format for recognized System Area data.", \ 4252 "", \ 4253 "No text will be reported if no System Area was loaded or if it was", \ 4254 "entirely filled with 0-bytes.", \ 4255 "Else there will be at least these three lines:", \ 4256 " System area options: hex", \ 4257 " see libisofs.h, parameter of iso_write_opts_set_system_area().", \ 4258 " System area summary: word ... word", \ 4259 " human readable interpretation of system area options and other info", \ 4260 " The words are from the set:", \ 4261 " { MBR, CHRP, PReP, GPT, APM, MIPS-Big-Endian, MIPS-Little-Endian,", \ 4262 " SUN-SPARC-Disk-Label, HP-PA-PALO, DEC-Alpha, ", \ 4263 " protective-msdos-label, isohybrid, grub2-mbr,", \ 4264 " cyl-align-{auto,on,off,all}, not-recognized, }", \ 4265 " The acronyms indicate boot data for particular hardware/firmware.", \ 4266 " protective-msdos-label is an MBR conformant to specs of GPT.", \ 4267 " isohybrid is an MBR implementing ISOLINUX isohybrid functionality.", \ 4268 " grub2-mbr is an MBR with GRUB2 64 bit address patching.", \ 4269 " cyl-align-on indicates that the ISO image MBR partition ends at a", \ 4270 " cylinder boundary. cyl-align-all means that more MBR partitions", \ 4271 " exist and all end at a cylinder boundary.", \ 4272 " not-recognized tells about unrecognized non-zero system area data.", \ 4273 " ISO image size/512 : decimal", \ 4274 " size of ISO image in block units of 512 bytes.", \ 4275 "" 4276 #define ISO_SYSAREA_REPORT_DOC_MBR \ 4277 \ 4278 "If an MBR is detected, with at least one partition entry of non-zero size,", \ 4279 "then there may be:", \ 4280 " Partition offset : decimal", \ 4281 " if not 0 then a second ISO 9660 superblock was found to which", \ 4282 " MBR partition 1 or GPT partition 1 is pointing.", \ 4283 " MBR heads per cyl : decimal", \ 4284 " conversion factor between MBR C/H/S address and LBA. 0=inconsistent.", \ 4285 " MBR secs per head : decimal", \ 4286 " conversion factor between MBR C/H/S address and LBA. 0=inconsistent.", \ 4287 " MBR partition table: N Status Type Start Blocks", \ 4288 " headline for MBR partition table.", \ 4289 " MBR partition : X hex hex decimal decimal", \ 4290 " gives partition number, status byte, type byte, start block,", \ 4291 " and number of blocks. 512 bytes per block.", \ 4292 " MBR partition path : X path", \ 4293 " the path of a file in the ISO image which begins at the partition", \ 4294 " start block of partition X.", \ 4295 " PReP boot partition: decimal decimal", \ 4296 " gives start block and size of a PReP boot partition in ISO 9660", \ 4297 " block units of 2048 bytes.", \ 4298 "" 4299 #define ISO_SYSAREA_REPORT_DOC_GPT1 \ 4300 \ 4301 "GUID Partition Table can coexist with MBR:", \ 4302 " GPT : N Info", \ 4303 " headline for GPT partition table. The fields are too wide for a", \ 4304 " neat table. So they are listed with a partition number and a text.", \ 4305 " GPT CRC should be : <hex> to match first 92 GPT header block bytes", \ 4306 " GPT CRC found : <hex> matches all 512 bytes of GPT header block", \ 4307 " libisofs-1.2.4 to 1.2.8 had a bug with the GPT header CRC. So", \ 4308 " libisofs is willing to recognize GPT with the buggy CRC. These", \ 4309 " two lines inform that most partition editors will not accept it.", \ 4310 " GPT array CRC wrong: should be <hex>, found <hex>", \ 4311 " GPT entry arrays are accepted even if their CRC does not match.", \ 4312 " In this case, both CRCs are reported by this line.", \ 4313 " GPT backup problems: text", \ 4314 " reports about inconsistencies between main GPT and backup GPT.", \ 4315 " The statements are comma separated:", \ 4316 " Implausible header LBA <decimal>", \ 4317 " Cannot read header block at 2k LBA <decimal>", \ 4318 " Not a GPT 1.0 header of 92 bytes for 128 bytes per entry", \ 4319 " Head CRC <hex> wrong. Should be <hex>", \ 4320 " Head CRC <hex> wrong. Should be <hex>. Matches all 512 block bytes", \ 4321 " Disk GUID differs (<hex_digits>)", \ 4322 " Cannot read array block at 2k LBA <decimal>", \ 4323 " Array CRC <hex> wrong. Should be <hex>", \ 4324 " Entries differ for partitions <decimal> [... <decimal>]", \ 4325 " GPT disk GUID : hex_digits", \ 4326 " 32 hex digits giving the byte string of the disk's GUID", \ 4327 " GPT entry array : decimal decimal word", \ 4328 " start block of partition entry array and number of entries. 512 bytes", \ 4329 " per block. The word may be \"separated\" if partitions are disjoint,", \ 4330 " \"overlapping\" if they are not. In future there may be \"nested\"", \ 4331 " as special case where all overlapping partitions are superset and", \ 4332 " subset, and \"covering\" as special case of disjoint partitions", \ 4333 " covering the whole GPT block range for partitions.", \ 4334 " GPT lba range : decimal decimal decimal", \ 4335 " addresses of first payload block, last payload block, and of the", \ 4336 " GPT backup header block. 512 bytes per block." \ 4337 4338 #define ISO_SYSAREA_REPORT_DOC_GPT2 \ 4339 \ 4340 " GPT partition name : X hex_digits", \ 4341 " up to 144 hex digits giving the UTF-16LE name byte string of", \ 4342 " partition X. Trailing 16 bit 0-characters are omitted.", \ 4343 " GPT partname local : X text", \ 4344 " the name of partition X converted to the local character set.", \ 4345 " This line may be missing if the name cannot be converted, or is", \ 4346 " empty.", \ 4347 " GPT partition GUID : X hex_digits", \ 4348 " 32 hex digits giving the byte string of the GUID of partition X.", \ 4349 " GPT type GUID : X hex_digits", \ 4350 " 32 hex digits giving the byte string of the type GUID of partition X.", \ 4351 " GPT partition flags: X hex", \ 4352 " 64 flag bits of partition X in hex representation.", \ 4353 " Known bit meanings are:", \ 4354 " bit0 = \"System Partition\" Do not alter.", \ 4355 " bit2 = Legacy BIOS bootable (MBR partition type 0x80)", \ 4356 " bit60= read-only", \ 4357 " GPT start and size : X decimal decimal", \ 4358 " start block and number of blocks of partition X. 512 bytes per block.", \ 4359 " GPT partition path : X path", \ 4360 " the path of a file in the ISO image which begins at the partition", \ 4361 " start block of partition X.", \ 4362 "" 4363 #define ISO_SYSAREA_REPORT_DOC_APM \ 4364 \ 4365 "Apple partition map can coexist with MBR and GPT:", \ 4366 " APM : N Info", \ 4367 " headline for human readers.", \ 4368 " APM block size : decimal", \ 4369 " block size of Apple Partition Map. 512 or 2048. This applies to", \ 4370 " start address and size of all partitions in the APM.", \ 4371 " APM gap fillers : decimal", \ 4372 " tells the number of partitions with name \"Gap[0-9[0-9]]\" and type", \ 4373 " \"ISO9660_data\".", \ 4374 " APM partition name : X text", \ 4375 " the name of partition X. Up to 32 characters.", \ 4376 " APM partition type : X text", \ 4377 " the type string of partition X. Up to 32 characters.", \ 4378 " APM start and size : X decimal decimal", \ 4379 " start block and number of blocks of partition X.", \ 4380 " APM partition path : X path", \ 4381 " the path of a file in the ISO image which begins at the partition", \ 4382 " start block of partition X.", \ 4383 "" 4384 #define ISO_SYSAREA_REPORT_DOC_MIPS \ 4385 \ 4386 "If a MIPS Big Endian Volume Header is detected, there may be:", \ 4387 " MIPS-BE volume dir : N Name Block Bytes", \ 4388 " headline for human readers.", \ 4389 " MIPS-BE boot entry : X upto8chr decimal decimal", \ 4390 " tells name, 512-byte block address, and byte count of boot entry X.", \ 4391 " MIPS-BE boot path : X path", \ 4392 " tells the path to the boot image file in the ISO image which belongs", \ 4393 " to the block address given by boot entry X.", \ 4394 "", \ 4395 "If a DEC Boot Block for MIPS Little Endian is detected, there may be:", \ 4396 " MIPS-LE boot map : LoadAddr ExecAddr SegmentSize SegmentStart", \ 4397 " headline for human readers.", \ 4398 " MIPS-LE boot params: decimal decimal decimal decimal", \ 4399 " tells four numbers which are originally derived from the ELF header", \ 4400 " of the boot file. The first two are counted in bytes, the other two", \ 4401 " are counted in blocks of 512 bytes.", \ 4402 " MIPS-LE boot path : path", \ 4403 " tells the path to the boot file in the ISO image which belongs to the", \ 4404 " address given by SegmentStart.", \ 4405 " MIPS-LE elf offset : decimal", \ 4406 " tells the relative 512-byte block offset inside the boot file:", \ 4407 " SegmentStart - FileStartBlock", \ 4408 "" 4409 #define ISO_SYSAREA_REPORT_DOC_SUN \ 4410 \ 4411 "If a SUN SPARC Disk Label is present:", \ 4412 " SUN SPARC disklabel: text", \ 4413 " tells the disk label text.", \ 4414 " SUN SPARC secs/head: decimal", \ 4415 " tells the number of sectors per head.", \ 4416 " SUN SPARC heads/cyl: decimal", \ 4417 " tells the number of heads per cylinder.", \ 4418 " SUN SPARC partmap : N IdTag Perms StartCyl NumBlock", \ 4419 " headline for human readers.", \ 4420 " SUN SPARC partition: X hex hex decimal decimal", \ 4421 " gives partition number, type word, permission word, start cylinder,", \ 4422 " and number of of blocks. 512 bytes per block. Type word may be: ", \ 4423 " 0=unused, 2=root partition with boot, 4=user partition.", \ 4424 " Permission word is 0x10 = read-only.", \ 4425 " SPARC GRUB2 core : decimal decimal", \ 4426 " tells byte address and byte count of the GRUB2 SPARC core file.", \ 4427 " SPARC GRUB2 path : path", \ 4428 " tells the path to the data file in the ISO image which belongs to the", \ 4429 " address given by core.", \ 4430 "" 4431 #define ISO_SYSAREA_REPORT_DOC_HPPA \ 4432 \ 4433 "If a HP-PA PALO boot sector version 4 or 5 is present:", \ 4434 " PALO header version: decimal", \ 4435 " tells the PALO header version: 4 or 5.", \ 4436 " HP-PA cmdline : text", \ 4437 " tells the command line for the kernels.", \ 4438 " HP-PA boot files : ByteAddr ByteSize Path", \ 4439 " headline for human readers.", \ 4440 " HP-PA 32-bit kernel: decimal decimal path", \ 4441 " tells start byte, byte count, and file path of the 32-bit kernel.", \ 4442 " HP-PA 64-bit kernel: decimal decimal path", \ 4443 " tells the same for the 64-bit kernel.", \ 4444 " HP-PA ramdisk : decimal decimal path", \ 4445 " tells the same for the ramdisk file.", \ 4446 " HP-PA bootloader : decimal decimal path", \ 4447 " tells the same for the bootloader file.", \ 4448 "" 4449 #define ISO_SYSAREA_REPORT_DOC_ALPHA \ 4450 "If a DEC Alpha SRM boot sector is present:", \ 4451 " DEC Alpha ldr size : decimal", \ 4452 " tells the number of 512-byte blocks in DEC Alpha Secondary Bootstrap", \ 4453 " Loader file.", \ 4454 " DEC Alpha ldr adr : decimal", \ 4455 " tells the start of the loader file in units of 512-byte blocks.", \ 4456 " DEC Alpha ldr path : path", \ 4457 " tells the path of a file in the ISO image which starts at the loader", \ 4458 " start address." 4459 4460 /** 4461 * Obtain an array of texts describing the detected properties of the 4462 * eventually loaded System Area. 4463 * The array will be NULL if no System Area was loaded. It will be non-NULL 4464 * with zero line count if the System Area was loaded and contains only 4465 * 0-bytes. 4466 * Else it will consist of lines as described in ISO_SYSAREA_REPORT_DOC above. 4467 * 4468 * File paths and other long texts are reported as "(too long to show here)" 4469 * if their length plus preceding text plus trailing 0-byte exceeds the 4470 * line length limit of ISO_MAX_SYSAREA_LINE_LENGTH bytes. 4471 * Texts which may contain whitespace or unprintable characters will start 4472 * at fixed positions and extend to the end of the line. 4473 * Note that newline characters may well appearing in the middle of a "line". 4474 * 4475 * @param image 4476 * The image to be inquired. 4477 * @param reply 4478 * Will return an array of pointers to the result text lines or NULL. 4479 * Dispose a non-NULL reply by a call to iso_image_report_system_area() 4480 * with flag bit15, when no longer needed. 4481 * Be prepared for a long text with up to ISO_MAX_SYSAREA_LINE_LENGTH 4482 * characters per line. 4483 * @param line_count 4484 * Will return the number of valid pointers in reply. 4485 * @param flag 4486 * Bitfield for control purposes 4487 * bit0= do not report system area but rather reply a copy of 4488 * above text line arrays ISO_SYSAREA_REPORT_DOC*. 4489 * With this bit it is permissible to submit image as NULL. 4490 * bit15= dispose result from previous call. 4491 * @return 4492 * 1 on success, 0 if no System Area was loaded, < 0 error. 4493 * @since 1.3.8 4494 */ 4495 int iso_image_report_system_area(IsoImage *image, 4496 char ***reply, int *line_count, int flag); 4497 4498 /** 4499 * Text which describes the output format of iso_image_report_el_torito(). 4500 * It is publicly defined here only as part of the API description. 4501 * Do not use it as macro in your application but rather call 4502 * iso_image_report_el_torito() with flag bit0. 4503 */ 4504 #define ISO_ELTORITO_REPORT_DOC \ 4505 "Report format for recognized El Torito boot information.", \ 4506 "", \ 4507 "No text will be reported if no El Torito information was found.", \ 4508 "Else there will be at least these three lines", \ 4509 " El Torito catalog : decimal decimal", \ 4510 " tells the block address and number of 2048-blocks of the boot catalog.", \ 4511 " El Torito images : N Pltf B Emul Ld_seg Hdpt Ldsiz LBA", \ 4512 " is the headline of the boot image list.", \ 4513 " El Torito boot img : X word char word hex hex decimal decimal", \ 4514 " tells about boot image number X:", \ 4515 " - Platform Id: \"BIOS\", \"PPC\", \"Mac\", \"UEFI\" or a hex number.", \ 4516 " - Bootability: either \"y\" or \"n\".", \ 4517 " - Emulation: \"none\", \"fd1.2\", \"fd1.4\", \"fd2.8\", \"hd\"", \ 4518 " for no emulation, three floppy MB sizes, hard disk.", \ 4519 " - Load Segment: start offset in boot image. 0x0000 means 0x07c0.", \ 4520 " - Hard disk emulation partition type: MBR partition type code.", \ 4521 " - Load size: number of 512-blocks to load with emulation mode \"none\".", \ 4522 " - LBA: start block number in ISO filesystem (2048-block).", \ 4523 "", \ 4524 "The following lines appear conditionally:", \ 4525 " El Torito cat path : iso_rr_path", \ 4526 " tells the path to the data file in the ISO image which belongs to", \ 4527 " the block address where the boot catalog starts.", \ 4528 " (This line is not reported if no path points to that block.)", \ 4529 " El Torito img path : X iso_rr_path", \ 4530 " tells the path to the data file in the ISO image which belongs to", \ 4531 " the block address given by LBA of boot image X.", \ 4532 " (This line is not reported if no path points to that block.)", \ 4533 " El Torito img opts : X word ... word", \ 4534 " tells the presence of extra features:", \ 4535 " \"boot-info-table\" image got boot info table patching.", \ 4536 " \"isohybrid-suitable\" image is suitable for ISOLINUX isohybrid MBR.", \ 4537 " \"grub2-boot-info\" image got GRUB2 boot info patching.", \ 4538 " (This line is not reported if no such options were detected.)", \ 4539 " El Torito id string: X hex_digits", \ 4540 " tells the id string of the catalog section which hosts boot image X.", \ 4541 " (This line is not reported if the id string is all zero.)", \ 4542 " El Torito sel crit : X hex_digits", \ 4543 " tells the selection criterion of boot image X.", \ 4544 " (This line is not reported if the criterion is all zero.)", \ 4545 " El Torito img blks : X decimal", \ 4546 " gives an upper limit of the number of 2048-blocks in the boot image", \ 4547 " if it is not accessible via a path in the ISO directory tree.", \ 4548 " The boot image is supposed to end before the start block of any", \ 4549 " other entity of the ISO filesystem.", \ 4550 " (This line is not reported if no limiting entity is found.)", \ 4551 " El Torito hdsiz/512: X decimal", \ 4552 " gives with a boot image of emulation type \"hd\" the lowest block", \ 4553 " number which is above any partition end in the boot image's MBR", \ 4554 " partition table. This can be considered the claimed size of the", \ 4555 " emulated hard disk given in blocks of 512 bytes.", \ 4556 " (This line is not reported if no partition is found in the image.)", \ 4557 "" 4558 4559 /** 4560 * Obtain an array of texts describing the detected properties of the 4561 * eventually loaded El Torito boot information. 4562 * The array will be NULL if no El Torito info was loaded. 4563 * Else it will consist of lines as described in ISO_ELTORITO_REPORT_DOC above. 4564 * 4565 * The lines have the same length restrictions and whitespace rules as the ones 4566 * returned by iso_image_report_system_area(). 4567 * 4568 * @param image 4569 * The image to be inquired. 4570 * @param reply 4571 * Will return an array of pointers to the result text lines or NULL. 4572 * Dispose a non-NULL reply by a call to iso_image_report_el_torito() 4573 * with flag bit15, when no longer needed. 4574 * Be prepared for a long text with up to ISO_MAX_SYSAREA_LINE_LENGTH 4575 * characters per line. 4576 * @param line_count 4577 * Will return the number of valid pointers in reply. 4578 * @param flag 4579 * Bitfield for control purposes 4580 * bit0= do not report system area but rather reply a copy of 4581 * above text line array ISO_ELTORITO_REPORT_DOC. 4582 * With this bit it is permissible to submit image as NULL. 4583 * bit15= dispose result from previous call. 4584 * @return 4585 * 1 on success, 0 if no El Torito information was loaded, < 0 error. 4586 * @since 1.3.8 4587 */ 4588 int iso_image_report_el_torito(IsoImage *image, 4589 char ***reply, int *line_count, int flag); 4590 4591 4592 /** 4593 * Compute a CRC number as expected in the GPT main and backup header blocks. 4594 * 4595 * The CRC at byte offset 88 is supposed to cover the array of partition 4596 * entries. 4597 * The CRC at byte offset 16 is supposed to cover the readily produced 4598 * first 92 bytes of the header block while its bytes 16 to 19 are still 4599 * set to 0. 4600 * Block size is 512 bytes. Numbers are stored little-endian. 4601 * See doc/boot_sectors.txt for the byte layout of GPT. 4602 * 4603 * This might be helpful for applications which want to manipulate GPT 4604 * directly. The function is in libisofs/system_area.c and self-contained. 4605 * So if you want to copy+paste it under the license of that file: Be invited. 4606 * Be warned that this implementation works bit-wise and thus is much slower 4607 * than table-driven ones. For less than 32 KiB, it fully suffices, though. 4608 * 4609 * @param data 4610 * The memory buffer with the data to sum up. 4611 * @param count 4612 * Number of bytes in data. 4613 * @param flag 4614 * Bitfield for control purposes. Submit 0. 4615 * @return 4616 * The CRC of data. 4617 * @since 1.3.8 4618 */ 4619 uint32_t iso_crc32_gpt(unsigned char *data, int count, int flag); 4620 4621 /** 4622 * Add a MIPS boot file path to the image. 4623 * Up to 15 such files can be written into a MIPS Big Endian Volume Header 4624 * if this is enabled by value 1 in iso_write_opts_set_system_area() option 4625 * bits 2 to 7. 4626 * A single file can be written into a DEC Boot Block if this is enabled by 4627 * value 2 in iso_write_opts_set_system_area() option bits 2 to 7. So only 4628 * the first added file gets into effect with this system area type. 4629 * The data files which shall serve as MIPS boot files have to be brought into 4630 * the image by the normal means. 4631 * @param image 4632 * The image to be manipulated. 4633 * @param path 4634 * Absolute path of the boot file in the ISO 9660 Rock Ridge tree. 4635 * @param flag 4636 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 4637 * @return 4638 * 1 on success, < 0 error 4639 * @since 0.6.38 4640 */ 4641 int iso_image_add_mips_boot_file(IsoImage *image, char *path, int flag); 4642 4643 /** 4644 * Obtain the number of added MIPS Big Endian boot files and pointers to 4645 * their paths in the ISO 9660 Rock Ridge tree. 4646 * @param image 4647 * The image to be inquired. 4648 * @param paths 4649 * An array of pointers to be set to the registered boot file paths. 4650 * This are just pointers to data inside IsoImage. Do not free() them. 4651 * Eventually make own copies of the data before manipulating the image. 4652 * @param flag 4653 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 4654 * @return 4655 * >= 0 is the number of valid path pointers , <0 means error 4656 * @since 0.6.38 4657 */ 4658 int iso_image_get_mips_boot_files(IsoImage *image, char *paths[15], int flag); 4659 4660 /** 4661 * Clear the list of MIPS Big Endian boot file paths. 4662 * @param image 4663 * The image to be manipulated. 4664 * @param flag 4665 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 4666 * @return 4667 * 1 is success , <0 means error 4668 * @since 0.6.38 4669 */ 4670 int iso_image_give_up_mips_boot(IsoImage *image, int flag); 4671 4672 /** 4673 * Designate a data file in the ISO image of which the position and size 4674 * shall be written after the SUN Disk Label. The position is written as 4675 * 64-bit big-endian number to byte position 0x228. The size is written 4676 * as 32-bit big-endian to 0x230. 4677 * This setting has an effect only if system area type is set to 3 4678 * with iso_write_opts_set_system_area(). 4679 * 4680 * @param img 4681 * The image to be manipulated. 4682 * @param sparc_core 4683 * The IsoFile which shall be mentioned after the SUN Disk label. 4684 * NULL is a permissible value. It disables this feature. 4685 * @param flag 4686 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 4687 * @return 4688 * 1 is success , <0 means error 4689 * @since 1.3.0 4690 */ 4691 int iso_image_set_sparc_core(IsoImage *img, IsoFile *sparc_core, int flag); 4692 4693 /** 4694 * Obtain the current setting of iso_image_set_sparc_core(). 4695 * 4696 * @param img 4697 * The image to be inquired. 4698 * @param sparc_core 4699 * Will return a pointer to the IsoFile (or NULL, which is not an error) 4700 * @param flag 4701 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 4702 * @return 4703 * 1 is success , <0 means error 4704 * @since 1.3.0 4705 */ 4706 int iso_image_get_sparc_core(IsoImage *img, IsoFile **sparc_core, int flag); 4707 4708 /** 4709 * Define a command line and submit the paths of four mandatory files for 4710 * production of a HP-PA PALO boot sector for PA-RISC machines. 4711 * The paths must lead to already existing data files in the ISO image 4712 * which stay with these paths until image production. 4713 * 4714 * @param img 4715 * The image to be manipulated. 4716 * @param cmdline 4717 * Up to 127 characters of command line. 4718 * @param bootloader 4719 * Absolute path of a data file in the ISO image. 4720 * @param kernel_32 4721 * Absolute path of a data file in the ISO image which serves as 4722 * 32 bit kernel. 4723 * @param kernel_64 4724 * Absolute path of a data file in the ISO image which serves as 4725 * 64 bit kernel. 4726 * @param ramdisk 4727 * Absolute path of a data file in the ISO image. 4728 * @param flag 4729 * Bitfield for control purposes 4730 * bit0= Let NULL parameters free the corresponding image properties. 4731 * Else only the non-NULL parameters of this call have an effect 4732 * @return 4733 * 1 is success , <0 means error 4734 * @since 1.3.8 4735 */ 4736 int iso_image_set_hppa_palo(IsoImage *img, char *cmdline, char *bootloader, 4737 char *kernel_32, char *kernel_64, char *ramdisk, 4738 int flag); 4739 4740 /** 4741 * Inquire the current settings of iso_image_set_hppa_palo(). 4742 * Do not free() the returned pointers. 4743 * 4744 * @param img 4745 * The image to be inquired. 4746 * @param cmdline 4747 * Will return the command line. 4748 * @param bootloader 4749 * Will return the absolute path of the bootloader file. 4750 * @param kernel_32 4751 * Will return the absolute path of the 32 bit kernel file. 4752 * @param kernel_64 4753 * Will return the absolute path of the 64 bit kernel file. 4754 * @param ramdisk 4755 * Will return the absolute path of the RAM disk file. 4756 * @return 4757 * 1 is success , <0 means error 4758 * @since 1.3.8 4759 */ 4760 int iso_image_get_hppa_palo(IsoImage *img, char **cmdline, char **bootloader, 4761 char **kernel_32, char **kernel_64, char **ramdisk); 4762 4763 4764 /** 4765 * Submit the path of the DEC Alpha Secondary Bootstrap Loader file. 4766 * The path must lead to an already existing data file in the ISO image 4767 * which stays with this path until image production. 4768 * This setting has an effect only if system area type is set to 6 4769 * with iso_write_opts_set_system_area(). 4770 * 4771 * @param img 4772 * The image to be manipulated. 4773 * @param boot_loader_path 4774 * Absolute path of a data file in the ISO image. 4775 * Submit NULL to free this image property. 4776 * @param flag 4777 * Bitfield for control purposes. Unused yet. Submit 0. 4778 * @return 4779 * 1 is success , <0 means error 4780 * @since 1.4.0 4781 */ 4782 int iso_image_set_alpha_boot(IsoImage *img, char *boot_loader_path, int flag); 4783 4784 /** 4785 * Inquire the path submitted by iso_image_set_alpha_boot() 4786 * Do not free() the returned pointer. 4787 * 4788 * @param img 4789 * The image to be inquired. 4790 * @param boot_loader_path 4791 * Will return the path. NULL if none is currently submitted. 4792 * @return 4793 * 1 is success , <0 means error 4794 * @since 1.4.0 4795 */ 4796 int iso_image_get_alpha_boot(IsoImage *img, char **boot_loader_path); 4797 4798 4799 /** 4800 * Increments the reference counting of the given node. 4801 * 4802 * @since 0.6.2 4803 */ 4804 void iso_node_ref(IsoNode *node); 4805 4806 /** 4807 * Decrements the reference counting of the given node. 4808 * If it reach 0, the node is free, and, if the node is a directory, 4809 * its children will be unref() too. 4810 * 4811 * @since 0.6.2 4812 */ 4813 void iso_node_unref(IsoNode *node); 4814 4815 /** 4816 * Get the type of an IsoNode. 4817 * 4818 * @since 0.6.2 4819 */ 4820 enum IsoNodeType iso_node_get_type(IsoNode *node); 4821 4822 /** 4823 * Class of functions to handle particular extended information. A function 4824 * instance acts as an identifier for the type of the information. Structs 4825 * with same information type must use a pointer to the same function. 4826 * 4827 * @param data 4828 * Attached data 4829 * @param flag 4830 * What to do with the data. At this time the following values are 4831 * defined: 4832 * -> 1 the data must be freed 4833 * @return 4834 * 1 in any case. 4835 * 4836 * @since 0.6.4 4837 */ 4838 typedef int (*iso_node_xinfo_func)(void *data, int flag); 4839 4840 /** 4841 * Add extended information to the given node. Extended info allows 4842 * applications (and libisofs itself) to add more information to an IsoNode. 4843 * You can use this facilities to associate temporary information with a given 4844 * node. This information is not written into the ISO 9660 image on media 4845 * and thus does not persist longer than the node memory object. 4846 * 4847 * Each node keeps a list of added extended info, meaning you can add several 4848 * extended info data to each node. Each extended info you add is identified 4849 * by the proc parameter, a pointer to a function that knows how to manage 4850 * the external info data. Thus, in order to add several types of extended 4851 * info, you need to define a "proc" function for each type. 4852 * 4853 * @param node 4854 * The node where to add the extended info 4855 * @param proc 4856 * A function pointer used to identify the type of the data, and that 4857 * knows how to manage it 4858 * @param data 4859 * Extended info to add. 4860 * @return 4861 * 1 if success, 0 if the given node already has extended info of the 4862 * type defined by the "proc" function, < 0 on error 4863 * 4864 * @since 0.6.4 4865 */ 4866 int iso_node_add_xinfo(IsoNode *node, iso_node_xinfo_func proc, void *data); 4867 4868 /** 4869 * Remove the given extended info (defined by the proc function) from the 4870 * given node. 4871 * 4872 * @return 4873 * 1 on success, 0 if node does not have extended info of the requested 4874 * type, < 0 on error 4875 * 4876 * @since 0.6.4 4877 */ 4878 int iso_node_remove_xinfo(IsoNode *node, iso_node_xinfo_func proc); 4879 4880 /** 4881 * Remove all extended information from the given node. 4882 * 4883 * @param node 4884 * The node where to remove all extended info 4885 * @param flag 4886 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 4887 * @return 4888 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 4889 * 4890 * @since 1.0.2 4891 */ 4892 int iso_node_remove_all_xinfo(IsoNode *node, int flag); 4893 4894 /** 4895 * Get the given extended info (defined by the proc function) from the 4896 * given node. 4897 * 4898 * @param node 4899 * The node to inquire 4900 * @param proc 4901 * The function pointer which serves as key 4902 * @param data 4903 * Will after successful call point to the xinfo data corresponding 4904 * to the given proc. This is a pointer, not a feeable data copy. 4905 * @return 4906 * 1 on success, 0 if node does not have extended info of the requested 4907 * type, < 0 on error 4908 * 4909 * @since 0.6.4 4910 */ 4911 int iso_node_get_xinfo(IsoNode *node, iso_node_xinfo_func proc, void **data); 4912 4913 4914 /** 4915 * Get the next pair of function pointer and data of an iteration of the 4916 * list of extended information. Like: 4917 * iso_node_xinfo_func proc; 4918 * void *handle = NULL, *data; 4919 * while (iso_node_get_next_xinfo(node, &handle, &proc, &data) == 1) { 4920 * ... make use of proc and data ... 4921 * } 4922 * The iteration allocates no memory. So you may end it without any disposal 4923 * action. 4924 * IMPORTANT: Do not continue iterations after manipulating the extended 4925 * information of a node. Memory corruption hazard ! 4926 * @param node 4927 * The node to inquire 4928 * @param handle 4929 * The opaque iteration handle. Initialize iteration by submitting 4930 * a pointer to a void pointer with value NULL. 4931 * Do not alter its content until iteration has ended. 4932 * @param proc 4933 * The function pointer which serves as key 4934 * @param data 4935 * Will be filled with the extended info corresponding to the given proc 4936 * function 4937 * @return 4938 * 1 on success 4939 * 0 if iteration has ended (proc and data are invalid then) 4940 * < 0 on error 4941 * 4942 * @since 1.0.2 4943 */ 4944 int iso_node_get_next_xinfo(IsoNode *node, void **handle, 4945 iso_node_xinfo_func *proc, void **data); 4946 4947 4948 /** 4949 * Class of functions to clone extended information. A function instance gets 4950 * associated to a particular iso_node_xinfo_func instance by function 4951 * iso_node_xinfo_make_clonable(). This is a precondition to have IsoNode 4952 * objects clonable which carry data for a particular iso_node_xinfo_func. 4953 * 4954 * @param old_data 4955 * Data item to be cloned 4956 * @param new_data 4957 * Shall return the cloned data item 4958 * @param flag 4959 * Unused yet, submit 0 4960 * The function shall return ISO_XINFO_NO_CLONE on unknown flag bits. 4961 * @return 4962 * > 0 number of allocated bytes 4963 * 0 no size info is available 4964 * < 0 error 4965 * 4966 * @since 1.0.2 4967 */ 4968 typedef int (*iso_node_xinfo_cloner)(void *old_data, void **new_data,int flag); 4969 4970 /** 4971 * Associate a iso_node_xinfo_cloner to a particular class of extended 4972 * information in order to make it clonable. 4973 * 4974 * @param proc 4975 * The key and disposal function which identifies the particular 4976 * extended information class. 4977 * @param cloner 4978 * The cloner function which shall be associated with proc. 4979 * @param flag 4980 * Unused yet, submit 0 4981 * @return 4982 * 1 success, < 0 error 4983 * 4984 * @since 1.0.2 4985 */ 4986 int iso_node_xinfo_make_clonable(iso_node_xinfo_func proc, 4987 iso_node_xinfo_cloner cloner, int flag); 4988 4989 /** 4990 * Inquire the registered cloner function for a particular class of 4991 * extended information. 4992 * 4993 * @param proc 4994 * The key and disposal function which identifies the particular 4995 * extended information class. 4996 * @param cloner 4997 * Will return the cloner function which is associated with proc, or NULL. 4998 * @param flag 4999 * Unused yet, submit 0 5000 * @return 5001 * 1 success, 0 no cloner registered for proc, < 0 error 5002 * 5003 * @since 1.0.2 5004 */ 5005 int iso_node_xinfo_get_cloner(iso_node_xinfo_func proc, 5006 iso_node_xinfo_cloner *cloner, int flag); 5007 5008 /** 5009 * Set the name of a node. Note that if the node is already added to a dir 5010 * this can fail if dir already contains a node with the new name. 5011 * The IsoImage context defines a maximum permissible name length and a mode 5012 * how to react on oversized names. See iso_image_set_truncate_mode(). 5013 * 5014 * @param image 5015 * The image object to which the node belongs or shall belong in future. 5016 * @param node 5017 * The node of which you want to change the name. One cannot change the 5018 * name of the root directory. 5019 * @param name 5020 * The new name for the node. It may not be empty. If it is oversized 5021 * then it will be handled according to iso_image_set_truncate_mode(). 5022 * @param flag 5023 * bit0= issue warning in case of truncation 5024 * @return 5025 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 5026 * 5027 * @since 1.4.2 5028 */ 5029 int iso_image_set_node_name(IsoImage *image, IsoNode *node, const char *name, 5030 int flag); 5031 5032 /** 5033 * *** Deprecated *** 5034 * use iso_image_set_node_name() instead 5035 * 5036 * Set the name of a node without taking into respect name truncation mode of 5037 * an IsoImage. 5038 * 5039 * @param node 5040 * The node whose name you want to change. Note that you can't change 5041 * the name of the root. 5042 * @param name 5043 * The name for the node. If you supply an empty string or a 5044 * name greater than 255 characters this returns with failure, and 5045 * node name is not modified. 5046 * @return 5047 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 5048 * 5049 * @since 0.6.2 5050 */ 5051 int iso_node_set_name(IsoNode *node, const char *name); 5052 5053 5054 /** 5055 * Get the name of a node. 5056 * The returned string belongs to the node and must not be modified nor 5057 * freed. Use strdup if you really need your own copy. 5058 * 5059 * Up to version 1.4.2 inquiry of the root directory name returned NULL, 5060 * which is a bug in the light of above description. 5061 * Since 1.4.2 the return value is an empty string. 5062 * 5063 * @since 0.6.2 5064 */ 5065 const char *iso_node_get_name(const IsoNode *node); 5066 5067 /** 5068 * Set the permissions for the node. This attribute is only useful when 5069 * Rock Ridge extensions are enabled. 5070 * 5071 * @param node 5072 * The node to change 5073 * @param mode 5074 * bitmask with the permissions of the node, as specified in 'man 2 stat'. 5075 * The file type bitfields will be ignored, only file permissions will be 5076 * modified. 5077 * 5078 * @since 0.6.2 5079 */ 5080 void iso_node_set_permissions(IsoNode *node, mode_t mode); 5081 5082 /** 5083 * Get the permissions for the node 5084 * 5085 * @since 0.6.2 5086 */ 5087 mode_t iso_node_get_permissions(const IsoNode *node); 5088 5089 /** 5090 * Get the mode of the node, both permissions and file type, as specified in 5091 * 'man 2 stat'. 5092 * 5093 * @since 0.6.2 5094 */ 5095 mode_t iso_node_get_mode(const IsoNode *node); 5096 5097 /** 5098 * Set the user id for the node. This attribute is only useful when 5099 * Rock Ridge extensions are enabled. 5100 * 5101 * @since 0.6.2 5102 */ 5103 void iso_node_set_uid(IsoNode *node, uid_t uid); 5104 5105 /** 5106 * Get the user id of the node. 5107 * 5108 * @since 0.6.2 5109 */ 5110 uid_t iso_node_get_uid(const IsoNode *node); 5111 5112 /** 5113 * Set the group id for the node. This attribute is only useful when 5114 * Rock Ridge extensions are enabled. 5115 * 5116 * @since 0.6.2 5117 */ 5118 void iso_node_set_gid(IsoNode *node, gid_t gid); 5119 5120 /** 5121 * Get the group id of the node. 5122 * 5123 * @since 0.6.2 5124 */ 5125 gid_t iso_node_get_gid(const IsoNode *node); 5126 5127 /** 5128 * Set the time of last modification of the file 5129 * 5130 * @since 0.6.2 5131 */ 5132 void iso_node_set_mtime(IsoNode *node, time_t time); 5133 5134 /** 5135 * Get the time of last modification of the file 5136 * 5137 * @since 0.6.2 5138 */ 5139 time_t iso_node_get_mtime(const IsoNode *node); 5140 5141 /** 5142 * Set the time of last access to the file 5143 * 5144 * @since 0.6.2 5145 */ 5146 void iso_node_set_atime(IsoNode *node, time_t time); 5147 5148 /** 5149 * Get the time of last access to the file 5150 * 5151 * @since 0.6.2 5152 */ 5153 time_t iso_node_get_atime(const IsoNode *node); 5154 5155 /** 5156 * Set the time of last status change of the file 5157 * 5158 * @since 0.6.2 5159 */ 5160 void iso_node_set_ctime(IsoNode *node, time_t time); 5161 5162 /** 5163 * Get the time of last status change of the file 5164 * 5165 * @since 0.6.2 5166 */ 5167 time_t iso_node_get_ctime(const IsoNode *node); 5168 5169 /** 5170 * Set whether the node will be hidden in the directory trees of RR/ISO 9660, 5171 * or of Joliet (if enabled at all), or of ISO-9660:1999 (if enabled at all). 5172 * 5173 * A hidden file does not show up by name in the affected directory tree. 5174 * For example, if a file is hidden only in Joliet, it will normally 5175 * not be visible on Windows systems, while being shown on GNU/Linux. 5176 * 5177 * If a file is not shown in any of the enabled trees, then its content will 5178 * not be written to the image, unless LIBISO_HIDE_BUT_WRITE is given (which 5179 * is available only since release 0.6.34). 5180 * 5181 * @param node 5182 * The node that is to be hidden. 5183 * @param hide_attrs 5184 * Or-combination of values from enum IsoHideNodeFlag to set the trees 5185 * in which the node's name shall be hidden. 5186 * 5187 * @since 0.6.2 5188 */ 5189 void iso_node_set_hidden(IsoNode *node, int hide_attrs); 5190 5191 /** 5192 * Get the hide_attrs as eventually set by iso_node_set_hidden(). 5193 * 5194 * @param node 5195 * The node to inquire. 5196 * @return 5197 * Or-combination of values from enum IsoHideNodeFlag which are 5198 * currently set for the node. 5199 * 5200 * @since 0.6.34 5201 */ 5202 int iso_node_get_hidden(IsoNode *node); 5203 5204 /** 5205 * Compare two nodes whether they are based on the same input and 5206 * can be considered as hardlinks to the same file objects. 5207 * 5208 * @param n1 5209 * The first node to compare. 5210 * @param n2 5211 * The second node to compare. 5212 * @return 5213 * -1 if n1 is smaller n2 , 0 if n1 matches n2 , 1 if n1 is larger n2 5214 * @param flag 5215 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 5216 * @since 0.6.20 5217 */ 5218 int iso_node_cmp_ino(IsoNode *n1, IsoNode *n2, int flag); 5219 5220 /** 5221 * Add a new node to a dir. Note that this function don't add a new ref to 5222 * the node, so you don't need to free it, it will be automatically freed 5223 * when the dir is deleted. Of course, if you want to keep using the node 5224 * after the dir life, you need to iso_node_ref() it. 5225 * 5226 * @param dir 5227 * the dir where to add the node 5228 * @param child 5229 * the node to add. You must ensure that the node hasn't previously added 5230 * to other dir, and that the node name is unique inside the child. 5231 * Otherwise this function will return a failure, and the child won't be 5232 * inserted. 5233 * @param replace 5234 * if the dir already contains a node with the same name, whether to 5235 * replace or not the old node with this. 5236 * @return 5237 * number of nodes in dir if success, < 0 otherwise 5238 * Possible errors: 5239 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if dir or child are NULL 5240 * ISO_NODE_ALREADY_ADDED, if child is already added to other dir 5241 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 5242 * ISO_WRONG_ARG_VALUE, if child == dir, or replace != (0,1) 5243 * 5244 * @since 0.6.2 5245 */ 5246 int iso_dir_add_node(IsoDir *dir, IsoNode *child, 5247 enum iso_replace_mode replace); 5248 5249 /** 5250 * Locate a node inside a given dir. 5251 * 5252 * The IsoImage context defines a maximum permissible name length and a mode 5253 * how to react on oversized names. See iso_image_set_truncate_mode(). 5254 * If the caller looks for an oversized name and image truncate mode is 1, 5255 * then this call looks for the truncated name among the nodes of dir. 5256 * 5257 * @param image 5258 * The image object to which dir belongs. 5259 * @param dir 5260 * The dir where to look for the node. 5261 * @param name 5262 * The name of the node. (Will not be changed if truncation happens.) 5263 * @param node 5264 * Location for a pointer to the node, it will filled with NULL if the dir 5265 * doesn't have a child with the given name. 5266 * The node will be owned by the dir and shouldn't be unref(). Just call 5267 * iso_node_ref() to get your own reference to the node. 5268 * Note that you can pass NULL is the only thing you want to do is check 5269 * if a node with such name already exists on dir. 5270 * @param flag 5271 * Bitfield for control purposes. 5272 * bit0= do not truncate name but lookup exactly as given. 5273 * @return 5274 * 1 node found 5275 * 0 no name truncation was needed, name not found in dir 5276 * 2 name truncation happened, truncated name not found in dir 5277 * < 0 error, see iso_dir_get_node(). 5278 * 5279 * @since 1.4.2 5280 */ 5281 int iso_image_dir_get_node(IsoImage *image, IsoDir *dir, 5282 const char *name, IsoNode **node, int flag); 5283 5284 /** 5285 * *** Deprecated *** 5286 * In most cases use iso_image_dir_get_node() instead. 5287 * 5288 * Locate a node inside a given dir without taking into respect name truncation 5289 * mode of an IsoImage. 5290 * 5291 * @param dir 5292 * The dir where to look for the node. 5293 * @param name 5294 * The name of the node 5295 * @param node 5296 * Location for a pointer to the node. See iso_image_get_node(). 5297 * @return 5298 * 1 node found, 0 child has no such node, < 0 error 5299 * Possible errors: 5300 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if dir or name are NULL 5301 * 5302 * @since 0.6.2 5303 */ 5304 int iso_dir_get_node(IsoDir *dir, const char *name, IsoNode **node); 5305 5306 /** 5307 * Get the number of children of a directory. 5308 * 5309 * @return 5310 * >= 0 number of items, < 0 error 5311 * Possible errors: 5312 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if dir is NULL 5313 * 5314 * @since 0.6.2 5315 */ 5316 int iso_dir_get_children_count(IsoDir *dir); 5317 5318 /** 5319 * Removes a child from a directory. 5320 * The child is not freed, so you will become the owner of the node. Later 5321 * you can add the node to another dir (calling iso_dir_add_node), or free 5322 * it if you don't need it (with iso_node_unref). 5323 * 5324 * @return 5325 * 1 on success, < 0 error 5326 * Possible errors: 5327 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if node is NULL 5328 * ISO_NODE_NOT_ADDED_TO_DIR, if node doesn't belong to a dir 5329 * 5330 * @since 0.6.2 5331 */ 5332 int iso_node_take(IsoNode *node); 5333 5334 /** 5335 * Removes a child from a directory and free (unref) it. 5336 * If you want to keep the child alive, you need to iso_node_ref() it 5337 * before this call, but in that case iso_node_take() is a better 5338 * alternative. 5339 * 5340 * @return 5341 * 1 on success, < 0 error 5342 * 5343 * @since 0.6.2 5344 */ 5345 int iso_node_remove(IsoNode *node); 5346 5347 /* 5348 * Get the parent of the given iso tree node. No extra ref is added to the 5349 * returned directory, you must take your ref. with iso_node_ref() if you 5350 * need it. 5351 * 5352 * If node is the root node, the same node will be returned as its parent. 5353 * 5354 * This returns NULL if the node doesn't pertain to any tree 5355 * (it was removed/taken). 5356 * 5357 * @since 0.6.2 5358 */ 5359 IsoDir *iso_node_get_parent(IsoNode *node); 5360 5361 /** 5362 * Get an iterator for the children of the given dir. 5363 * 5364 * You can iterate over the children with iso_dir_iter_next. When finished, 5365 * you should free the iterator with iso_dir_iter_free. 5366 * You must not delete a child of the same dir, using iso_node_take() or 5367 * iso_node_remove(), while you're using the iterator. You can use 5368 * iso_dir_iter_take() or iso_dir_iter_remove() instead. 5369 * 5370 * You can use the iterator in the way like this 5371 * 5372 * IsoDirIter *iter; 5373 * IsoNode *node; 5374 * if ( iso_dir_get_children(dir, &iter) != 1 ) { 5375 * // handle error 5376 * } 5377 * while ( iso_dir_iter_next(iter, &node) == 1 ) { 5378 * // do something with the child 5379 * } 5380 * iso_dir_iter_free(iter); 5381 * 5382 * An iterator is intended to be used in a single iteration over the 5383 * children of a dir. Thus, it should be treated as a temporary object, 5384 * and free as soon as possible. 5385 * 5386 * @return 5387 * 1 success, < 0 error 5388 * Possible errors: 5389 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if dir or iter are NULL 5390 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 5391 * 5392 * @since 0.6.2 5393 */ 5394 int iso_dir_get_children(const IsoDir *dir, IsoDirIter **iter); 5395 5396 /** 5397 * Get the next child. 5398 * Take care that the node is owned by its parent, and will be unref() when 5399 * the parent is freed. If you want your own ref to it, call iso_node_ref() 5400 * on it. 5401 * 5402 * @return 5403 * 1 success, 0 if dir has no more elements, < 0 error 5404 * Possible errors: 5405 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if node or iter are NULL 5406 * ISO_ERROR, on wrong iter usage, usual caused by modiying the 5407 * dir during iteration 5408 * 5409 * @since 0.6.2 5410 */ 5411 int iso_dir_iter_next(IsoDirIter *iter, IsoNode **node); 5412 5413 /** 5414 * Check if there're more children. 5415 * 5416 * @return 5417 * 1 dir has more elements, 0 no, < 0 error 5418 * Possible errors: 5419 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if iter is NULL 5420 * 5421 * @since 0.6.2 5422 */ 5423 int iso_dir_iter_has_next(IsoDirIter *iter); 5424 5425 /** 5426 * Free a dir iterator. 5427 * 5428 * @since 0.6.2 5429 */ 5430 void iso_dir_iter_free(IsoDirIter *iter); 5431 5432 /** 5433 * Removes a child from a directory during an iteration, without freeing it. 5434 * It's like iso_node_take(), but to be used during a directory iteration. 5435 * The node removed will be the last returned by the iteration. 5436 * 5437 * If you call this function twice without calling iso_dir_iter_next between 5438 * them is not allowed and you will get an ISO_ERROR in second call. 5439 * 5440 * @return 5441 * 1 on success, < 0 error 5442 * Possible errors: 5443 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if iter is NULL 5444 * ISO_ERROR, on wrong iter usage, for example by call this before 5445 * iso_dir_iter_next. 5446 * 5447 * @since 0.6.2 5448 */ 5449 int iso_dir_iter_take(IsoDirIter *iter); 5450 5451 /** 5452 * Removes a child from a directory during an iteration and unref() it. 5453 * Like iso_node_remove(), but to be used during a directory iteration. 5454 * The node removed will be the one returned by the previous iteration. 5455 * 5456 * It is not allowed to call this function twice without calling 5457 * iso_dir_iter_next between the calls. 5458 * 5459 * @return 5460 * 1 on success, < 0 error 5461 * Possible errors: 5462 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if iter is NULL 5463 * ISO_ERROR, on wrong iter usage, for example by calling this before 5464 * iso_dir_iter_next. 5465 * 5466 * @since 0.6.2 5467 */ 5468 int iso_dir_iter_remove(IsoDirIter *iter); 5469 5470 /** 5471 * Removes a node by iso_node_remove() or iso_dir_iter_remove(). If the node 5472 * is a directory then the whole tree of nodes underneath is removed too. 5473 * 5474 * @param node 5475 * The node to be removed. 5476 * @param boss_iter 5477 * If not NULL, then the node will be removed by 5478 * iso_dir_iter_remove(boss_iter) 5479 * else it will be removed by iso_node_remove(node). 5480 * @return 5481 * 1 is success, <0 indicates error 5482 * 5483 * @since 1.0.2 5484 */ 5485 int iso_node_remove_tree(IsoNode *node, IsoDirIter *boss_iter); 5486 5487 5488 /** 5489 * @since 0.6.4 5490 */ 5491 typedef struct iso_find_condition IsoFindCondition; 5492 5493 /** 5494 * Create a new condition that checks if the node name matches the given 5495 * wildcard. 5496 * 5497 * @param wildcard 5498 * @result 5499 * The created IsoFindCondition, NULL on error. 5500 * 5501 * @since 0.6.4 5502 */ 5503 IsoFindCondition *iso_new_find_conditions_name(const char *wildcard); 5504 5505 /** 5506 * Create a new condition that checks the node mode against a mode mask. It 5507 * can be used to check both file type and permissions. 5508 * 5509 * For example: 5510 * 5511 * iso_new_find_conditions_mode(S_IFREG) : search for regular files 5512 * iso_new_find_conditions_mode(S_IFCHR | S_IWUSR) : search for character 5513 * devices where owner has write permissions. 5514 * 5515 * @param mask 5516 * Mode mask to AND against node mode. 5517 * @result 5518 * The created IsoFindCondition, NULL on error. 5519 * 5520 * @since 0.6.4 5521 */ 5522 IsoFindCondition *iso_new_find_conditions_mode(mode_t mask); 5523 5524 /** 5525 * Create a new condition that checks the node gid. 5526 * 5527 * @param gid 5528 * Desired Group Id. 5529 * @result 5530 * The created IsoFindCondition, NULL on error. 5531 * 5532 * @since 0.6.4 5533 */ 5534 IsoFindCondition *iso_new_find_conditions_gid(gid_t gid); 5535 5536 /** 5537 * Create a new condition that checks the node uid. 5538 * 5539 * @param uid 5540 * Desired User Id. 5541 * @result 5542 * The created IsoFindCondition, NULL on error. 5543 * 5544 * @since 0.6.4 5545 */ 5546 IsoFindCondition *iso_new_find_conditions_uid(uid_t uid); 5547 5548 /** 5549 * Possible comparison between IsoNode and given conditions. 5550 * 5551 * @since 0.6.4 5552 */ 5553 enum iso_find_comparisons { 5554 ISO_FIND_COND_GREATER, 5555 ISO_FIND_COND_GREATER_OR_EQUAL, 5556 ISO_FIND_COND_EQUAL, 5557 ISO_FIND_COND_LESS, 5558 ISO_FIND_COND_LESS_OR_EQUAL 5559 }; 5560 5561 /** 5562 * Create a new condition that checks the time of last access. 5563 * 5564 * @param time 5565 * Time to compare against IsoNode atime. 5566 * @param comparison 5567 * Comparison to be done between IsoNode atime and submitted time. 5568 * Note that ISO_FIND_COND_GREATER, for example, is true if the node 5569 * time is greater than the submitted time. 5570 * @result 5571 * The created IsoFindCondition, NULL on error. 5572 * 5573 * @since 0.6.4 5574 */ 5575 IsoFindCondition *iso_new_find_conditions_atime(time_t time, 5576 enum iso_find_comparisons comparison); 5577 5578 /** 5579 * Create a new condition that checks the time of last modification. 5580 * 5581 * @param time 5582 * Time to compare against IsoNode mtime. 5583 * @param comparison 5584 * Comparison to be done between IsoNode mtime and submitted time. 5585 * Note that ISO_FIND_COND_GREATER, for example, is true if the node 5586 * time is greater than the submitted time. 5587 * @result 5588 * The created IsoFindCondition, NULL on error. 5589 * 5590 * @since 0.6.4 5591 */ 5592 IsoFindCondition *iso_new_find_conditions_mtime(time_t time, 5593 enum iso_find_comparisons comparison); 5594 5595 /** 5596 * Create a new condition that checks the time of last status change. 5597 * 5598 * @param time 5599 * Time to compare against IsoNode ctime. 5600 * @param comparison 5601 * Comparison to be done between IsoNode ctime and submitted time. 5602 * Note that ISO_FIND_COND_GREATER, for example, is true if the node 5603 * time is greater than the submitted time. 5604 * @result 5605 * The created IsoFindCondition, NULL on error. 5606 * 5607 * @since 0.6.4 5608 */ 5609 IsoFindCondition *iso_new_find_conditions_ctime(time_t time, 5610 enum iso_find_comparisons comparison); 5611 5612 /** 5613 * Create a new condition that check if the two given conditions are 5614 * valid. 5615 * 5616 * @param a 5617 * @param b 5618 * IsoFindCondition to compare 5619 * @result 5620 * The created IsoFindCondition, NULL on error. 5621 * 5622 * @since 0.6.4 5623 */ 5624 IsoFindCondition *iso_new_find_conditions_and(IsoFindCondition *a, 5625 IsoFindCondition *b); 5626 5627 /** 5628 * Create a new condition that check if at least one the two given conditions 5629 * is valid. 5630 * 5631 * @param a 5632 * @param b 5633 * IsoFindCondition to compare 5634 * @result 5635 * The created IsoFindCondition, NULL on error. 5636 * 5637 * @since 0.6.4 5638 */ 5639 IsoFindCondition *iso_new_find_conditions_or(IsoFindCondition *a, 5640 IsoFindCondition *b); 5641 5642 /** 5643 * Create a new condition that check if the given conditions is false. 5644 * 5645 * @param negate 5646 * @result 5647 * The created IsoFindCondition, NULL on error. 5648 * 5649 * @since 0.6.4 5650 */ 5651 IsoFindCondition *iso_new_find_conditions_not(IsoFindCondition *negate); 5652 5653 /** 5654 * Find all directory children that match the given condition. 5655 * 5656 * @param dir 5657 * Directory where we will search children. 5658 * @param cond 5659 * Condition that the children must match in order to be returned. 5660 * It will be free together with the iterator. Remember to delete it 5661 * if this function return error. 5662 * @param iter 5663 * Iterator that returns only the children that match condition. 5664 * @return 5665 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 5666 * 5667 * @since 0.6.4 5668 */ 5669 int iso_dir_find_children(IsoDir* dir, IsoFindCondition *cond, 5670 IsoDirIter **iter); 5671 5672 /** 5673 * Get the destination of a node. 5674 * The returned string belongs to the node and must not be modified nor 5675 * freed. Use strdup if you really need your own copy. 5676 * 5677 * @since 0.6.2 5678 */ 5679 const char *iso_symlink_get_dest(const IsoSymlink *link); 5680 5681 /** 5682 * Set the destination of a symbolic 5683 * 5684 * @param link 5685 * The link node to be manipulated 5686 * @param dest 5687 * New destination for the link. It must be a non-empty string, otherwise 5688 * this function doesn't modify previous destination. 5689 * @return 5690 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 5691 * 5692 * @since 0.6.2 5693 */ 5694 int iso_symlink_set_dest(IsoSymlink *link, const char *dest); 5695 5696 /** 5697 * Sets the order in which a node will be written on image. The data content 5698 * of files with high weight will be written to low block addresses. 5699 * 5700 * @param node 5701 * The node which weight will be changed. If it's a dir, this function 5702 * will change the weight of all its children. For nodes other that dirs 5703 * or regular files, this function has no effect. 5704 * @param w 5705 * The weight as a integer number, the greater this value is, the 5706 * closer from the beginning of image the file will be written. 5707 * Default value at IsoNode creation is 0. 5708 * 5709 * @since 0.6.2 5710 */ 5711 void iso_node_set_sort_weight(IsoNode *node, int w); 5712 5713 /** 5714 * Get the sort weight of a file. 5715 * 5716 * @since 0.6.2 5717 */ 5718 int iso_file_get_sort_weight(IsoFile *file); 5719 5720 /** 5721 * Get the size of the file, in bytes 5722 * 5723 * @since 0.6.2 5724 */ 5725 off_t iso_file_get_size(IsoFile *file); 5726 5727 /** 5728 * Get the device id (major/minor numbers) of the given block or 5729 * character device file. The result is undefined for other kind 5730 * of special files, of first be sure iso_node_get_mode() returns either 5731 * S_IFBLK or S_IFCHR. 5732 * 5733 * @since 0.6.6 5734 */ 5735 dev_t iso_special_get_dev(IsoSpecial *special); 5736 5737 /** 5738 * Get the IsoStream that represents the contents of the given IsoFile. 5739 * The stream may be a filter stream which itself get its input from a 5740 * further stream. This may be inquired by iso_stream_get_input_stream(). 5741 * 5742 * If you iso_stream_open() the stream, iso_stream_close() it before 5743 * image generation begins. 5744 * 5745 * @return 5746 * The IsoStream. No extra ref is added, so the IsoStream belongs to the 5747 * IsoFile, and it may be freed together with it. Add your own ref with 5748 * iso_stream_ref() if you need it. 5749 * 5750 * @since 0.6.4 5751 */ 5752 IsoStream *iso_file_get_stream(IsoFile *file); 5753 5754 /** 5755 * Get the block lba of a file node, if it was imported from an old image. 5756 * 5757 * @param file 5758 * The file 5759 * @param lba 5760 * Will be filled with the kba 5761 * @param flag 5762 * Reserved for future usage, submit 0 5763 * @return 5764 * 1 if lba is valid (file comes from old image and has only one section), 5765 * 0 if file was newly added, i.e. it does not come from an old image, 5766 * < 0 error, especially ISO_WRONG_ARG_VALUE if the file has more than 5767 * one file section. 5768 * 5769 * @since 0.6.4 5770 * 5771 * @deprecated Use iso_file_get_old_image_sections(), as this function does 5772 * not work with multi-extend files. 5773 */ 5774 int iso_file_get_old_image_lba(IsoFile *file, uint32_t *lba, int flag); 5775 5776 /** 5777 * Get the start addresses and the sizes of the data extents of a file node 5778 * if it was imported from an old image. 5779 * 5780 * @param file 5781 * The file 5782 * @param section_count 5783 * Returns the number of extent entries in sections array. 5784 * @param sections 5785 * Returns the array of file sections if section_count > 0. 5786 * In this case, apply free() to dispose it. 5787 * @param flag 5788 * Reserved for future usage, submit 0 5789 * @return 5790 * 1 if there are valid extents (file comes from old image), 5791 * 0 if file was newly added, i.e. it does not come from an old image, 5792 * < 0 error 5793 * 5794 * @since 0.6.8 5795 */ 5796 int iso_file_get_old_image_sections(IsoFile *file, int *section_count, 5797 struct iso_file_section **sections, 5798 int flag); 5799 5800 /* 5801 * Like iso_file_get_old_image_lba(), but take an IsoNode. 5802 * 5803 * @return 5804 * 1 if lba is valid (file comes from old image), 0 if file was newly 5805 * added, i.e. it does not come from an old image, 2 node type has no 5806 * LBA (no regular file), < 0 error 5807 * 5808 * @since 0.6.4 5809 */ 5810 int iso_node_get_old_image_lba(IsoNode *node, uint32_t *lba, int flag); 5811 5812 /** 5813 * Add a new directory to the iso tree. Permissions, owner and hidden atts 5814 * are taken from parent, you can modify them later. 5815 * 5816 * @param image 5817 * The image object to which the new directory shall belong. 5818 * @param parent 5819 * The directory node where the new directory will be grafted in. 5820 * @param name 5821 * Name for the new directory. If truncation mode is set to 1, 5822 * an oversized name gets truncated before further processing. 5823 * If a node with same name already exists on parent, this function 5824 * fails with ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE. 5825 * @param dir 5826 * place where to store a pointer to the newly created dir. No extra 5827 * ref is added, so you will need to call iso_node_ref() if you really 5828 * need it. You can pass NULL in this parameter if you don't need the 5829 * pointer. 5830 * @return 5831 * number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 5832 * Possible errors: 5833 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if parent or name are NULL 5834 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 5835 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 5836 * ISO_RR_NAME_TOO_LONG 5837 * 5838 * @since 1.4.2 5839 */ 5840 int iso_image_add_new_dir(IsoImage *image, IsoDir *parent, const char *name, 5841 IsoDir **dir); 5842 5843 /** 5844 * *** Deprecated *** 5845 * use iso_image_add_new_dir() instead 5846 * 5847 * Add a new directory to the iso tree without taking into respect name 5848 * truncation mode of an IsoImage. 5849 * For detailed description of parameters, see above iso_image_add_new_dir(). 5850 * 5851 * @param parent 5852 * the dir where the new directory will be created 5853 * @param name 5854 * name for the new dir. 5855 * @param dir 5856 * place where to store a pointer to the newly created dir.i 5857 * @return 5858 * number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 5859 * Possible errors: 5860 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if parent or name are NULL 5861 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 5862 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 5863 * 5864 * @since 0.6.2 5865 */ 5866 int iso_tree_add_new_dir(IsoDir *parent, const char *name, IsoDir **dir); 5867 5868 /** 5869 * Add a new regular file to the iso tree. Permissions are set to 0444, 5870 * owner and hidden atts are taken from parent. You can modify any of them 5871 * later. 5872 * 5873 * @param image 5874 * The image object to which the new file shall belong. 5875 * @param parent 5876 * The directory node where the new directory will be grafted in. 5877 * @param name 5878 * Name for the new file. If truncation mode is set to 1, 5879 * an oversized name gets truncated before further processing. 5880 * If a node with same name already exists on parent, this function 5881 * fails with ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE. 5882 * @param stream 5883 * IsoStream for the contents of the file. The reference will be taken 5884 * by the newly created file, you will need to take an extra ref to it 5885 * if you need it. 5886 * @param file 5887 * place where to store a pointer to the newly created file. No extra 5888 * ref is added, so you will need to call iso_node_ref() if you really 5889 * need it. You can pass NULL in this parameter if you don't need the 5890 * pointer 5891 * @return 5892 * number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 5893 * Possible errors: 5894 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if parent, name or dest are NULL 5895 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 5896 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 5897 * ISO_RR_NAME_TOO_LONG 5898 * 5899 * @since 1.4.2 5900 */ 5901 int iso_image_add_new_file(IsoImage *image, IsoDir *parent, const char *name, 5902 IsoStream *stream, IsoFile **file); 5903 5904 /** 5905 * *** Deprecated *** 5906 * use iso_image_add_new_file() instead 5907 * 5908 * Add a new regular file to the iso tree without taking into respect name 5909 * truncation mode of an IsoImage. 5910 * For detailed description of parameters, see above iso_image_add_new_file(). 5911 * 5912 * @param parent 5913 * the dir where the new file will be created 5914 * @param name 5915 * name for the new file. 5916 * @param stream 5917 * IsoStream for the contents of the file. 5918 * @param file 5919 * place where to store a pointer to the newly created file. 5920 * @return 5921 * number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 5922 * Possible errors: 5923 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if parent, name or dest are NULL 5924 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 5925 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 5926 * 5927 * @since 0.6.4 5928 */ 5929 int iso_tree_add_new_file(IsoDir *parent, const char *name, IsoStream *stream, 5930 IsoFile **file); 5931 5932 /** 5933 * Create an IsoStream object from content which is stored in a dynamically 5934 * allocated memory buffer. The new stream will become owner of the buffer 5935 * and apply free() to it when the stream finally gets destroyed itself. 5936 * 5937 * @param buf 5938 * The dynamically allocated memory buffer with the stream content. 5939 * @param size 5940 * The number of bytes which may be read from buf. 5941 * @param stream 5942 * Will return a reference to the newly created stream. 5943 * @return 5944 * ISO_SUCCESS or <0 for error. E.g. ISO_NULL_POINTER, ISO_OUT_OF_MEM. 5945 * 5946 * @since 1.0.0 5947 */ 5948 int iso_memory_stream_new(unsigned char *buf, size_t size, IsoStream **stream); 5949 5950 /** 5951 * Add a new symbolic link to the directory tree. Permissions are set to 0777, 5952 * owner and hidden atts are taken from parent. You can modify any of them 5953 * later. 5954 * 5955 * @param image 5956 * The image object to which the new directory shall belong. 5957 * @param parent 5958 * The directory node where the new symlink will be grafted in. 5959 * @param name 5960 * Name for the new symlink. If truncation mode is set to 1, 5961 * an oversized name gets truncated before further processing. 5962 * If a node with same name already exists on parent, this function 5963 * fails with ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE. 5964 * @param dest 5965 * The destination path of the link. The components of this path are 5966 * not checked for being oversized. 5967 * @param link 5968 * Place where to store a pointer to the newly created link. No extra 5969 * ref is added, so you will need to call iso_node_ref() if you really 5970 * need it. You can pass NULL in this parameter if you don't need the 5971 * pointer 5972 * @return 5973 * number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 5974 * Possible errors: 5975 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if parent, name or dest are NULL 5976 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 5977 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 5978 * ISO_RR_NAME_TOO_LONG 5979 * 5980 * @since 1.4.2 5981 */ 5982 int iso_image_add_new_symlink(IsoImage *image, IsoDir *parent, 5983 const char *name, const char *dest, 5984 IsoSymlink **link); 5985 5986 /** 5987 * *** Deprecated *** 5988 * use iso_image_add_new_symlink() instead 5989 * 5990 * Add a new symlink to the directory tree without taking into respect name 5991 * truncation mode of an IsoImage. 5992 * For detailed description of parameters, see above 5993 * iso_image_add_new_isymlink(). 5994 * 5995 * @param parent 5996 * the dir where the new symlink will be created 5997 * @param name 5998 * name for the new symlink. 5999 * @param dest 6000 * destination of the link 6001 * @param link 6002 * place where to store a pointer to the newly created link. 6003 * @return 6004 * number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 6005 * Possible errors: 6006 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if parent, name or dest are NULL 6007 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 6008 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 6009 * 6010 * @since 0.6.2 6011 */ 6012 int iso_tree_add_new_symlink(IsoDir *parent, const char *name, 6013 const char *dest, IsoSymlink **link); 6014 6015 /** 6016 * Add a new special file to the directory tree. As far as libisofs concerns, 6017 * a special file is a block device, a character device, a FIFO (named pipe) 6018 * or a socket. You can choose the specific kind of file you want to add 6019 * by setting mode properly (see man 2 stat). 6020 * 6021 * Note that special files are only written to image when Rock Ridge 6022 * extensions are enabled. Moreover, a special file is just a directory entry 6023 * in the image tree, no data is written beyond that. 6024 * 6025 * Owner and hidden atts are taken from parent. You can modify any of them 6026 * later. 6027 * 6028 * @param image 6029 * The image object to which the new special file shall belong. 6030 * @param parent 6031 * The directory node where the new special file will be grafted in. 6032 * @param name 6033 * Name for the new special file. If truncation mode is set to 1, 6034 * an oversized name gets truncated before further processing. 6035 * If a node with same name already exists on parent, this function 6036 * fails with ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE. 6037 * @param mode 6038 * File type and permissions for the new node. Note that only the file 6039 * types S_IFSOCK, S_IFBLK, S_IFCHR, and S_IFIFO are allowed. 6040 * S_IFLNK, S_IFREG, or S_IFDIR are not. 6041 * @param dev 6042 * Device ID, equivalent to the st_rdev field in man 2 stat. 6043 * @param special 6044 * Place where to store a pointer to the newly created special file. No 6045 * extra ref is added, so you will need to call iso_node_ref() if you 6046 * really need it. You can pass NULL in this parameter if you don't need 6047 * the pointer. 6048 * @return 6049 * Number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 6050 * Possible errors: 6051 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if parent, name or dest are NULL 6052 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 6053 * ISO_WRONG_ARG_VALUE if you select a incorrect mode 6054 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 6055 * ISO_RR_NAME_TOO_LONG 6056 * 6057 * @since 1.4.2 6058 */ 6059 int iso_image_add_new_special(IsoImage *image, IsoDir *parent, 6060 const char *name, mode_t mode, 6061 dev_t dev, IsoSpecial **special); 6062 6063 /** 6064 * *** Deprecated *** 6065 * use iso_image_add_new_special() instead 6066 * 6067 * Add a new special file to the directory tree without taking into respect name 6068 * truncation mode of an IsoImage. 6069 * For detailed description of parameters, see above 6070 * iso_image_add_new_special(). 6071 * 6072 * @param parent 6073 * the dir where the new special file will be created 6074 * @param name 6075 * name for the new special file. 6076 * @param mode 6077 * file type and permissions for the new node. 6078 * @param dev 6079 * device ID, equivalent to the st_rdev field in man 2 stat. 6080 * @param special 6081 * place where to store a pointer to the newly created special file. 6082 * @return 6083 * number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 6084 * Possible errors: 6085 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if parent, name or dest are NULL 6086 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 6087 * ISO_WRONG_ARG_VALUE if you select a incorrect mode 6088 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 6089 * 6090 * @since 0.6.2 6091 */ 6092 int iso_tree_add_new_special(IsoDir *parent, const char *name, mode_t mode, 6093 dev_t dev, IsoSpecial **special); 6094 6095 /** 6096 * Set whether to follow or not symbolic links when added a file from a source 6097 * to IsoImage. Default behavior is to not follow symlinks. 6098 * 6099 * @since 0.6.2 6100 */ 6101 void iso_tree_set_follow_symlinks(IsoImage *image, int follow); 6102 6103 /** 6104 * Get current setting for follow_symlinks. 6105 * 6106 * @see iso_tree_set_follow_symlinks 6107 * @since 0.6.2 6108 */ 6109 int iso_tree_get_follow_symlinks(IsoImage *image); 6110 6111 /** 6112 * Set whether to skip or not disk files with names beginning by '.' 6113 * when adding a directory recursively. 6114 * Default behavior is to not ignore them. 6115 * 6116 * Clarification: This is not related to the IsoNode property to be hidden 6117 * in one or more of the resulting image trees as of 6118 * IsoHideNodeFlag and iso_node_set_hidden(). 6119 * 6120 * @since 0.6.2 6121 */ 6122 void iso_tree_set_ignore_hidden(IsoImage *image, int skip); 6123 6124 /** 6125 * Get current setting for ignore_hidden. 6126 * 6127 * @see iso_tree_set_ignore_hidden 6128 * @since 0.6.2 6129 */ 6130 int iso_tree_get_ignore_hidden(IsoImage *image); 6131 6132 /** 6133 * Set the replace mode, that defines the behavior of libisofs when adding 6134 * a node whit the same name that an existent one, during a recursive 6135 * directory addition. 6136 * 6137 * @since 0.6.2 6138 */ 6139 void iso_tree_set_replace_mode(IsoImage *image, enum iso_replace_mode mode); 6140 6141 /** 6142 * Get current setting for replace_mode. 6143 * 6144 * @see iso_tree_set_replace_mode 6145 * @since 0.6.2 6146 */ 6147 enum iso_replace_mode iso_tree_get_replace_mode(IsoImage *image); 6148 6149 /** 6150 * Set whether to skip or not special files. Default behavior is to not skip 6151 * them. Note that, despite of this setting, special files will never be added 6152 * to an image unless RR extensions were enabled. 6153 * 6154 * @param image 6155 * The image to manipulate. 6156 * @param skip 6157 * Bitmask to determine what kind of special files will be skipped: 6158 * bit0: ignore FIFOs 6159 * bit1: ignore Sockets 6160 * bit2: ignore char devices 6161 * bit3: ignore block devices 6162 * 6163 * @since 0.6.2 6164 */ 6165 void iso_tree_set_ignore_special(IsoImage *image, int skip); 6166 6167 /** 6168 * Get current setting for ignore_special. 6169 * 6170 * @see iso_tree_set_ignore_special 6171 * @since 0.6.2 6172 */ 6173 int iso_tree_get_ignore_special(IsoImage *image); 6174 6175 /** 6176 * Add a excluded path. These are paths that won't never added to image, and 6177 * will be excluded even when adding recursively its parent directory. 6178 * 6179 * For example, in 6180 * 6181 * iso_tree_add_exclude(image, "/home/user/data/private"); 6182 * iso_tree_add_dir_rec(image, root, "/home/user/data"); 6183 * 6184 * the directory /home/user/data/private won't be added to image. 6185 * 6186 * However, if you explicitly add a deeper dir, it won't be excluded. i.e., 6187 * in the following example. 6188 * 6189 * iso_tree_add_exclude(image, "/home/user/data"); 6190 * iso_tree_add_dir_rec(image, root, "/home/user/data/private"); 6191 * 6192 * the directory /home/user/data/private is added. On the other, side, and 6193 * following the example above, 6194 * 6195 * iso_tree_add_dir_rec(image, root, "/home/user"); 6196 * 6197 * will exclude the directory "/home/user/data". 6198 * 6199 * Absolute paths are not mandatory, you can, for example, add a relative 6200 * path such as: 6201 * 6202 * iso_tree_add_exclude(image, "private"); 6203 * iso_tree_add_exclude(image, "user/data"); 6204 * 6205 * to exclude, respectively, all files or dirs named private, and also all 6206 * files or dirs named data that belong to a folder named "user". Note that the 6207 * above rule about deeper dirs is still valid. i.e., if you call 6208 * 6209 * iso_tree_add_dir_rec(image, root, "/home/user/data/music"); 6210 * 6211 * it is included even containing "user/data" string. However, a possible 6212 * "/home/user/data/music/user/data" is not added. 6213 * 6214 * Usual wildcards, such as * or ? are also supported, with the usual meaning 6215 * as stated in "man 7 glob". For example 6216 * 6217 * // to exclude backup text files 6218 * iso_tree_add_exclude(image, "*.~"); 6219 * 6220 * @return 6221 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 6222 * 6223 * @since 0.6.2 6224 */ 6225 int iso_tree_add_exclude(IsoImage *image, const char *path); 6226 6227 /** 6228 * Remove a previously added exclude. 6229 * 6230 * @see iso_tree_add_exclude 6231 * @return 6232 * 1 on success, 0 exclude do not exists, < 0 on error 6233 * 6234 * @since 0.6.2 6235 */ 6236 int iso_tree_remove_exclude(IsoImage *image, const char *path); 6237 6238 /** 6239 * Set a callback function that libisofs will call for each file that is 6240 * added to the given image by a recursive addition function. This includes 6241 * image import. 6242 * 6243 * @param image 6244 * The image to manipulate. 6245 * @param report 6246 * pointer to a function that will be called just before a file will be 6247 * added to the image. You can control whether the file will be in fact 6248 * added or ignored. 6249 * This function should return 1 to add the file, 0 to ignore it and 6250 * continue, < 0 to abort the process 6251 * NULL is allowed if you don't want any callback. 6252 * 6253 * @since 0.6.2 6254 */ 6255 void iso_tree_set_report_callback(IsoImage *image, 6256 int (*report)(IsoImage*, IsoFileSource*)); 6257 6258 /** 6259 * Add a new node to the image tree, from an existing file. 6260 * 6261 * TODO comment Builder and Filesystem related issues when exposing both 6262 * 6263 * All attributes will be taken from the source file. The appropriate file 6264 * type will be created. 6265 * 6266 * @param image 6267 * The image 6268 * @param parent 6269 * The directory in the image tree where the node will be added. 6270 * @param path 6271 * The absolute path of the file in the local filesystem. 6272 * The node will have the same leaf name as the file on disk, possibly 6273 * truncated according to iso_image_set_truncate_mode(). 6274 * Its directory path depends on the parent node. 6275 * @param node 6276 * place where to store a pointer to the newly added file. No 6277 * extra ref is added, so you will need to call iso_node_ref() if you 6278 * really need it. You can pass NULL in this parameter if you don't need 6279 * the pointer. 6280 * @return 6281 * number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 6282 * Possible errors: 6283 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if image, parent or path are NULL 6284 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 6285 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 6286 * ISO_RR_NAME_TOO_LONG 6287 * 6288 * @since 0.6.2 6289 */ 6290 int iso_tree_add_node(IsoImage *image, IsoDir *parent, const char *path, 6291 IsoNode **node); 6292 6293 /** 6294 * This is a more versatile form of iso_tree_add_node which allows to set 6295 * the node name in ISO image already when it gets added. 6296 * 6297 * Add a new node to the image tree, from an existing file, and with the 6298 * given name, that must not exist on dir. 6299 * 6300 * @param image 6301 * The image 6302 * @param parent 6303 * The directory in the image tree where the node will be added. 6304 * @param name 6305 * The leaf name that the node will have on image, possibly truncated 6306 * according to iso_image_set_truncate_mode(). 6307 * Its directory path depends on the parent node. 6308 * @param path 6309 * The absolute path of the file in the local filesystem. 6310 * @param node 6311 * place where to store a pointer to the newly added file. No 6312 * extra ref is added, so you will need to call iso_node_ref() if you 6313 * really need it. You can pass NULL in this parameter if you don't need 6314 * the pointer. 6315 * @return 6316 * number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 6317 * Possible errors: 6318 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if image, parent or path are NULL 6319 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 6320 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 6321 * ISO_RR_NAME_TOO_LONG 6322 * 6323 * @since 0.6.4 6324 */ 6325 int iso_tree_add_new_node(IsoImage *image, IsoDir *parent, const char *name, 6326 const char *path, IsoNode **node); 6327 6328 /** 6329 * Add a new node to the image tree with the given name that must not exist 6330 * on dir. The node data content will be a byte interval out of the data 6331 * content of a file in the local filesystem. 6332 * 6333 * @param image 6334 * The image 6335 * @param parent 6336 * The directory in the image tree where the node will be added. 6337 * @param name 6338 * The leaf name that the node will have on image, possibly truncated 6339 * according to iso_image_set_truncate_mode(). 6340 * Its directory path depends on the parent node. 6341 * @param path 6342 * The absolute path of the file in the local filesystem. For now 6343 * only regular files and symlinks to regular files are supported. 6344 * @param offset 6345 * Byte number in the given file from where to start reading data. 6346 * @param size 6347 * Max size of the file. This may be more than actually available from 6348 * byte offset to the end of the file in the local filesystem. 6349 * @param node 6350 * place where to store a pointer to the newly added file. No 6351 * extra ref is added, so you will need to call iso_node_ref() if you 6352 * really need it. You can pass NULL in this parameter if you don't need 6353 * the pointer. 6354 * @return 6355 * number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 6356 * Possible errors: 6357 * ISO_NULL_POINTER, if image, parent or path are NULL 6358 * ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE, a node with same name already exists 6359 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 6360 * ISO_RR_NAME_TOO_LONG 6361 * 6362 * @since 0.6.4 6363 */ 6364 int iso_tree_add_new_cut_out_node(IsoImage *image, IsoDir *parent, 6365 const char *name, const char *path, 6366 off_t offset, off_t size, 6367 IsoNode **node); 6368 6369 /** 6370 * Create a copy of the given node under a different path. If the node is 6371 * actually a directory then clone its whole subtree. 6372 * This call may fail because an IsoFile is encountered which gets fed by an 6373 * IsoStream which cannot be cloned. See also IsoStream_Iface method 6374 * clone_stream(). 6375 * Surely clonable node types are: 6376 * IsoDir, 6377 * IsoSymlink, 6378 * IsoSpecial, 6379 * IsoFile from a loaded ISO image, 6380 * IsoFile referring to local filesystem files, 6381 * IsoFile created by iso_tree_add_new_file 6382 * from a stream created by iso_memory_stream_new(), 6383 * IsoFile created by iso_tree_add_new_cut_out_node() 6384 * Silently ignored are nodes of type IsoBoot. 6385 * An IsoFile node with IsoStream filters can be cloned if all those filters 6386 * are clonable and the node would be clonable without filter. 6387 * Clonable IsoStream filters are created by: 6388 * iso_file_add_zisofs_filter() 6389 * iso_file_add_gzip_filter() 6390 * iso_file_add_external_filter() 6391 * An IsoNode with extended information as of iso_node_add_xinfo() can only be 6392 * cloned if each of the iso_node_xinfo_func instances is associated to a 6393 * clone function. See iso_node_xinfo_make_clonable(). 6394 * All internally used classes of extended information are clonable. 6395 * 6396 * The IsoImage context defines a maximum permissible name length and a mode 6397 * how to react on oversized names. See iso_image_set_truncate_mode(). 6398 * 6399 * @param image 6400 * The image object to which the node belongs. 6401 * @param node 6402 * The node to be cloned. 6403 * @param new_parent 6404 * The existing directory node where to insert the cloned node. 6405 * @param new_name 6406 * The name for the cloned node. It must not yet exist in new_parent, 6407 * unless it is a directory and node is a directory and flag bit0 is set. 6408 * @param new_node 6409 * Will return a pointer (without reference) to the newly created clone. 6410 * @param flag 6411 * Bitfield for control purposes. Submit any undefined bits as 0. 6412 * bit0= Merge directories rather than returning ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE. 6413 * This will not allow to overwrite any existing node. 6414 * Attributes of existing directories will not be overwritten. 6415 * bit1= issue warning in case of new_name truncation 6416 * @return 6417 * <0 means error, 1 = new node created, 6418 * 2 = if flag bit0 is set: new_node is a directory which already existed. 6419 * 6420 * @since 1.4.2 6421 */ 6422 int iso_image_tree_clone(IsoImage *image, IsoNode *node, IsoDir *new_parent, 6423 char *new_name, IsoNode **new_node, int flag); 6424 6425 /** 6426 * *** Deprecated *** 6427 * use iso_image_tree_clone() instead 6428 * 6429 * Create a copy of the given node under a different path without taking 6430 * into respect name truncation mode of an IsoImage. 6431 * 6432 * @param node 6433 * The node to be cloned. 6434 * @param new_parent 6435 * The existing directory node where to insert the cloned node. 6436 * @param new_name 6437 * The name for the cloned node. It must not yet exist in new_parent, 6438 * unless it is a directory and node is a directory and flag bit0 is set. 6439 * @param new_node 6440 * Will return a pointer (without reference) to the newly created clone. 6441 * @param flag 6442 * Bitfield for control purposes. Submit any undefined bits as 0. 6443 * bit0= Merge directories rather than returning ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE. 6444 * This will not allow to overwrite any existing node. 6445 * Attributes of existing directories will not be overwritten. 6446 * @return 6447 * <0 means error, 1 = new node created, 6448 * 2 = if flag bit0 is set: new_node is a directory which already existed. 6449 * 6450 * @since 1.0.2 6451 */ 6452 int iso_tree_clone(IsoNode *node, 6453 IsoDir *new_parent, char *new_name, IsoNode **new_node, 6454 int flag); 6455 6456 /** 6457 * Add the contents of a dir to a given directory of the iso tree. 6458 * 6459 * There are several options to control what files are added or how they are 6460 * managed. Take a look at iso_tree_set_* functions to see different options 6461 * for recursive directory addition. 6462 * 6463 * TODO comment Builder and Filesystem related issues when exposing both 6464 * 6465 * @param image 6466 * The image to which the directory belongs. 6467 * @param parent 6468 * Directory on the image tree where to add the contents of the dir 6469 * @param dir 6470 * Path to a dir in the filesystem 6471 * @return 6472 * number of nodes in parent if success, < 0 otherwise 6473 * 6474 * @since 0.6.2 6475 */ 6476 int iso_tree_add_dir_rec(IsoImage *image, IsoDir *parent, const char *dir); 6477 6478 /** 6479 * Inquire whether some local filesystem xattr namespace could not be explored 6480 * during node building.This may happen due to lack of administrator privileges 6481 * e.g. on FreeBSD namespace "system". 6482 * It may well be that the processed local files have no attributes which 6483 * would require special privileges. But already their existence was neither 6484 * denied nor confirmed. 6485 * 6486 * @param image 6487 * The image to inquire. 6488 * @param flag 6489 * Bitfield for control purposes: 6490 * bit0 = reset internal value to 0 6491 * @return 6492 * 1 = Exploration was prevented 6493 * 0 = No such prevention occurred 6494 * 6495 * @since 1.5.0 6496 */ 6497 int iso_image_was_blind_attrs(IsoImage *image, int flag); 6498 6499 6500 /** 6501 * Locate a node by its absolute path in the image. 6502 * The IsoImage context defines a maximum permissible name length and a mode 6503 * how to react on oversized names. See iso_image_set_truncate_mode(). 6504 * 6505 * @param image 6506 * The image to which the node belongs. 6507 * @param path 6508 * File path beginning at the root directory of image. If truncation mode 6509 * is set to 1, oversized path components will be truncated before lookup. 6510 * @param node 6511 * Location for a pointer to the node, it will be filled with NULL if the 6512 * given path does not exists on image. 6513 * The node will be owned by the image and shouldn't be unref(). Just call 6514 * iso_node_ref() to get your own reference to the node. 6515 * Note that you can pass NULL is the only thing you want to do is check 6516 * if a node with such path really exists. 6517 * 6518 * @return 6519 * 1 node found 6520 * 0 no truncation was needed, path not found in image 6521 * 2 truncation happened, truncated path component not found in parent dir 6522 * < 0 error, see iso_dir_get_node(). 6523 * 6524 * @since 1.4.2 6525 */ 6526 int iso_image_path_to_node(IsoImage *image, const char *path, IsoNode **node); 6527 6528 /** 6529 * *** Deprecated *** 6530 * In most cases use iso_image_path_to_node() instead 6531 * 6532 * Locate a node by its absolute path on image without taking into respect 6533 * name truncation mode of the image. 6534 * 6535 * @param image 6536 * The image to which the node belongs. 6537 * @param path 6538 * File path beginning at the root directory of image. No truncation will 6539 * happen. 6540 * @param node 6541 * Location for a pointer to the node, it will be filled with NULL if the 6542 * given path does not exists on image. See iso_image_path_to_node(). 6543 * @return 6544 * 1 found, 0 not found, < 0 error 6545 * 6546 * @since 0.6.2 6547 */ 6548 int iso_tree_path_to_node(IsoImage *image, const char *path, IsoNode **node); 6549 6550 /** 6551 * Get the absolute path on image of the given node. 6552 * 6553 * @return 6554 * The path on the image, that must be freed when no more needed. If the 6555 * given node is not added to any image, this returns NULL. 6556 * @since 0.6.4 6557 */ 6558 char *iso_tree_get_node_path(IsoNode *node); 6559 6560 /** 6561 * Get the destination node of a symbolic link within the IsoImage. 6562 * 6563 * @param img 6564 * The image wherein to try resolving the link. 6565 * @param sym 6566 * The symbolic link node which to resolve. 6567 * @param res 6568 * Will return the found destination node, in case of success. 6569 * Call iso_node_ref() / iso_node_unref() if you intend to use the node 6570 * over API calls which might in any event delete it. 6571 * @param depth 6572 * Prevents endless loops. Submit as 0. 6573 * @param flag 6574 * Bitfield for control purposes. Submit 0 for now. 6575 * @return 6576 * 1 on success, 6577 * < 0 on failure, especially ISO_DEEP_SYMLINK and ISO_DEAD_SYMLINK 6578 * 6579 * @since 1.2.4 6580 */ 6581 int iso_tree_resolve_symlink(IsoImage *img, IsoSymlink *sym, IsoNode **res, 6582 int *depth, int flag); 6583 6584 /* Maximum number link resolution steps before ISO_DEEP_SYMLINK gets 6585 * returned by iso_tree_resolve_symlink(). 6586 * 6587 * @since 1.2.4 6588 */ 6589 #define LIBISO_MAX_LINK_DEPTH 100 6590 6591 /** 6592 * Increments the reference counting of the given IsoDataSource. 6593 * 6594 * @since 0.6.2 6595 */ 6596 void iso_data_source_ref(IsoDataSource *src); 6597 6598 /** 6599 * Decrements the reference counting of the given IsoDataSource, freeing it 6600 * if refcount reach 0. 6601 * 6602 * @since 0.6.2 6603 */ 6604 void iso_data_source_unref(IsoDataSource *src); 6605 6606 /** 6607 * Create a new IsoDataSource from a local file. This is suitable for 6608 * accessing regular files or block devices with ISO images. 6609 * 6610 * @param path 6611 * The absolute path of the file 6612 * @param src 6613 * Will be filled with the pointer to the newly created data source. 6614 * @return 6615 * 1 on success, < 0 on error. 6616 * 6617 * @since 0.6.2 6618 */ 6619 int iso_data_source_new_from_file(const char *path, IsoDataSource **src); 6620 6621 /** 6622 * Get the status of the buffer used by a burn_source. 6623 * 6624 * @param b 6625 * A burn_source previously obtained with 6626 * iso_image_create_burn_source(). 6627 * @param size 6628 * Will be filled with the total size of the buffer, in bytes 6629 * @param free_bytes 6630 * Will be filled with the bytes currently available in buffer 6631 * @return 6632 * < 0 error, > 0 state: 6633 * 1="active" : input and consumption are active 6634 * 2="ending" : input has ended without error 6635 * 3="failing" : input had error and ended, 6636 * 5="abandoned" : consumption has ended prematurely 6637 * 6="ended" : consumption has ended without input error 6638 * 7="aborted" : consumption has ended after input error 6639 * 6640 * @since 0.6.2 6641 */ 6642 int iso_ring_buffer_get_status(struct burn_source *b, size_t *size, 6643 size_t *free_bytes); 6644 6645 #define ISO_MSGS_MESSAGE_LEN 4096 6646 6647 /** 6648 * Control queueing and stderr printing of messages from libisofs. 6649 * Severity may be one of "NEVER", "FATAL", "SORRY", "WARNING", "HINT", 6650 * "NOTE", "UPDATE", "DEBUG", "ALL". 6651 * 6652 * @param queue_severity Gives the minimum limit for messages to be queued. 6653 * Default: "NEVER". If you queue messages then you 6654 * must consume them by iso_obtain_msgs(). 6655 * @param print_severity Does the same for messages to be printed directly 6656 * to stderr. 6657 * @param print_id A text prefix to be printed before the message. 6658 * @return >0 for success, <=0 for error 6659 * 6660 * @since 0.6.2 6661 */ 6662 int iso_set_msgs_severities(char *queue_severity, char *print_severity, 6663 char *print_id); 6664 6665 /** 6666 * Obtain the oldest pending libisofs message from the queue which has at 6667 * least the given minimum_severity. This message and any older message of 6668 * lower severity will get discarded from the queue and is then lost forever. 6669 * 6670 * Severity may be one of "NEVER", "FATAL", "SORRY", "WARNING", "HINT", 6671 * "NOTE", "UPDATE", "DEBUG", "ALL". To call with minimum_severity "NEVER" 6672 * will discard the whole queue. 6673 * 6674 * @param minimum_severity 6675 * Threshold 6676 * @param error_code 6677 * Will become a unique error code as listed at the end of this header 6678 * @param imgid 6679 * Id of the image that was issued the message. 6680 * @param msg_text 6681 * Must provide at least ISO_MSGS_MESSAGE_LEN bytes. 6682 * @param severity 6683 * Will become the severity related to the message and should provide at 6684 * least 80 bytes. 6685 * @return 6686 * 1 if a matching item was found, 0 if not, <0 for severe errors 6687 * 6688 * @since 0.6.2 6689 */ 6690 int iso_obtain_msgs(char *minimum_severity, int *error_code, int *imgid, 6691 char msg_text[], char severity[]); 6692 6693 6694 /** 6695 * Submit a message to the libisofs queueing system. It will be queued or 6696 * printed as if it was generated by libisofs itself. 6697 * 6698 * @param error_code 6699 * The unique error code of your message. 6700 * Submit 0 if you do not have reserved error codes within the libburnia 6701 * project. 6702 * @param msg_text 6703 * Not more than ISO_MSGS_MESSAGE_LEN characters of message text. 6704 * @param os_errno 6705 * Eventual errno related to the message. Submit 0 if the message is not 6706 * related to a operating system error. 6707 * @param severity 6708 * One of "ABORT", "FATAL", "FAILURE", "SORRY", "WARNING", "HINT", "NOTE", 6709 * "UPDATE", "DEBUG". Defaults to "FATAL". 6710 * @param origin 6711 * Submit 0 for now. 6712 * @return 6713 * 1 if message was delivered, <=0 if failure 6714 * 6715 * @since 0.6.4 6716 */ 6717 int iso_msgs_submit(int error_code, char msg_text[], int os_errno, 6718 char severity[], int origin); 6719 6720 6721 /** 6722 * Convert a severity name into a severity number, which gives the severity 6723 * rank of the name. 6724 * 6725 * @param severity_name 6726 * A name as with iso_msgs_submit(), e.g. "SORRY". 6727 * @param severity_number 6728 * The rank number: the higher, the more severe. 6729 * @return 6730 * >0 success, <=0 failure 6731 * 6732 * @since 0.6.4 6733 */ 6734 int iso_text_to_sev(char *severity_name, int *severity_number); 6735 6736 6737 /** 6738 * Convert a severity number into a severity name 6739 * 6740 * @param severity_number 6741 * The rank number: the higher, the more severe. 6742 * @param severity_name 6743 * A name as with iso_msgs_submit(), e.g. "SORRY". 6744 * 6745 * @since 0.6.4 6746 */ 6747 int iso_sev_to_text(int severity_number, char **severity_name); 6748 6749 6750 /** 6751 * Get the id of an IsoImage, used for message reporting. This message id, 6752 * retrieved with iso_obtain_msgs(), can be used to distinguish what 6753 * IsoImage has issued a given message. 6754 * 6755 * @since 0.6.2 6756 */ 6757 int iso_image_get_msg_id(IsoImage *image); 6758 6759 /** 6760 * Get a textual description of a libisofs error. 6761 * 6762 * @since 0.6.2 6763 */ 6764 const char *iso_error_to_msg(int errcode); 6765 6766 /** 6767 * Get the severity of a given error code 6768 * @return 6769 * 0x10000000 -> DEBUG 6770 * 0x20000000 -> UPDATE 6771 * 0x30000000 -> NOTE 6772 * 0x40000000 -> HINT 6773 * 0x50000000 -> WARNING 6774 * 0x60000000 -> SORRY 6775 * 0x64000000 -> MISHAP 6776 * 0x68000000 -> FAILURE 6777 * 0x70000000 -> FATAL 6778 * 0x71000000 -> ABORT 6779 * 6780 * @since 0.6.2 6781 */ 6782 int iso_error_get_severity(int e); 6783 6784 /** 6785 * Get the priority of a given error. 6786 * @return 6787 * 0x00000000 -> ZERO 6788 * 0x10000000 -> LOW 6789 * 0x20000000 -> MEDIUM 6790 * 0x30000000 -> HIGH 6791 * 6792 * @since 0.6.2 6793 */ 6794 int iso_error_get_priority(int e); 6795 6796 /** 6797 * Get the message queue code of a libisofs error. 6798 */ 6799 int iso_error_get_code(int e); 6800 6801 /** 6802 * Set the minimum error severity that causes a libisofs operation to 6803 * be aborted as soon as possible. 6804 * 6805 * @param severity 6806 * one of "FAILURE", "MISHAP", "SORRY", "WARNING", "HINT", "NOTE". 6807 * Severities greater or equal than FAILURE always cause program to abort. 6808 * Severities under NOTE won't never cause function abort. 6809 * @return 6810 * Previous abort priority on success, < 0 on error. 6811 * 6812 * @since 0.6.2 6813 */ 6814 int iso_set_abort_severity(char *severity); 6815 6816 /** 6817 * Return the messenger object handle used by libisofs. This handle 6818 * may be used by related libraries to their own compatible 6819 * messenger objects and thus to direct their messages to the libisofs 6820 * message queue. See also: libburn, API function burn_set_messenger(). 6821 * 6822 * @return the handle. Do only use with compatible 6823 * 6824 * @since 0.6.2 6825 */ 6826 void *iso_get_messenger(); 6827 6828 /** 6829 * Take a ref to the given IsoFileSource. 6830 * 6831 * @since 0.6.2 6832 */ 6833 void iso_file_source_ref(IsoFileSource *src); 6834 6835 /** 6836 * Drop your ref to the given IsoFileSource, eventually freeing the associated 6837 * system resources. 6838 * 6839 * @since 0.6.2 6840 */ 6841 void iso_file_source_unref(IsoFileSource *src); 6842 6843 /* 6844 * this are just helpers to invoque methods in class 6845 */ 6846 6847 /** 6848 * Get the absolute path in the filesystem this file source belongs to. 6849 * 6850 * @return 6851 * the path of the FileSource inside the filesystem, it should be 6852 * freed when no more needed. 6853 * 6854 * @since 0.6.2 6855 */ 6856 char* iso_file_source_get_path(IsoFileSource *src); 6857 6858 /** 6859 * Get the name of the file, with the dir component of the path. 6860 * 6861 * @return 6862 * the name of the file, it should be freed when no more needed. 6863 * 6864 * @since 0.6.2 6865 */ 6866 char* iso_file_source_get_name(IsoFileSource *src); 6867 6868 /** 6869 * Get information about the file. 6870 * @return 6871 * 1 success, < 0 error 6872 * Error codes: 6873 * ISO_FILE_ACCESS_DENIED 6874 * ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 6875 * ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 6876 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 6877 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 6878 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 6879 * 6880 * @since 0.6.2 6881 */ 6882 int iso_file_source_lstat(IsoFileSource *src, struct stat *info); 6883 6884 /** 6885 * Check if the process has access to read file contents. Note that this 6886 * is not necessarily related with (l)stat functions. For example, in a 6887 * filesystem implementation to deal with an ISO image, if the user has 6888 * read access to the image it will be able to read all files inside it, 6889 * despite of the particular permission of each file in the RR tree, that 6890 * are what the above functions return. 6891 * 6892 * @return 6893 * 1 if process has read access, < 0 on error 6894 * Error codes: 6895 * ISO_FILE_ACCESS_DENIED 6896 * ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 6897 * ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 6898 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 6899 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 6900 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 6901 * 6902 * @since 0.6.2 6903 */ 6904 int iso_file_source_access(IsoFileSource *src); 6905 6906 /** 6907 * Get information about the file. If the file is a symlink, the info 6908 * returned refers to the destination. 6909 * 6910 * @return 6911 * 1 success, < 0 error 6912 * Error codes: 6913 * ISO_FILE_ACCESS_DENIED 6914 * ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 6915 * ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 6916 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 6917 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 6918 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 6919 * 6920 * @since 0.6.2 6921 */ 6922 int iso_file_source_stat(IsoFileSource *src, struct stat *info); 6923 6924 /** 6925 * Opens the source. 6926 * @return 1 on success, < 0 on error 6927 * Error codes: 6928 * ISO_FILE_ALREADY_OPENED 6929 * ISO_FILE_ACCESS_DENIED 6930 * ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 6931 * ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 6932 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 6933 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 6934 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 6935 * 6936 * @since 0.6.2 6937 */ 6938 int iso_file_source_open(IsoFileSource *src); 6939 6940 /** 6941 * Close a previously opened file 6942 * @return 1 on success, < 0 on error 6943 * Error codes: 6944 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 6945 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 6946 * ISO_FILE_NOT_OPENED 6947 * 6948 * @since 0.6.2 6949 */ 6950 int iso_file_source_close(IsoFileSource *src); 6951 6952 /** 6953 * Attempts to read up to count bytes from the given source into 6954 * the buffer starting at buf. 6955 * 6956 * The file src must be open() before calling this, and close() when no 6957 * more needed. Not valid for dirs. On symlinks it reads the destination 6958 * file. 6959 * 6960 * @param src 6961 * The given source 6962 * @param buf 6963 * Pointer to a buffer of at least count bytes where the read data will be 6964 * stored 6965 * @param count 6966 * Bytes to read 6967 * @return 6968 * number of bytes read, 0 if EOF, < 0 on error 6969 * Error codes: 6970 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 6971 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 6972 * ISO_FILE_NOT_OPENED 6973 * ISO_WRONG_ARG_VALUE -> if count == 0 6974 * ISO_FILE_IS_DIR 6975 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 6976 * ISO_INTERRUPTED 6977 * 6978 * @since 0.6.2 6979 */ 6980 int iso_file_source_read(IsoFileSource *src, void *buf, size_t count); 6981 6982 /** 6983 * Repositions the offset of the given IsoFileSource (must be opened) to the 6984 * given offset according to the value of flag. 6985 * 6986 * @param src 6987 * The given source 6988 * @param offset 6989 * in bytes 6990 * @param flag 6991 * 0 The offset is set to offset bytes (SEEK_SET) 6992 * 1 The offset is set to its current location plus offset bytes 6993 * (SEEK_CUR) 6994 * 2 The offset is set to the size of the file plus offset bytes 6995 * (SEEK_END). 6996 * @return 6997 * Absolute offset position on the file, or < 0 on error. Cast the 6998 * returning value to int to get a valid libisofs error. 6999 * @since 0.6.4 7000 */ 7001 off_t iso_file_source_lseek(IsoFileSource *src, off_t offset, int flag); 7002 7003 /** 7004 * Read a directory. 7005 * 7006 * Each call to this function will return a new child, until we reach 7007 * the end of file (i.e, no more children), in that case it returns 0. 7008 * 7009 * The dir must be open() before calling this, and close() when no more 7010 * needed. Only valid for dirs. 7011 * 7012 * Note that "." and ".." children MUST NOT BE returned. 7013 * 7014 * @param src 7015 * The given source 7016 * @param child 7017 * pointer to be filled with the given child. Undefined on error or OEF 7018 * @return 7019 * 1 on success, 0 if EOF (no more children), < 0 on error 7020 * Error codes: 7021 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 7022 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 7023 * ISO_FILE_NOT_OPENED 7024 * ISO_FILE_IS_NOT_DIR 7025 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 7026 * 7027 * @since 0.6.2 7028 */ 7029 int iso_file_source_readdir(IsoFileSource *src, IsoFileSource **child); 7030 7031 /** 7032 * Read the destination of a symlink. You don't need to open the file 7033 * to call this. 7034 * 7035 * @param src 7036 * An IsoFileSource corresponding to a symbolic link. 7037 * @param buf 7038 * Allocated buffer of at least bufsiz bytes. 7039 * The destination string will be copied there, and it will be 0-terminated 7040 * if the return value indicates success or ISO_RR_PATH_TOO_LONG. 7041 * @param bufsiz 7042 * Maximum number of buf characters + 1. The string will be truncated if 7043 * it is larger than bufsiz - 1 and ISO_RR_PATH_TOO_LONG. will be returned. 7044 * @return 7045 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 7046 * Error codes: 7047 * ISO_FILE_ERROR 7048 * ISO_NULL_POINTER 7049 * ISO_WRONG_ARG_VALUE -> if bufsiz <= 0 7050 * ISO_FILE_IS_NOT_SYMLINK 7051 * ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 7052 * ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 7053 * ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 7054 * ISO_RR_PATH_TOO_LONG (@since 1.0.6) 7055 * 7056 * @since 0.6.2 7057 */ 7058 int iso_file_source_readlink(IsoFileSource *src, char *buf, size_t bufsiz); 7059 7060 7061 /** 7062 * Get the AAIP string with encoded ACL and xattr. 7063 * (Not to be confused with ECMA-119 Extended Attributes). 7064 * @param src The file source object to be inquired. 7065 * @param aa_string Returns a pointer to the AAIP string data. If no AAIP 7066 * string is available, *aa_string becomes NULL. 7067 * (See doc/susp_aaip_2_0.txt for the meaning of AAIP.) 7068 * The caller is responsible for finally calling free() 7069 * on non-NULL results. 7070 * @param flag Bitfield for control purposes 7071 * bit0= Transfer ownership of AAIP string data. 7072 * src will free the eventual cached data and might 7073 * not be able to produce it again. 7074 * bit1= No need to get ACL (but no guarantee of exclusion) 7075 * bit2= No need to get xattr (but no guarantee of exclusion) 7076 * bit3= if not bit2: import all xattr namespaces from 7077 * local filesystem, not only "user." 7078 * @since 1.5.0 7079 * @return 1 means success (*aa_string == NULL is possible) 7080 * <0 means failure and must b a valid libisofs error code 7081 * (e.g. ISO_FILE_ERROR if no better one can be found). 7082 * @since 0.6.14 7083 */ 7084 int iso_file_source_get_aa_string(IsoFileSource *src, 7085 unsigned char **aa_string, int flag); 7086 7087 /** 7088 * Get the filesystem for this source. No extra ref is added, so you 7089 * must not unref the IsoFilesystem. 7090 * 7091 * @return 7092 * The filesystem, NULL on error 7093 * 7094 * @since 0.6.2 7095 */ 7096 IsoFilesystem* iso_file_source_get_filesystem(IsoFileSource *src); 7097 7098 /** 7099 * Take a ref to the given IsoFilesystem 7100 * 7101 * @since 0.6.2 7102 */ 7103 void iso_filesystem_ref(IsoFilesystem *fs); 7104 7105 /** 7106 * Drop your ref to the given IsoFilesystem, evetually freeing associated 7107 * resources. 7108 * 7109 * @since 0.6.2 7110 */ 7111 void iso_filesystem_unref(IsoFilesystem *fs); 7112 7113 /** 7114 * Create a new IsoFilesystem to access a existent ISO image. 7115 * 7116 * @param src 7117 * Data source to access data. 7118 * @param opts 7119 * Image read options 7120 * @param msgid 7121 * An image identifier, obtained with iso_image_get_msg_id(), used to 7122 * associated messages issued by the filesystem implementation with an 7123 * existent image. If you are not using this filesystem in relation with 7124 * any image context, just use 0x1fffff as the value for this parameter. 7125 * @param fs 7126 * Will be filled with a pointer to the filesystem that can be used 7127 * to access image contents. 7128 * @return 7129 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 7130 * 7131 * @since 0.6.2 7132 */ 7133 int iso_image_filesystem_new(IsoDataSource *src, IsoReadOpts *opts, int msgid, 7134 IsoImageFilesystem **fs); 7135 7136 /** 7137 * Get the volset identifier for an existent image. The returned string belong 7138 * to the IsoImageFilesystem and shouldn't be free() nor modified. 7139 * 7140 * @since 0.6.2 7141 */ 7142 const char *iso_image_fs_get_volset_id(IsoImageFilesystem *fs); 7143 7144 /** 7145 * Get the volume identifier for an existent image. The returned string belong 7146 * to the IsoImageFilesystem and shouldn't be free() nor modified. 7147 * 7148 * @since 0.6.2 7149 */ 7150 const char *iso_image_fs_get_volume_id(IsoImageFilesystem *fs); 7151 7152 /** 7153 * Get the publisher identifier for an existent image. The returned string 7154 * belong to the IsoImageFilesystem and shouldn't be free() nor modified. 7155 * 7156 * @since 0.6.2 7157 */ 7158 const char *iso_image_fs_get_publisher_id(IsoImageFilesystem *fs); 7159 7160 /** 7161 * Get the data preparer identifier for an existent image. The returned string 7162 * belong to the IsoImageFilesystem and shouldn't be free() nor modified. 7163 * 7164 * @since 0.6.2 7165 */ 7166 const char *iso_image_fs_get_data_preparer_id(IsoImageFilesystem *fs); 7167 7168 /** 7169 * Get the system identifier for an existent image. The returned string belong 7170 * to the IsoImageFilesystem and shouldn't be free() nor modified. 7171 * 7172 * @since 0.6.2 7173 */ 7174 const char *iso_image_fs_get_system_id(IsoImageFilesystem *fs); 7175 7176 /** 7177 * Get the application identifier for an existent image. The returned string 7178 * belong to the IsoImageFilesystem and shouldn't be free() nor modified. 7179 * 7180 * @since 0.6.2 7181 */ 7182 const char *iso_image_fs_get_application_id(IsoImageFilesystem *fs); 7183 7184 /** 7185 * Get the copyright file identifier for an existent image. The returned string 7186 * belong to the IsoImageFilesystem and shouldn't be free() nor modified. 7187 * 7188 * @since 0.6.2 7189 */ 7190 const char *iso_image_fs_get_copyright_file_id(IsoImageFilesystem *fs); 7191 7192 /** 7193 * Get the abstract file identifier for an existent image. The returned string 7194 * belong to the IsoImageFilesystem and shouldn't be free() nor modified. 7195 * 7196 * @since 0.6.2 7197 */ 7198 const char *iso_image_fs_get_abstract_file_id(IsoImageFilesystem *fs); 7199 7200 /** 7201 * Get the biblio file identifier for an existent image. The returned string 7202 * belong to the IsoImageFilesystem and shouldn't be free() nor modified. 7203 * 7204 * @since 0.6.2 7205 */ 7206 const char *iso_image_fs_get_biblio_file_id(IsoImageFilesystem *fs); 7207 7208 /** 7209 * Increment reference count of an IsoStream. 7210 * 7211 * @since 0.6.4 7212 */ 7213 void iso_stream_ref(IsoStream *stream); 7214 7215 /** 7216 * Decrement reference count of an IsoStream, and eventually free it if 7217 * refcount reach 0. 7218 * 7219 * @since 0.6.4 7220 */ 7221 void iso_stream_unref(IsoStream *stream); 7222 7223 /** 7224 * Opens the given stream. Remember to close the Stream before writing the 7225 * image. 7226 * 7227 * @return 7228 * 1 on success, 2 file greater than expected, 3 file smaller than 7229 * expected, < 0 on error 7230 * 7231 * @since 0.6.4 7232 */ 7233 int iso_stream_open(IsoStream *stream); 7234 7235 /** 7236 * Close a previously opened IsoStream. 7237 * 7238 * @return 7239 * 1 on success, < 0 on error 7240 * 7241 * @since 0.6.4 7242 */ 7243 int iso_stream_close(IsoStream *stream); 7244 7245 /** 7246 * Get the size of a given stream. This function should always return the same 7247 * size, even if the underlying source size changes, unless you call 7248 * iso_stream_update_size(). 7249 * 7250 * @return 7251 * IsoStream size in bytes 7252 * 7253 * @since 0.6.4 7254 */ 7255 off_t iso_stream_get_size(IsoStream *stream); 7256 7257 /** 7258 * Attempts to read up to count bytes from the given stream into 7259 * the buffer starting at buf. 7260 * 7261 * The stream must be open() before calling this, and close() when no 7262 * more needed. 7263 * 7264 * @return 7265 * number of bytes read, 0 if EOF, < 0 on error 7266 * 7267 * @since 0.6.4 7268 */ 7269 int iso_stream_read(IsoStream *stream, void *buf, size_t count); 7270 7271 /** 7272 * Whether the given IsoStream can be read several times, with the same 7273 * results. 7274 * For example, a regular file is repeatable, you can read it as many 7275 * times as you want. However, a pipe isn't. 7276 * 7277 * This function doesn't take into account if the file has been modified 7278 * between the two reads. 7279 * 7280 * @return 7281 * 1 if stream is repeatable, 0 if not, < 0 on error 7282 * 7283 * @since 0.6.4 7284 */ 7285 int iso_stream_is_repeatable(IsoStream *stream); 7286 7287 /** 7288 * Updates the size of the IsoStream with the current size of the 7289 * underlying source. 7290 * 7291 * @return 7292 * 1 if ok, < 0 on error (has to be a valid libisofs error code), 7293 * 0 if the IsoStream does not support this function. 7294 * @since 0.6.8 7295 */ 7296 int iso_stream_update_size(IsoStream *stream); 7297 7298 /** 7299 * Get an unique identifier for a given IsoStream. 7300 * 7301 * @since 0.6.4 7302 */ 7303 void iso_stream_get_id(IsoStream *stream, unsigned int *fs_id, dev_t *dev_id, 7304 ino_t *ino_id); 7305 7306 /** 7307 * Try to get eventual source path string of a stream. Meaning and availability 7308 * of this string depends on the stream.class . Expect valid results with 7309 * types "fsrc" and "cout". Result formats are 7310 * fsrc: result of file_source_get_path() 7311 * cout: result of file_source_get_path() " " offset " " size 7312 * @param stream 7313 * The stream to be inquired. 7314 * @param flag 7315 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 7316 * @return 7317 * A copy of the path string. Apply free() when no longer needed. 7318 * NULL if no path string is available. 7319 * 7320 * @since 0.6.18 7321 */ 7322 char *iso_stream_get_source_path(IsoStream *stream, int flag); 7323 7324 /** 7325 * Compare two streams whether they are based on the same input and will 7326 * produce the same output. If in any doubt, then this comparison will 7327 * indicate no match. 7328 * 7329 * @param s1 7330 * The first stream to compare. 7331 * @param s2 7332 * The second stream to compare. 7333 * @return 7334 * -1 if s1 is smaller s2 , 0 if s1 matches s2 , 1 if s1 is larger s2 7335 * @param flag 7336 * bit0= do not use s1->class->cmp_ino() even if available 7337 * 7338 * @since 0.6.20 7339 */ 7340 int iso_stream_cmp_ino(IsoStream *s1, IsoStream *s2, int flag); 7341 7342 7343 /** 7344 * Produce a copy of a stream. It must be possible to operate both stream 7345 * objects concurrently. The success of this function depends on the 7346 * existence of a IsoStream_Iface.clone_stream() method with the stream 7347 * and with its eventual subordinate streams. 7348 * See iso_tree_clone() for a list of surely clonable built-in streams. 7349 * 7350 * @param old_stream 7351 * The existing stream object to be copied 7352 * @param new_stream 7353 * Will return a pointer to the copy 7354 * @param flag 7355 * Bitfield for control purposes. Submit 0 for now. 7356 * @return 7357 * >0 means success 7358 * ISO_STREAM_NO_CLONE is issued if no .clone_stream() exists 7359 * other error return values < 0 may occur depending on kind of stream 7360 * 7361 * @since 1.0.2 7362 */ 7363 int iso_stream_clone(IsoStream *old_stream, IsoStream **new_stream, int flag); 7364 7365 7366 /* --------------------------------- AAIP --------------------------------- */ 7367 7368 /** 7369 * Function to identify and manage AAIP strings as xinfo of IsoNode. 7370 * 7371 * An AAIP string contains the Attribute List with the xattr and ACL of a node 7372 * in the image tree. It is formatted according to libisofs specification 7373 * AAIP-2.0 and ready to be written into the System Use Area or Continuation 7374 * Area of a directory entry in an ISO image. 7375 * 7376 * Applications are not supposed to manipulate AAIP strings directly. 7377 * They should rather make use of the appropriate iso_node_get_* and 7378 * iso_node_set_* calls. 7379 * 7380 * AAIP represents ACLs as xattr with empty name and AAIP-specific binary 7381 * content. Local filesystems may represent ACLs as xattr with names like 7382 * "system.posix_acl_access". libisofs does not interpret those local 7383 * xattr representations of ACL directly but rather uses the ACL interface of 7384 * the local system. By default the local xattr representations of ACL will 7385 * not become part of the AAIP Attribute List via iso_local_get_attrs() and 7386 * not be attached to local files via iso_local_set_attrs(). 7387 * 7388 * @since 0.6.14 7389 */ 7390 int aaip_xinfo_func(void *data, int flag); 7391 7392 /** 7393 * The iso_node_xinfo_cloner function which gets associated to aaip_xinfo_func 7394 * by iso_init() or iso_init_with_flag() via iso_node_xinfo_make_clonable(). 7395 * @since 1.0.2 7396 */ 7397 int aaip_xinfo_cloner(void *old_data, void **new_data, int flag); 7398 7399 /** 7400 * Get the eventual ACLs which are associated with the node. 7401 * The result will be in "long" text form as of man acl and acl_to_text(). 7402 * Call this function with flag bit15 to finally release the memory 7403 * occupied by an ACL inquiry. 7404 * 7405 * @param node 7406 * The node that is to be inquired. 7407 * @param access_text 7408 * Will return a pointer to the eventual "access" ACL text or NULL if it 7409 * is not available and flag bit 4 is set. 7410 * @param default_text 7411 * Will return a pointer to the eventual "default" ACL or NULL if it 7412 * is not available. 7413 * (GNU/Linux directories can have a "default" ACL which influences 7414 * the permissions of newly created files.) 7415 * @param flag 7416 * Bitfield for control purposes 7417 * bit4= if no "access" ACL is available: return *access_text == NULL 7418 * else: produce ACL from stat(2) permissions 7419 * bit15= free memory and return 1 (node may be NULL) 7420 * @return 7421 * 2 *access_text was produced from stat(2) permissions 7422 * 1 *access_text was produced from ACL of node 7423 * 0 if flag bit4 is set and no ACL is available 7424 * < 0 on error 7425 * 7426 * @since 0.6.14 7427 */ 7428 int iso_node_get_acl_text(IsoNode *node, 7429 char **access_text, char **default_text, int flag); 7430 7431 7432 /** 7433 * Set the ACLs of the given node to the lists in parameters access_text and 7434 * default_text or delete them. 7435 * 7436 * The stat(2) permission bits get updated according to the new "access" ACL if 7437 * neither bit1 of parameter flag is set nor parameter access_text is NULL. 7438 * Note that S_IRWXG permission bits correspond to ACL mask permissions 7439 * if a "mask::" entry exists in the ACL. Only if there is no "mask::" then 7440 * the "group::" entry corresponds to to S_IRWXG. 7441 * 7442 * @param node 7443 * The node that is to be manipulated. 7444 * @param access_text 7445 * The text to be set into effect as "access" ACL. NULL will delete an 7446 * eventually existing "access" ACL of the node. 7447 * @param default_text 7448 * The text to be set into effect as "default" ACL. NULL will delete an 7449 * eventually existing "default" ACL of the node. 7450 * (GNU/Linux directories can have a "default" ACL which influences 7451 * the permissions of newly created files.) 7452 * @param flag 7453 * Bitfield for control purposes 7454 * bit0= Do not change the stat(2) permissions. 7455 * Caution: This can make the node's permission set inconsistent. 7456 * bit1= Ignore text parameters but rather update the "access" ACL 7457 * to the stat(2) permissions of node. If no "access" ACL exists, 7458 * then do nothing and return success. 7459 * bit2= Be verbose about failure causes. 7460 * @since 1.5.2 7461 * @return 7462 * > 0 success 7463 * < 0 failure 7464 * 7465 * @since 0.6.14 7466 */ 7467 int iso_node_set_acl_text(IsoNode *node, 7468 char *access_text, char *default_text, int flag); 7469 7470 /** 7471 * Like iso_node_get_permissions but reflecting ACL entry "group::" in S_IRWXG 7472 * rather than ACL entry "mask::". This is necessary if the permissions of a 7473 * node with ACL shall be restored to a filesystem without restoring the ACL. 7474 * The same mapping happens internally when the ACL of a node is deleted. 7475 * If the node has no ACL then the result is iso_node_get_permissions(node). 7476 * @param node 7477 * The node that is to be inquired. 7478 * @return 7479 * Permission bits as of stat(2) 7480 * 7481 * @since 0.6.14 7482 */ 7483 mode_t iso_node_get_perms_wo_acl(const IsoNode *node); 7484 7485 7486 /** 7487 * Get the list of xattr which is associated with the node. 7488 * The resulting data may finally be disposed by a call to this function 7489 * with flag bit15 set, or its components may be freed one-by-one. 7490 * The following values are either NULL or malloc() memory: 7491 * *names, *value_lengths, *values, (*names)[i], (*values)[i] 7492 * with 0 <= i < *num_attrs. 7493 * It is allowed to replace or reallocate those memory items in order to 7494 * to manipulate the attribute list before submitting it to other calls. 7495 * 7496 * If enabled by flag bit0, this list possibly includes the ACLs of the node. 7497 * They are eventually encoded in a pair with empty name. It is not advisable 7498 * to alter the value or name of that pair. One may decide to erase both ACLs 7499 * by deleting this pair or to copy both ACLs by copying the content of this 7500 * pair to an empty named pair of another node. 7501 * For all other ACL purposes use iso_node_get_acl_text(). 7502 * 7503 * @param node 7504 * The node that is to be inquired. 7505 * @param num_attrs 7506 * Will return the number of name-value pairs 7507 * @param names 7508 * Will return an array of pointers to 0-terminated names 7509 * @param value_lengths 7510 * Will return an array with the lengths of values 7511 * @param values 7512 * Will return an array of pointers to strings of 8-bit bytes 7513 * @param flag 7514 * Bitfield for control purposes 7515 * bit0= obtain eventual ACLs as attribute with empty name 7516 * bit2= with bit0: do not obtain attributes other than ACLs 7517 * bit15= free memory (node may be NULL) 7518 * @return 7519 * 1 = ok (but *num_attrs may be 0) 7520 * < 0 = error 7521 * 7522 * @since 0.6.14 7523 */ 7524 int iso_node_get_attrs(IsoNode *node, size_t *num_attrs, 7525 char ***names, size_t **value_lengths, char ***values, int flag); 7526 7527 7528 /** 7529 * Obtain the value of a particular xattr name. Eventually make a copy of 7530 * that value and add a trailing 0 byte for caller convenience. 7531 * @param node 7532 * The node that is to be inquired. 7533 * @param name 7534 * The xattr name that shall be looked up. 7535 * @param value_length 7536 * Will return the length of value 7537 * @param value 7538 * Will return a string of 8-bit bytes. free() it when no longer needed. 7539 * @param flag 7540 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 7541 * @return 7542 * 1= name found , 0= name not found , <0 indicates error 7543 * 7544 * @since 0.6.18 7545 */ 7546 int iso_node_lookup_attr(IsoNode *node, char *name, 7547 size_t *value_length, char **value, int flag); 7548 7549 /** 7550 * Set the list of xattr which is associated with the node. 7551 * The data get copied so that you may dispose your input data afterwards. 7552 * 7553 * If enabled by flag bit0 then the submitted list of attributes will not only 7554 * overwrite xattr but also both eventual ACLs of the node. Eventual ACL in 7555 * the submitted list have to reside in an attribute with empty name. 7556 * 7557 * @param node 7558 * The node that is to be manipulated. 7559 * @param num_attrs 7560 * Number of attributes 7561 * @param names 7562 * Array of pointers to 0 terminated name strings 7563 * @param value_lengths 7564 * Array of byte lengths for each value 7565 * @param values 7566 * Array of pointers to the value bytes 7567 * @param flag 7568 * Bitfield for control purposes 7569 * bit0= Do not maintain eventual existing ACL of the node. 7570 * Set eventual new ACL from value of empty name. 7571 * bit1= Do not clear the existing attribute list but merge it with 7572 * the list given by this call. 7573 * The given values override the values of their eventually existing 7574 * names. If no xattr with a given name exists, then it will be 7575 * added as new xattr. So this bit can be used to set a single 7576 * xattr without inquiring any other xattr of the node. 7577 * bit2= Delete the attributes with the given names 7578 * bit3= Allow to affect non-user attributes. 7579 * I.e. those with a non-empty name which does not begin by "user." 7580 * (The empty name is always allowed and governed by bit0.) This 7581 * deletes all previously existing attributes if not bit1 is set. 7582 * bit4= Do not affect attributes from namespace "isofs". 7583 * To be combined with bit3 for copying attributes from local 7584 * filesystem to ISO image. 7585 * @since 1.2.4 7586 * @return 7587 * 1 = ok 7588 * < 0 = error 7589 * 7590 * @since 0.6.14 7591 */ 7592 int iso_node_set_attrs(IsoNode *node, size_t num_attrs, char **names, 7593 size_t *value_lengths, char **values, int flag); 7594 7595 7596 /* ----- This is an interface to ACL and xattr of the local filesystem ----- */ 7597 7598 /** 7599 * libisofs has an internal system dependent adapter to ACL and xattr 7600 * operations. For the sake of completeness and simplicity it exposes this 7601 * functionality to its applications which might want to get and set ACLs 7602 * from local files. 7603 */ 7604 7605 /** 7606 * Inquire whether local filesystem operations with ACL or xattr are enabled 7607 * inside libisofs. They may be disabled because of compile time decisions. 7608 * E.g. because the operating system does not support these features or 7609 * because libisofs has not yet an adapter to use them. 7610 * 7611 * @param flag 7612 * Bitfield for control purposes 7613 * bit0= inquire availability of ACL 7614 * bit1= inquire availability of xattr 7615 * bit2 - bit7= Reserved for future types. 7616 * It is permissibile to set them to 1 already now. 7617 * bit8 and higher: reserved, submit 0 7618 * @return 7619 * Bitfield corresponding to flag. 7620 * bit0= ACL adapter is enabled 7621 * bit1= xattr adapter is enabled 7622 * bit2 - bit7= Reserved for future types. 7623 * bit8 and higher: reserved, do not interpret these 7624 * 7625 * @since 1.1.6 7626 */ 7627 int iso_local_attr_support(int flag); 7628 7629 /** 7630 * Get an ACL of the given file in the local filesystem in long text form. 7631 * 7632 * @param disk_path 7633 * Absolute path to the file 7634 * @param text 7635 * Will return a pointer to the ACL text. If not NULL the text will be 7636 * 0 terminated and finally has to be disposed by a call to this function 7637 * with bit15 set. 7638 * @param flag 7639 * Bitfield for control purposes 7640 * bit0= get "default" ACL rather than "access" ACL 7641 * bit4= set *text = NULL and return 2 7642 * if the ACL matches st_mode permissions. 7643 * bit5= in case of symbolic link: inquire link target 7644 * bit15= free text and return 1 7645 * @return 7646 * 1 ok 7647 * 2 ok, trivial ACL found while bit4 is set, *text is NULL 7648 * 0 no ACL manipulation adapter available / ACL not supported on fs 7649 * -1 failure of system ACL service (see errno) 7650 * -2 attempt to inquire ACL of a symbolic link without bit4 or bit5 7651 * or with no suitable link target 7652 * 7653 * @since 0.6.14 7654 */ 7655 int iso_local_get_acl_text(char *disk_path, char **text, int flag); 7656 7657 7658 /** 7659 * Set the ACL of the given file in the local filesystem to a given list 7660 * in long text form. 7661 * 7662 * @param disk_path 7663 * Absolute path to the file 7664 * @param text 7665 * The input text (0 terminated, ACL long text form) 7666 * @param flag 7667 * Bitfield for control purposes 7668 * bit0= set "default" ACL rather than "access" ACL 7669 * bit5= in case of symbolic link: manipulate link target 7670 * @return 7671 * > 0 ok 7672 * 0 no ACL manipulation adapter available for desired ACL type 7673 * -1 failure of system ACL service (see errno) 7674 * -2 attempt to manipulate ACL of a symbolic link without bit5 7675 * or with no suitable link target 7676 * 7677 * @since 0.6.14 7678 */ 7679 int iso_local_set_acl_text(char *disk_path, char *text, int flag); 7680 7681 7682 /** 7683 * Obtain permissions of a file in the local filesystem which shall reflect 7684 * ACL entry "group::" in S_IRWXG rather than ACL entry "mask::". This is 7685 * necessary if the permissions of a disk file with ACL shall be copied to 7686 * an object which has no ACL. 7687 * @param disk_path 7688 * Absolute path to the local file which may have an "access" ACL or not. 7689 * @param flag 7690 * Bitfield for control purposes 7691 * bit5= in case of symbolic link: inquire link target 7692 * @param st_mode 7693 * Returns permission bits as of stat(2) 7694 * @return 7695 * 1 success 7696 * -1 failure of lstat() or stat() (see errno) 7697 * 7698 * @since 0.6.14 7699 */ 7700 int iso_local_get_perms_wo_acl(char *disk_path, mode_t *st_mode, int flag); 7701 7702 7703 /** 7704 * Get xattr and non-trivial ACLs of the given file in the local filesystem. 7705 * The resulting data has finally to be disposed by a call to this function 7706 * with flag bit15 set. 7707 * 7708 * Eventual ACLs will get encoded as attribute pair with empty name if this is 7709 * enabled by flag bit0. An ACL which simply replects stat(2) permissions 7710 * will not be put into the result. 7711 * 7712 * @param disk_path 7713 * Absolute path to the file 7714 * @param num_attrs 7715 * Will return the number of name-value pairs 7716 * @param names 7717 * Will return an array of pointers to 0-terminated names 7718 * @param value_lengths 7719 * Will return an array with the lengths of values 7720 * @param values 7721 * Will return an array of pointers to 8-bit values 7722 * @param flag 7723 * Bitfield for control purposes 7724 * bit0= obtain eventual ACLs as attribute with empty name 7725 * bit2= do not obtain attributes other than ACLs 7726 * bit3= do not ignore eventual non-user attributes. 7727 * I.e. those with a name which does not begin by "user." 7728 * bit5= in case of symbolic link: inquire link target 7729 * bit15= free memory 7730 * @return 7731 * 1 ok 7732 * 2 ok, but it is possible that attributes exist in non-user namespaces 7733 * which could not be explored due to lack of permission. 7734 * @since 1.5.0 7735 * < 0 failure 7736 * 7737 * @since 0.6.14 7738 */ 7739 int iso_local_get_attrs(char *disk_path, size_t *num_attrs, char ***names, 7740 size_t **value_lengths, char ***values, int flag); 7741 7742 7743 /** 7744 * Attach a list of xattr and ACLs to the given file in the local filesystem. 7745 * 7746 * Eventual ACLs have to be encoded as attribute pair with empty name. 7747 * 7748 * @param disk_path 7749 * Absolute path to the file 7750 * @param num_attrs 7751 * Number of attributes 7752 * @param names 7753 * Array of pointers to 0 terminated name strings 7754 * @param value_lengths 7755 * Array of byte lengths for each attribute payload 7756 * @param values 7757 * Array of pointers to the attribute payload bytes 7758 * @param errnos 7759 * Array of integers to return error numbers if encountered at the attempt 7760 * to process the name-value pair at the given array index number: 7761 * 0 = no error , -1 = unknown error 7762 * >0 = errno as of local system calls to set xattr and ACLs 7763 * @param flag 7764 * Bitfield for control purposes 7765 * bit0= do not attach ACLs from an eventual attribute with empty name 7766 * bit3= do not ignore eventual non-user attributes. 7767 * I.e. those with a name which does not begin by "user." 7768 * bit5= in case of symbolic link: manipulate link target 7769 * bit6= @since 1.1.6 7770 * tolerate inappropriate presence or absence of 7771 * directory "default" ACL 7772 * bit7= @since 1.5.0 7773 * avoid setting a name value pair if it already exists and 7774 * has the desired value. 7775 * @return 7776 * 1 = ok 7777 * < 0 = error 7778 * 7779 * @since 1.5.0 7780 */ 7781 int iso_local_set_attrs_errno(char *disk_path, size_t num_attrs, char **names, 7782 size_t *value_lengths, char **values, 7783 int *errnos, int flag); 7784 /** 7785 * Older version of iso_local_set_attrs_errno() without the errnos array. 7786 * All other parameters and the return value have the same meaning. 7787 * 7788 * @since 0.6.14 7789 */ 7790 int iso_local_set_attrs(char *disk_path, size_t num_attrs, char **names, 7791 size_t *value_lengths, char **values, int flag); 7792 7793 7794 /* Default in case that the compile environment has no macro PATH_MAX. 7795 */ 7796 #define Libisofs_default_path_maX 4096 7797 7798 7799 /* --------------------------- Filters in General -------------------------- */ 7800 7801 /* 7802 * A filter is an IsoStream which uses another IsoStream as input. It gets 7803 * attached to an IsoFile by specialized calls iso_file_add_*_filter() which 7804 * replace its current IsoStream by the filter stream which takes over the 7805 * current IsoStream as input. 7806 * The consequences are: 7807 * iso_file_get_stream() will return the filter stream. 7808 * iso_stream_get_size() will return the (cached) size of the filtered data, 7809 * iso_stream_open() will start eventual child processes, 7810 * iso_stream_close() will kill eventual child processes, 7811 * iso_stream_read() will return filtered data. E.g. as data file content 7812 * during ISO image generation. 7813 * 7814 * There are external filters which run child processes 7815 * iso_file_add_external_filter() 7816 * and internal filters 7817 * iso_file_add_zisofs_filter() 7818 * iso_file_add_gzip_filter() 7819 * which may or may not be available depending on compile time settings and 7820 * installed software packages like libz. 7821 * 7822 * During image generation filters get not in effect if the original IsoStream 7823 * is an "fsrc" stream based on a file in the loaded ISO image and if the 7824 * image generation type is set to 1 by iso_write_opts_set_appendable(). 7825 */ 7826 7827 /** 7828 * Delete the top filter stream from a data file. This is the most recent one 7829 * which was added by iso_file_add_*_filter(). 7830 * Caution: One should not do this while the IsoStream of the file is opened. 7831 * For now there is no general way to determine this state. 7832 * Filter stream implementations are urged to eventually call .close() 7833 * inside method .free() . This will close the input stream too. 7834 * @param file 7835 * The data file node which shall get rid of one layer of content 7836 * filtering. 7837 * @param flag 7838 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0. 7839 * @return 7840 * 1 on success, 0 if no filter was present 7841 * <0 on error 7842 * 7843 * @since 0.6.18 7844 */ 7845 int iso_file_remove_filter(IsoFile *file, int flag); 7846 7847 /** 7848 * Obtain the eventual input stream of a filter stream. 7849 * @param stream 7850 * The eventual filter stream to be inquired. 7851 * @param flag 7852 * Bitfield for control purposes. 7853 * bit0= Follow the chain of input streams and return the one at the 7854 * end of the chain. 7855 * @since 1.3.2 7856 * @return 7857 * The input stream, if one exists. Elsewise NULL. 7858 * No extra reference to the stream is taken by this call. 7859 * 7860 * @since 0.6.18 7861 */ 7862 IsoStream *iso_stream_get_input_stream(IsoStream *stream, int flag); 7863 7864 7865 /* ---------------------------- External Filters --------------------------- */ 7866 7867 /** 7868 * Representation of an external program that shall serve as filter for 7869 * an IsoStream. This object may be shared among many IsoStream objects. 7870 * It is to be created and disposed by the application. 7871 * 7872 * The filter will act as proxy between the original IsoStream of an IsoFile. 7873 * Up to completed image generation it will be run at least twice: 7874 * for IsoStream.class.get_size() and for .open() with subsequent .read(). 7875 * So the original IsoStream has to return 1 by its .class.is_repeatable(). 7876 * The filter program has to be repeateable too. I.e. it must produce the same 7877 * output on the same input. 7878 * 7879 * @since 0.6.18 7880 */ 7881 struct iso_external_filter_command 7882 { 7883 /* Will indicate future extensions. It has to be 0 for now. */ 7884 int version; 7885 7886 /* Tells how many IsoStream objects depend on this command object. 7887 * One may only dispose an IsoExternalFilterCommand when this count is 0. 7888 * Initially this value has to be 0. 7889 */ 7890 int refcount; 7891 7892 /* An optional instance id. 7893 * Set to empty text if no individual name for this object is intended. 7894 */ 7895 char *name; 7896 7897 /* Absolute local filesystem path to the executable program. */ 7898 char *path; 7899 7900 /* Tells the number of arguments. */ 7901 int argc; 7902 7903 /* NULL terminated list suitable for system call execv(3). 7904 * I.e. argv[0] points to the alleged program name, 7905 * argv[1] to argv[argc] point to program arguments (if argc > 0) 7906 * argv[argc+1] is NULL 7907 */ 7908 char **argv; 7909 7910 /* A bit field which controls behavior variations: 7911 * bit0= Do not install filter if the input has size 0. 7912 * bit1= Do not install filter if the output is not smaller than the input. 7913 * bit2= Do not install filter if the number of output blocks is 7914 * not smaller than the number of input blocks. Block size is 2048. 7915 * Assume that non-empty input yields non-empty output and thus do 7916 * not attempt to attach a filter to files smaller than 2049 bytes. 7917 * bit3= suffix removed rather than added. 7918 * (Removal and adding suffixes is the task of the application. 7919 * This behavior bit serves only as reminder for the application.) 7920 */ 7921 int behavior; 7922 7923 /* The eventual suffix which is supposed to be added to the IsoFile name 7924 * or to be removed from the name. 7925 * (This is to be done by the application, not by calls 7926 * iso_file_add_external_filter() or iso_file_remove_filter(). 7927 * The value recorded here serves only as reminder for the application.) 7928 */ 7929 char *suffix; 7930 }; 7931 7932 typedef struct iso_external_filter_command IsoExternalFilterCommand; 7933 7934 /** 7935 * Install an external filter command on top of the content stream of a data 7936 * file. The filter process must be repeatable. It will be run once by this 7937 * call in order to cache the output size. 7938 * @param file 7939 * The data file node which shall show filtered content. 7940 * @param cmd 7941 * The external program and its arguments which shall do the filtering. 7942 * @param flag 7943 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0. 7944 * @return 7945 * 1 on success, 2 if filter installation revoked (e.g. cmd.behavior bit1) 7946 * <0 on error 7947 * 7948 * @since 0.6.18 7949 */ 7950 int iso_file_add_external_filter(IsoFile *file, IsoExternalFilterCommand *cmd, 7951 int flag); 7952 7953 /** 7954 * Obtain the IsoExternalFilterCommand which is eventually associated with the 7955 * given stream. (Typically obtained from an IsoFile by iso_file_get_stream() 7956 * or from an IsoStream by iso_stream_get_input_stream()). 7957 * @param stream 7958 * The stream to be inquired. 7959 * @param cmd 7960 * Will return the external IsoExternalFilterCommand. Valid only if 7961 * the call returns 1. This does not increment cmd->refcount. 7962 * @param flag 7963 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0. 7964 * @return 7965 * 1 on success, 0 if the stream is not an external filter 7966 * <0 on error 7967 * 7968 * @since 0.6.18 7969 */ 7970 int iso_stream_get_external_filter(IsoStream *stream, 7971 IsoExternalFilterCommand **cmd, int flag); 7972 7973 7974 /* ---------------------------- Internal Filters --------------------------- */ 7975 7976 7977 /** 7978 * Install a zisofs filter on top of the content stream of a data file. 7979 * zisofs is a compression format which is decompressed by some Linux kernels. 7980 * See also doc/zisofs_format.txt and doc/zisofs2_format.txt. 7981 * The filter will not be installed if its output size is not smaller than 7982 * the size of the input stream. 7983 * This is only enabled if the use of libz was enabled at compile time. 7984 * @param file 7985 * The data file node which shall show filtered content. 7986 * @param flag 7987 * Bitfield for control purposes 7988 * bit0= Do not install filter if the number of output blocks is 7989 * not smaller than the number of input blocks. Block size is 2048. 7990 * bit1= Install a decompression filter rather than one for compression. 7991 * bit2= Only inquire availability of zisofs filtering. file may be NULL. 7992 * If available return 2, else return error. 7993 * bit3= is reserved for internal use and will be forced to 0 7994 * @return 7995 * 1 on success, 2 if filter available but installation revoked 7996 * <0 on error, e.g. ISO_ZLIB_NOT_ENABLED 7997 * 7998 * @since 0.6.18 7999 */ 8000 int iso_file_add_zisofs_filter(IsoFile *file, int flag); 8001 8002 8003 /** 8004 * Obtain the parameters of a zisofs filter stream. 8005 * @param stream 8006 * The stream to be inquired. 8007 * @param stream_type 8008 * 1=compressing ("ziso") 8009 * -1=uncompressing ("osiz") 8010 * 0 other (any obtained parameters have invalid content) 8011 * @param zisofs_algo 8012 * Algorithm as of ZF field: 8013 * {'p', 'z'} = zisofs version 1 (Zlib) 8014 * {'P', 'Z'} = zisofs version 2 (Zlib) 8015 * @param algo_num 8016 * Algorithm as of zisofs header: 8017 * 0 = zisofs version 1 (Zlib) 8018 * 1 = zisofs version 2 (Zlib) 8019 * @param block_size_log2 8020 * Log2 of the compression block size 8021 * 15 = 32 kiB , 16 = 64 kiB , 17 = 128 kiB, ... 8022 * @param flag 8023 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 8024 * @return 8025 * 1 on success, 0 if the stream has not class->type "ziso" or "osiz" 8026 * <0 on error 8027 * @since 1.5.4 8028 */ 8029 int iso_stream_get_zisofs_par(IsoStream *stream, int *stream_type, 8030 uint8_t zisofs_algo[2], uint8_t* algo_num, 8031 int *block_size_log2, int flag); 8032 8033 8034 /** 8035 * Discard the buffered zisofs compression block pointers of a stream, if the 8036 * stream is a zisofs compression stream and not currently opened. 8037 * @param stream 8038 * The stream to be manipulated. 8039 * @param flag 8040 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 8041 * @return 8042 * 1 on success, 0 if no block pointers were reoved, <0 on error 8043 * @since 1.5.4 8044 */ 8045 int iso_stream_zisofs_discard_bpt(IsoStream *stream, int flag); 8046 8047 /** 8048 * Discard all buffered zisofs compression block pointers of streams in the 8049 * given image, which are zisofs compression streams and not currently opened. 8050 * @param image 8051 * The image to be manipulated. 8052 * @param flag 8053 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 8054 * @return 8055 * ISO_SUCCESS on success, <0 on error 8056 * @since 1.5.4 8057 */ 8058 int iso_image_zisofs_discard_bpt(IsoImage *image, int flag); 8059 8060 8061 /** 8062 * Inquire the number of zisofs compression and uncompression filters which 8063 * are in use. 8064 * @param ziso_count 8065 * Will return the number of currently installed compression filters. 8066 * @param osiz_count 8067 * Will return the number of currently installed uncompression filters. 8068 * @param flag 8069 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 8070 * @return 8071 * 1 on success, <0 on error 8072 * 8073 * @since 0.6.18 8074 */ 8075 int iso_zisofs_get_refcounts(off_t *ziso_count, off_t *osiz_count, int flag); 8076 8077 8078 /** 8079 * Parameter set for iso_zisofs_set_params(). 8080 * 8081 * @since 0.6.18 8082 */ 8083 struct iso_zisofs_ctrl { 8084 8085 /* Set to 0 or 1 for this version of the structure 8086 * 0 = only members up to .block_size_log2 are valid 8087 * 1 = members up to .bpt_discard_free_ratio are valid 8088 * @since 1.5.4 8089 */ 8090 int version; 8091 8092 /* Compression level for zlib function compress2(). From <zlib.h>: 8093 * "between 0 and 9: 8094 * 1 gives best speed, 9 gives best compression, 0 gives no compression" 8095 * Default is 6. 8096 */ 8097 int compression_level; 8098 8099 /* Log2 of the block size for compression filters of zisofs version 1. 8100 * Allowed values are: 8101 * 15 = 32 kiB , 16 = 64 kiB , 17 = 128 kiB 8102 */ 8103 uint8_t block_size_log2; 8104 8105 /* ------------------- Only valid with .version >= 1 ------------------- */ 8106 8107 /* 8108 * Whether to produce zisofs2 (zisofs version 2) file headers and ZF 8109 * entries for files which get compressed: 8110 * 0 = do not produce zisofs2, 8111 * do not recognize zisofs2 file headers by magic 8112 * This is the default. 8113 * 1 = zisofs2 is enabled for file size 4 GiB or more 8114 * 2 = zisofs2 shall be used if zisofs is used at all 8115 * @since 1.5.4 8116 */ 8117 int v2_enabled; 8118 8119 /* 8120 * Log2 of block size for zisofs2 files. 0 keeps current setting. 8121 * Allowed are 15 = 32 kiB to 20 = 1024 kiB. 8122 * @since 1.5.4 8123 */ 8124 uint8_t v2_block_size_log2; 8125 8126 /* 8127 * Maximum overall number of blocklist pointers. 0 keeps current setting. 8128 * @since 1.5.4 8129 */ 8130 uint64_t max_total_blocks; 8131 8132 /* 8133 * Ignored as input value: Number of allocated zisofs block pointers. 8134 * @since 1.5.4 8135 */ 8136 uint64_t current_total_blocks; 8137 8138 /* 8139 * Maximum number of blocklist pointers per file. 0 keeps current setting. 8140 * @since 1.5.4 8141 */ 8142 uint64_t max_file_blocks; 8143 8144 /* 8145 * Number of block pointers of a file, which is considered low enough to 8146 * justify a reduction of block size. If this number is > 0, then the 8147 * lowest permissible block size is used, with which not more than the 8148 * given number of block pointers gets produced. Upper limit is the 8149 * setting of block size log2. 8150 * The inavoidable end block pointer counts. E.g. a file of 55 KiB has 8151 * 3 blocks pointers with block size log2 15, and 2 blocks pointers with 8152 * block size log2 16. 8153 * -1 disables this automatic block size adjustment. 8154 * 0 keeps the current setting. 8155 * @since 1.5.4 8156 */ 8157 int64_t block_number_target; 8158 8159 /* 8160 * The number of blocks from which on the block pointer list shall be 8161 * discarded on iso_stream_close() of a compressing stream. This means that 8162 * the pointers have to be determined again on next ziso_stream_compress(), 8163 * so that adding a zisofs compression filter and writing the compressed 8164 * stream needs in the sum three read runs of the input stream. 8165 * 0 keeps the current setting. 8166 * < 0 disables this file size based discarding. 8167 * @since 1.5.4 8168 */ 8169 int64_t bpt_discard_file_blocks; 8170 8171 /* 8172 * A ratio describing the part of max_file_blocks which shall be kept free 8173 * by intermediate discarding of block pointers. 8174 * See above bpt_discard_file_blocks . 8175 * It makes sense to set this to 1.0 if max_file_blocks is substantially 8176 * smaller than max_total_blocks. 8177 * 0.0 keeps the current setting. 8178 * < 0.0 disables this memory consumption based discarding. 8179 * @since 1.5.4 8180 */ 8181 double bpt_discard_free_ratio; 8182 8183 }; 8184 8185 /** 8186 * Set the global parameters for zisofs filtering. 8187 * This is only allowed while no zisofs compression filters are installed. 8188 * i.e. ziso_count returned by iso_zisofs_get_refcounts() has to be 0. 8189 * @param params 8190 * Pointer to a structure with the intended settings. 8191 * The caller sets params->version to indicate which set of members 8192 * has been filled. I.e. params->version == 0 causes all members after 8193 * params->block_size_log2 to be ignored. 8194 * @param flag 8195 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 8196 * @return 8197 * 1 on success, <0 on error 8198 * 8199 * @since 0.6.18 8200 */ 8201 int iso_zisofs_set_params(struct iso_zisofs_ctrl *params, int flag); 8202 8203 /** 8204 * Get the current global parameters for zisofs filtering. 8205 * @param params 8206 * Pointer to a caller provided structure which shall take the settings. 8207 * The caller sets params->version to indicate which set of members 8208 * shall be filled. I.e. params->version == 0 leaves all members after 8209 * params->block_size_log2 untouched. 8210 * @param flag 8211 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 8212 * @return 8213 * 1 on success, <0 on error 8214 * 8215 * @since 0.6.18 8216 */ 8217 int iso_zisofs_get_params(struct iso_zisofs_ctrl *params, int flag); 8218 8219 8220 /** 8221 * Enable or disable the production of "Z2" SUSP entries instead of "ZF" 8222 * entries for zisofs2 compressed files. 8223 * "ZF" with zisofs2 causes unaware Linux kernels to complain like: 8224 * isofs: Unknown ZF compression algorithm: PZ 8225 * "Z2" is silently ignored by unaware Linux kernels. 8226 * @param enable 8227 * 1 = produce "Z2" , 0 = only "ZF" , -1 = do not change 8228 * @return 8229 * 1 = enabled , 0 = not enabled 8230 * @since 1.5.4 8231 */ 8232 int iso_zisofs_ctrl_susp_z2(int enable); 8233 8234 8235 /** 8236 * Check for the given node or for its subtree whether the data file content 8237 * effectively bears zisofs file headers and eventually mark the outcome 8238 * by an xinfo data record if not already marked by a zisofs compressor filter. 8239 * This does not install any filter but only a hint for image generation 8240 * that the already compressed files shall get written with zisofs ZF entries. 8241 * Use this if you insert the compressed results of program mkzftree from disk 8242 * into the image. 8243 * @param node 8244 * The node which shall be checked and, if appropriate, be marked. 8245 * @param flag 8246 * Bitfield for control purposes 8247 * bit0= prepare for a run with iso_write_opts_set_appendable(,1). 8248 * Take into account that files from the imported image 8249 * do not get their content filtered. 8250 * bit1= permission to overwrite existing zisofs_zf_info 8251 * bit2= if no zisofs header is found: 8252 * create xinfo with parameters which indicate no zisofs 8253 * bit3= no tree recursion if node is a directory 8254 * bit4= skip files which stem from the imported image 8255 * bit8-bit15= maximum zisofs version to be recognized (0 means 1) 8256 * @return 8257 * 0= no zisofs data found 8258 * 1= zf xinfo added 8259 * 2= found existing zf xinfo and flag bit1 was not set 8260 * 3= both encountered: 1 and 2 8261 * <0 means error 8262 * 8263 * @since 0.6.18 8264 */ 8265 int iso_node_zf_by_magic(IsoNode *node, int flag); 8266 8267 8268 /** 8269 * Install a gzip or gunzip filter on top of the content stream of a data file. 8270 * gzip is a compression format which is used by programs gzip and gunzip. 8271 * The filter will not be installed if its output size is not smaller than 8272 * the size of the input stream. 8273 * This is only enabled if the use of libz was enabled at compile time. 8274 * @param file 8275 * The data file node which shall show filtered content. 8276 * @param flag 8277 * Bitfield for control purposes 8278 * bit0= Do not install filter if the number of output blocks is 8279 * not smaller than the number of input blocks. Block size is 2048. 8280 * bit1= Install a decompression filter rather than one for compression. 8281 * bit2= Only inquire availability of gzip filtering. file may be NULL. 8282 * If available return 2, else return error. 8283 * bit3= is reserved for internal use and will be forced to 0 8284 * @return 8285 * 1 on success, 2 if filter available but installation revoked 8286 * <0 on error, e.g. ISO_ZLIB_NOT_ENABLED 8287 * 8288 * @since 0.6.18 8289 */ 8290 int iso_file_add_gzip_filter(IsoFile *file, int flag); 8291 8292 8293 /** 8294 * Inquire the number of gzip compression and uncompression filters which 8295 * are in use. 8296 * @param gzip_count 8297 * Will return the number of currently installed compression filters. 8298 * @param gunzip_count 8299 * Will return the number of currently installed uncompression filters. 8300 * @param flag 8301 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 8302 * @return 8303 * 1 on success, <0 on error 8304 * 8305 * @since 0.6.18 8306 */ 8307 int iso_gzip_get_refcounts(off_t *gzip_count, off_t *gunzip_count, int flag); 8308 8309 8310 /* ---------------------------- MD5 Checksums --------------------------- */ 8311 8312 /* Production and loading of MD5 checksums is controlled by calls 8313 iso_write_opts_set_record_md5() and iso_read_opts_set_no_md5(). 8314 For data representation details see doc/checksums.txt . 8315 */ 8316 8317 /** 8318 * Obtain the recorded MD5 checksum of the session which was 8319 * loaded as ISO image. Such a checksum may be stored together with others 8320 * in a contiguous array at the end of the session. The session checksum 8321 * covers the data blocks from address start_lba to address end_lba - 1. 8322 * It does not cover the recorded array of md5 checksums. 8323 * Layout, size, and position of the checksum array is recorded in the xattr 8324 * "isofs.ca" of the session root node. 8325 * @param image 8326 * The image to inquire 8327 * @param start_lba 8328 * Returns the first block address covered by md5 8329 * @param end_lba 8330 * Returns the first block address not covered by md5 any more 8331 * @param md5 8332 * Returns 16 byte of MD5 checksum 8333 * @param flag 8334 * Bitfield for control purposes, unused yet, submit 0 8335 * @return 8336 * 1= md5 found 8337 * 0= no md5 available (i.e. start_lba, end_lba, md5 are invalid) 8338 * <0 indicates error 8339 * 8340 * @since 0.6.22 8341 */ 8342 int iso_image_get_session_md5(IsoImage *image, uint32_t *start_lba, 8343 uint32_t *end_lba, char md5[16], int flag); 8344 8345 /** 8346 * Eventually obtain the recorded MD5 checksum of a data file from the loaded 8347 * ISO image. Such a checksum may be stored with others in a contiguous 8348 * array at the end of the loaded session. The data file eventually has an 8349 * xattr "isofs.cx" which gives the index in that array. 8350 * @param image 8351 * The image from which file stems. 8352 * @param file 8353 * The file object to inquire 8354 * @param md5 8355 * Eventually returns 16 byte of MD5 checksum 8356 * @param flag 8357 * Bitfield for control purposes 8358 * bit0= only determine return value, do not touch parameter md5 8359 * @return 8360 * 1= md5 found , 0= no md5 available , <0 indicates error 8361 * 8362 * @since 0.6.22 8363 */ 8364 int iso_file_get_md5(IsoImage *image, IsoFile *file, char md5[16], int flag); 8365 8366 /** 8367 * Read the content of an IsoFile object, compute its MD5 and attach it to 8368 * the IsoFile. It can then be inquired by iso_file_get_md5() and will get 8369 * written into the next session if this is enabled at write time and if the 8370 * image write process does not compute an MD5 from content which it copies. 8371 * So this call can be used to equip nodes from the old image with checksums 8372 * or to make available checksums of newly added files before the session gets 8373 * written. 8374 * @param file 8375 * The file object to read data from and to which to attach the checksum. 8376 * If the file is from the imported image, then its most original stream 8377 * will be checksummed. Else the eventual filter streams will get into 8378 * effect. 8379 * @param flag 8380 * Bitfield for control purposes. Unused yet. Submit 0. 8381 * @return 8382 * 1= ok, MD5 is computed and attached , <0 indicates error 8383 * 8384 * @since 0.6.22 8385 */ 8386 int iso_file_make_md5(IsoFile *file, int flag); 8387 8388 /** 8389 * Check a data block whether it is a libisofs session checksum tag and 8390 * eventually obtain its recorded parameters. These tags get written after 8391 * volume descriptors, directory tree and checksum array and can be detected 8392 * without loading the image tree. 8393 * One may start reading and computing MD5 at the suspected image session 8394 * start and look out for a session tag on the fly. See doc/checksum.txt . 8395 * @param data 8396 * A complete and aligned data block read from an ISO image session. 8397 * @param tag_type 8398 * 0= no tag 8399 * 1= session tag 8400 * 2= superblock tag 8401 * 3= tree tag 8402 * 4= relocated 64 kB superblock tag (at LBA 0 of overwritable media) 8403 * @param pos 8404 * Returns the LBA where the tag supposes itself to be stored. 8405 * If this does not match the data block LBA then the tag might be 8406 * image data payload and should be ignored for image checksumming. 8407 * @param range_start 8408 * Returns the block address where the session is supposed to start. 8409 * If this does not match the session start on media then the image 8410 * volume descriptors have been been relocated. 8411 * A proper checksum will only emerge if computing started at range_start. 8412 * @param range_size 8413 * Returns the number of blocks beginning at range_start which are 8414 * covered by parameter md5. 8415 * @param next_tag 8416 * Returns the predicted block address of the next tag. 8417 * next_tag is valid only if not 0 and only with return values 2, 3, 4. 8418 * With tag types 2 and 3, reading shall go on sequentially and the MD5 8419 * computation shall continue up to that address. 8420 * With tag type 4, reading shall resume either at LBA 32 for the first 8421 * session or at the given address for the session which is to be loaded 8422 * by default. In both cases the MD5 computation shall be re-started from 8423 * scratch. 8424 * @param md5 8425 * Returns 16 byte of MD5 checksum. 8426 * @param flag 8427 * Bitfield for control purposes: 8428 * bit0-bit7= tag type being looked for 8429 * 0= any checksum tag 8430 * 1= session tag 8431 * 2= superblock tag 8432 * 3= tree tag 8433 * 4= relocated superblock tag 8434 * @return 8435 * 0= not a checksum tag, return parameters are invalid 8436 * 1= checksum tag found, return parameters are valid 8437 * <0= error 8438 * (return parameters are valid with error ISO_MD5_AREA_CORRUPTED 8439 * but not trustworthy because the tag seems corrupted) 8440 * 8441 * @since 0.6.22 8442 */ 8443 int iso_util_decode_md5_tag(char data[2048], int *tag_type, uint32_t *pos, 8444 uint32_t *range_start, uint32_t *range_size, 8445 uint32_t *next_tag, char md5[16], int flag); 8446 8447 8448 /* The following functions allow to do own MD5 computations. E.g for 8449 comparing the result with a recorded checksum. 8450 */ 8451 /** 8452 * Create a MD5 computation context and hand out an opaque handle. 8453 * 8454 * @param md5_context 8455 * Returns the opaque handle. Submitted *md5_context must be NULL or 8456 * point to freeable memory. 8457 * @return 8458 * 1= success , <0 indicates error 8459 * 8460 * @since 0.6.22 8461 */ 8462 int iso_md5_start(void **md5_context); 8463 8464 /** 8465 * Advance the computation of a MD5 checksum by a chunk of data bytes. 8466 * 8467 * @param md5_context 8468 * An opaque handle once returned by iso_md5_start() or iso_md5_clone(). 8469 * @param data 8470 * The bytes which shall be processed into to the checksum. 8471 * @param datalen 8472 * The number of bytes to be processed. 8473 * @return 8474 * 1= success , <0 indicates error 8475 * 8476 * @since 0.6.22 8477 */ 8478 int iso_md5_compute(void *md5_context, char *data, int datalen); 8479 8480 /** 8481 * Create a MD5 computation context as clone of an existing one. One may call 8482 * iso_md5_clone(old, &new, 0) and then iso_md5_end(&new, result, 0) in order 8483 * to obtain an intermediate MD5 sum before the computation goes on. 8484 * 8485 * @param old_md5_context 8486 * An opaque handle once returned by iso_md5_start() or iso_md5_clone(). 8487 * @param new_md5_context 8488 * Returns the opaque handle to the new MD5 context. Submitted 8489 * *md5_context must be NULL or point to freeable memory. 8490 * @return 8491 * 1= success , <0 indicates error 8492 * 8493 * @since 0.6.22 8494 */ 8495 int iso_md5_clone(void *old_md5_context, void **new_md5_context); 8496 8497 /** 8498 * Obtain the MD5 checksum from a MD5 computation context and dispose this 8499 * context. (If you want to keep the context then call iso_md5_clone() and 8500 * apply iso_md5_end() to the clone.) 8501 * 8502 * @param md5_context 8503 * A pointer to an opaque handle once returned by iso_md5_start() or 8504 * iso_md5_clone(). *md5_context will be set to NULL in this call. 8505 * @param result 8506 * Gets filled with the 16 bytes of MD5 checksum. 8507 * @return 8508 * 1= success , <0 indicates error 8509 * 8510 * @since 0.6.22 8511 */ 8512 int iso_md5_end(void **md5_context, char result[16]); 8513 8514 /** 8515 * Inquire whether two MD5 checksums match. (This is trivial but such a call 8516 * is convenient and completes the interface.) 8517 * @param first_md5 8518 * A MD5 byte string as returned by iso_md5_end() 8519 * @param second_md5 8520 * A MD5 byte string as returned by iso_md5_end() 8521 * @return 8522 * 1= match , 0= mismatch 8523 * 8524 * @since 0.6.22 8525 */ 8526 int iso_md5_match(char first_md5[16], char second_md5[16]); 8527 8528 8529 /* -------------------------------- For HFS+ ------------------------------- */ 8530 8531 8532 /** 8533 * HFS+ attributes which may be attached to IsoNode objects as data parameter 8534 * of iso_node_add_xinfo(). As parameter proc use iso_hfsplus_xinfo_func(). 8535 * Create instances of this struct by iso_hfsplus_xinfo_new(). 8536 * 8537 * @since 1.2.4 8538 */ 8539 struct iso_hfsplus_xinfo_data { 8540 8541 /* Currently set to 0 by iso_hfsplus_xinfo_new() */ 8542 int version; 8543 8544 /* Attributes available with version 0. 8545 * See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creator_code , .../Type_code 8546 * @since 1.2.4 8547 */ 8548 uint8_t creator_code[4]; 8549 uint8_t type_code[4]; 8550 }; 8551 8552 /** 8553 * The function that is used to mark struct iso_hfsplus_xinfo_data at IsoNodes 8554 * and finally disposes such structs when their IsoNodes get disposed. 8555 * Usually an application does not call this function, but only uses it as 8556 * parameter of xinfo calls like iso_node_add_xinfo() or iso_node_get_xinfo(). 8557 * 8558 * @since 1.2.4 8559 */ 8560 int iso_hfsplus_xinfo_func(void *data, int flag); 8561 8562 /** 8563 * Create an instance of struct iso_hfsplus_xinfo_new(). 8564 * 8565 * @param flag 8566 * Bitfield for control purposes. Unused yet. Submit 0. 8567 * @return 8568 * A pointer to the new object 8569 * NULL indicates failure to allocate memory 8570 * 8571 * @since 1.2.4 8572 */ 8573 struct iso_hfsplus_xinfo_data *iso_hfsplus_xinfo_new(int flag); 8574 8575 8576 /** 8577 * HFS+ blessings are relationships between HFS+ enhanced ISO images and 8578 * particular files in such images. Except for ISO_HFSPLUS_BLESS_INTEL_BOOTFILE 8579 * and ISO_HFSPLUS_BLESS_MAX, these files have to be directories. 8580 * No file may have more than one blessing. Each blessing can only be issued 8581 * to one file. 8582 * 8583 * @since 1.2.4 8584 */ 8585 enum IsoHfsplusBlessings { 8586 /* The blessing that is issued by mkisofs option -hfs-bless. */ 8587 ISO_HFSPLUS_BLESS_PPC_BOOTDIR, 8588 8589 /* To be applied to a data file */ 8590 ISO_HFSPLUS_BLESS_INTEL_BOOTFILE, 8591 8592 /* Further blessings for directories */ 8593 ISO_HFSPLUS_BLESS_SHOWFOLDER, 8594 ISO_HFSPLUS_BLESS_OS9_FOLDER, 8595 ISO_HFSPLUS_BLESS_OSX_FOLDER, 8596 8597 /* Not a blessing, but telling the number of blessings in this list */ 8598 ISO_HFSPLUS_BLESS_MAX 8599 }; 8600 8601 /** 8602 * Issue a blessing to a particular IsoNode. If the blessing is already issued 8603 * to some file, then it gets revoked from that one. 8604 * 8605 * @param img 8606 * The image to manipulate. 8607 * @param blessing 8608 * The kind of blessing to be issued. 8609 * @param node 8610 * The file that shall be blessed. It must actually be an IsoDir or 8611 * IsoFile as is appropriate for the kind of blessing. (See above enum.) 8612 * The node may not yet bear a blessing other than the desired one. 8613 * If node is NULL, then the blessing will be revoked from any node 8614 * which bears it. 8615 * @param flag 8616 * Bitfield for control purposes. 8617 * bit0= Revoke blessing if node != NULL bears it. 8618 * bit1= Revoke any blessing of the node, regardless of parameter 8619 * blessing. If node is NULL, then revoke all blessings in 8620 * the image. 8621 * @return 8622 * 1 means successful blessing or revokation of an existing blessing. 8623 * 0 means the node already bears another blessing, or is of wrong type, 8624 * or that the node was not blessed and revokation was desired. 8625 * <0 is one of the listed error codes. 8626 * 8627 * @since 1.2.4 8628 */ 8629 int iso_image_hfsplus_bless(IsoImage *img, enum IsoHfsplusBlessings blessing, 8630 IsoNode *node, int flag); 8631 8632 /** 8633 * Get the array of nodes which are currently blessed. 8634 * Array indice correspond to enum IsoHfsplusBlessings. 8635 * Array element value NULL means that no node bears that blessing. 8636 * 8637 * Several usage restrictions apply. See parameter blessed_nodes. 8638 * 8639 * @param img 8640 * The image to inquire. 8641 * @param blessed_nodes 8642 * Will return a pointer to an internal node array of image. 8643 * This pointer is valid only as long as image exists and only until 8644 * iso_image_hfsplus_bless() gets used to manipulate the blessings. 8645 * Do not free() this array. Do not alter the content of the array 8646 * directly, but rather use iso_image_hfsplus_bless() and re-inquire 8647 * by iso_image_hfsplus_get_blessed(). 8648 * This call does not impose an extra reference on the nodes in the 8649 * array. So do not iso_node_unref() them. 8650 * Nodes listed here are not necessarily grafted into the tree of 8651 * the IsoImage. 8652 * @param bless_max 8653 * Will return the number of elements in the array. 8654 * It is unlikely but not outruled that it will be larger than 8655 * ISO_HFSPLUS_BLESS_MAX in this libisofs.h file. 8656 * @param flag 8657 * Bitfield for control purposes. Submit 0. 8658 * @return 8659 * 1 means success, <0 means error 8660 * 8661 * @since 1.2.4 8662 */ 8663 int iso_image_hfsplus_get_blessed(IsoImage *img, IsoNode ***blessed_nodes, 8664 int *bless_max, int flag); 8665 8666 8667 /* ----------------------------- Character sets ---------------------------- */ 8668 8669 /** 8670 * Convert the characters in name from local charset to another charset or 8671 * convert name to the representation of a particular ISO image name space. 8672 * In the latter case it is assumed that the conversion result does not 8673 * collide with any other converted name in the same directory. 8674 * I.e. this function does not take into respect possible name changes 8675 * due to collision handling. 8676 * 8677 * @param opts 8678 * Defines output charset, UCS-2 versus UTF-16 for Joliet, 8679 * and naming restrictions. 8680 * @param name 8681 * The input text which shall be converted. 8682 * @param name_len 8683 * The number of bytes in input text. 8684 * @param result 8685 * Will return the conversion result in case of success. Terminated by 8686 * a trailing zero byte. 8687 * Use free() to dispose it when no longer needed. 8688 * @param result_len 8689 * Will return the number of bytes in result (excluding trailing zero) 8690 * @param flag 8691 * Bitfield for control purposes. 8692 * bit0-bit7= Name space 8693 * 0= generic (output charset is used, 8694 * no reserved characters, no length limits) 8695 * 1= Rock Ridge (output charset is used) 8696 * 2= Joliet (output charset gets overridden by UCS-2 or 8697 * UTF-16) 8698 * 3= ECMA-119 (output charset gets overridden by the 8699 * dull ISO 9660 subset of ASCII) 8700 * 4= HFS+ (output charset gets overridden by UTF-16BE) 8701 * bit8= Treat input text as directory name 8702 * (matters for Joliet and ECMA-119) 8703 * bit9= Do not issue error messages 8704 * bit15= Reverse operation (best to be done only with results of 8705 * previous conversions) 8706 * @return 8707 * 1 means success, <0 means error 8708 * 8709 * @since 1.3.6 8710 */ 8711 int iso_conv_name_chars(IsoWriteOpts *opts, char *name, size_t name_len, 8712 char **result, size_t *result_len, int flag); 8713 8714 8715 8716 /************ Error codes and return values for libisofs ********************/ 8717 8718 /** successfully execution */ 8719 #define ISO_SUCCESS 1 8720 8721 /** 8722 * special return value, it could be or not an error depending on the 8723 * context. 8724 */ 8725 #define ISO_NONE 0 8726 8727 /** Operation canceled (FAILURE,HIGH, -1) */ 8728 #define ISO_CANCELED 0xE830FFFF 8729 8730 /** Unknown or unexpected fatal error (FATAL,HIGH, -2) */ 8731 #define ISO_FATAL_ERROR 0xF030FFFE 8732 8733 /** Unknown or unexpected error (FAILURE,HIGH, -3) */ 8734 #define ISO_ERROR 0xE830FFFD 8735 8736 /** Internal programming error. Please report this bug (FATAL,HIGH, -4) */ 8737 #define ISO_ASSERT_FAILURE 0xF030FFFC 8738 8739 /** 8740 * NULL pointer as value for an arg. that doesn't allow NULL (FAILURE,HIGH, -5) 8741 */ 8742 #define ISO_NULL_POINTER 0xE830FFFB 8743 8744 /** Memory allocation error (FATAL,HIGH, -6) */ 8745 #define ISO_OUT_OF_MEM 0xF030FFFA 8746 8747 /** Interrupted by a signal (FATAL,HIGH, -7) */ 8748 #define ISO_INTERRUPTED 0xF030FFF9 8749 8750 /** Invalid parameter value (FAILURE,HIGH, -8) */ 8751 #define ISO_WRONG_ARG_VALUE 0xE830FFF8 8752 8753 /** Can't create a needed thread (FATAL,HIGH, -9) */ 8754 #define ISO_THREAD_ERROR 0xF030FFF7 8755 8756 /** Write error (FAILURE,HIGH, -10) */ 8757 #define ISO_WRITE_ERROR 0xE830FFF6 8758 8759 /** Buffer read error (FAILURE,HIGH, -11) */ 8760 #define ISO_BUF_READ_ERROR 0xE830FFF5 8761 8762 /** Trying to add to a dir a node already added to a dir (FAILURE,HIGH, -64) */ 8763 #define ISO_NODE_ALREADY_ADDED 0xE830FFC0 8764 8765 /** Node with same name already exists (FAILURE,HIGH, -65) */ 8766 #define ISO_NODE_NAME_NOT_UNIQUE 0xE830FFBF 8767 8768 /** Trying to remove a node that was not added to dir (FAILURE,HIGH, -65) */ 8769 #define ISO_NODE_NOT_ADDED_TO_DIR 0xE830FFBE 8770 8771 /** A requested node does not exist (FAILURE,HIGH, -66) */ 8772 #define ISO_NODE_DOESNT_EXIST 0xE830FFBD 8773 8774 /** 8775 * Try to set the boot image of an already bootable image (FAILURE,HIGH, -67) 8776 */ 8777 #define ISO_IMAGE_ALREADY_BOOTABLE 0xE830FFBC 8778 8779 /** Trying to use an invalid file as boot image (FAILURE,HIGH, -68) */ 8780 #define ISO_BOOT_IMAGE_NOT_VALID 0xE830FFBB 8781 8782 /** Too many boot images (FAILURE,HIGH, -69) */ 8783 #define ISO_BOOT_IMAGE_OVERFLOW 0xE830FFBA 8784 8785 /** No boot catalog created yet ((FAILURE,HIGH, -70) */ /* @since 0.6.34 */ 8786 #define ISO_BOOT_NO_CATALOG 0xE830FFB9 8787 8788 8789 /** 8790 * Error on file operation (FAILURE,HIGH, -128) 8791 * (take a look at more specified error codes below) 8792 */ 8793 #define ISO_FILE_ERROR 0xE830FF80 8794 8795 /** Trying to open an already opened file (FAILURE,HIGH, -129) */ 8796 #define ISO_FILE_ALREADY_OPENED 0xE830FF7F 8797 8798 /* @deprecated use ISO_FILE_ALREADY_OPENED instead */ 8799 #define ISO_FILE_ALREADY_OPENNED 0xE830FF7F 8800 8801 /** Access to file is not allowed (FAILURE,HIGH, -130) */ 8802 #define ISO_FILE_ACCESS_DENIED 0xE830FF7E 8803 8804 /** Incorrect path to file (FAILURE,HIGH, -131) */ 8805 #define ISO_FILE_BAD_PATH 0xE830FF7D 8806 8807 /** The file does not exist in the filesystem (FAILURE,HIGH, -132) */ 8808 #define ISO_FILE_DOESNT_EXIST 0xE830FF7C 8809 8810 /** Trying to read or close a file not opened (FAILURE,HIGH, -133) */ 8811 #define ISO_FILE_NOT_OPENED 0xE830FF7B 8812 8813 /* @deprecated use ISO_FILE_NOT_OPENED instead */ 8814 #define ISO_FILE_NOT_OPENNED ISO_FILE_NOT_OPENED 8815 8816 /** Directory used where no dir is expected (FAILURE,HIGH, -134) */ 8817 #define ISO_FILE_IS_DIR 0xE830FF7A 8818 8819 /** Read error (FAILURE,HIGH, -135) */ 8820 #define ISO_FILE_READ_ERROR 0xE830FF79 8821 8822 /** Not dir used where a dir is expected (FAILURE,HIGH, -136) */ 8823 #define ISO_FILE_IS_NOT_DIR 0xE830FF78 8824 8825 /** Not symlink used where a symlink is expected (FAILURE,HIGH, -137) */ 8826 #define ISO_FILE_IS_NOT_SYMLINK 0xE830FF77 8827 8828 /** Can't seek to specified location (FAILURE,HIGH, -138) */ 8829 #define ISO_FILE_SEEK_ERROR 0xE830FF76 8830 8831 /** File not supported in ECMA-119 tree and thus ignored (WARNING,MEDIUM, -139) */ 8832 #define ISO_FILE_IGNORED 0xD020FF75 8833 8834 /* A file is bigger than supported by used standard (FAILURE,HIGH, -140) */ 8835 #define ISO_FILE_TOO_BIG 0xE830FF74 8836 8837 /* File read error during image creation (MISHAP,HIGH, -141) */ 8838 #define ISO_FILE_CANT_WRITE 0xE430FF73 8839 8840 /* Can't convert filename to requested charset (WARNING,MEDIUM, -142) */ 8841 #define ISO_FILENAME_WRONG_CHARSET 0xD020FF72 8842 /* This was once a HINT. Deprecated now. */ 8843 #define ISO_FILENAME_WRONG_CHARSET_OLD 0xC020FF72 8844 8845 /* File can't be added to the tree (SORRY,HIGH, -143) */ 8846 #define ISO_FILE_CANT_ADD 0xE030FF71 8847 8848 /** 8849 * File path break specification constraints and will be ignored 8850 * (WARNING,MEDIUM, -144) 8851 */ 8852 #define ISO_FILE_IMGPATH_WRONG 0xD020FF70 8853 8854 /** 8855 * Offset greater than file size (FAILURE,HIGH, -150) 8856 * @since 0.6.4 8857 */ 8858 #define ISO_FILE_OFFSET_TOO_BIG 0xE830FF6A 8859 8860 8861 /** Charset conversion error (FAILURE,HIGH, -256) */ 8862 #define ISO_CHARSET_CONV_ERROR 0xE830FF00 8863 8864 /** 8865 * Too many files to mangle, i.e. we cannot guarantee unique file names 8866 * (FAILURE,HIGH, -257) 8867 */ 8868 #define ISO_MANGLE_TOO_MUCH_FILES 0xE830FEFF 8869 8870 /* image related errors */ 8871 8872 /** 8873 * Wrong or damaged Primary Volume Descriptor (FAILURE,HIGH, -320) 8874 * This could mean that the file is not a valid ISO image. 8875 */ 8876 #define ISO_WRONG_PVD 0xE830FEC0 8877 8878 /** Wrong or damaged RR entry (SORRY,HIGH, -321) */ 8879 #define ISO_WRONG_RR 0xE030FEBF 8880 8881 /** Unsupported RR feature (SORRY,HIGH, -322) */ 8882 #define ISO_UNSUPPORTED_RR 0xE030FEBE 8883 8884 /** Wrong or damaged ECMA-119 (FAILURE,HIGH, -323) */ 8885 #define ISO_WRONG_ECMA119 0xE830FEBD 8886 8887 /** Unsupported ECMA-119 feature (FAILURE,HIGH, -324) */ 8888 #define ISO_UNSUPPORTED_ECMA119 0xE830FEBC 8889 8890 /** Wrong or damaged El-Torito catalog (WARN,HIGH, -325) */ 8891 #define ISO_WRONG_EL_TORITO 0xD030FEBB 8892 8893 /** Unsupported El-Torito feature (WARN,HIGH, -326) */ 8894 #define ISO_UNSUPPORTED_EL_TORITO 0xD030FEBA 8895 8896 /** Can't patch an isolinux boot image (SORRY,HIGH, -327) */ 8897 #define ISO_ISOLINUX_CANT_PATCH 0xE030FEB9 8898 8899 /** Unsupported SUSP feature (SORRY,HIGH, -328) */ 8900 #define ISO_UNSUPPORTED_SUSP 0xE030FEB8 8901 8902 /** Error on a RR entry that can be ignored (WARNING,HIGH, -329) */ 8903 #define ISO_WRONG_RR_WARN 0xD030FEB7 8904 8905 /** Error on a RR entry that can be ignored (HINT,MEDIUM, -330) */ 8906 #define ISO_SUSP_UNHANDLED 0xC020FEB6 8907 8908 /** Multiple ER SUSP entries found (WARNING,HIGH, -331) */ 8909 #define ISO_SUSP_MULTIPLE_ER 0xD030FEB5 8910 8911 /** Unsupported volume descriptor found (HINT,MEDIUM, -332) */ 8912 #define ISO_UNSUPPORTED_VD 0xC020FEB4 8913 8914 /** El-Torito related warning (WARNING,HIGH, -333) */ 8915 #define ISO_EL_TORITO_WARN 0xD030FEB3 8916 8917 /** Image write cancelled (MISHAP,HIGH, -334) */ 8918 #define ISO_IMAGE_WRITE_CANCELED 0xE430FEB2 8919 8920 /** El-Torito image is hidden (WARNING,HIGH, -335) */ 8921 #define ISO_EL_TORITO_HIDDEN 0xD030FEB1 8922 8923 8924 /** AAIP info with ACL or xattr in ISO image will be ignored 8925 (NOTE, HIGH, -336) */ 8926 #define ISO_AAIP_IGNORED 0xB030FEB0 8927 8928 /** Error with decoding ACL from AAIP info (FAILURE, HIGH, -337) */ 8929 #define ISO_AAIP_BAD_ACL 0xE830FEAF 8930 8931 /** Error with encoding ACL for AAIP (FAILURE, HIGH, -338) */ 8932 #define ISO_AAIP_BAD_ACL_TEXT 0xE830FEAE 8933 8934 /** AAIP processing for ACL or xattr not enabled at compile time 8935 (FAILURE, HIGH, -339) */ 8936 #define ISO_AAIP_NOT_ENABLED 0xE830FEAD 8937 8938 /** Error with decoding AAIP info for ACL or xattr (FAILURE, HIGH, -340) */ 8939 #define ISO_AAIP_BAD_AASTRING 0xE830FEAC 8940 8941 /** Error with reading ACL or xattr from local file (FAILURE, HIGH, -341) */ 8942 #define ISO_AAIP_NO_GET_LOCAL 0xE830FEAB 8943 8944 /** Error with attaching ACL or xattr to local file (FAILURE, HIGH, -342) */ 8945 #define ISO_AAIP_NO_SET_LOCAL 0xE830FEAA 8946 8947 /** Unallowed attempt to set an xattr with non-userspace name 8948 (FAILURE, HIGH, -343) */ 8949 #define ISO_AAIP_NON_USER_NAME 0xE830FEA9 8950 8951 /** Too many references on a single IsoExternalFilterCommand 8952 (FAILURE, HIGH, -344) */ 8953 #define ISO_EXTF_TOO_OFTEN 0xE830FEA8 8954 8955 /** Use of zlib was not enabled at compile time (FAILURE, HIGH, -345) */ 8956 #define ISO_ZLIB_NOT_ENABLED 0xE830FEA7 8957 8958 /** File too large. Cannot apply zisofs filter. (FAILURE, HIGH, -346) */ 8959 #define ISO_ZISOFS_TOO_LARGE 0xE830FEA6 8960 8961 /** Filter input differs from previous run (FAILURE, HIGH, -347) */ 8962 #define ISO_FILTER_WRONG_INPUT 0xE830FEA5 8963 8964 /** zlib compression/decompression error (FAILURE, HIGH, -348) */ 8965 #define ISO_ZLIB_COMPR_ERR 0xE830FEA4 8966 8967 /** Input stream is not in a supported zisofs format (FAILURE, HIGH, -349) */ 8968 #define ISO_ZISOFS_WRONG_INPUT 0xE830FEA3 8969 8970 /** Cannot set global zisofs parameters while filters exist 8971 (FAILURE, HIGH, -350) */ 8972 #define ISO_ZISOFS_PARAM_LOCK 0xE830FEA2 8973 8974 /** Premature EOF of zlib input stream (FAILURE, HIGH, -351) */ 8975 #define ISO_ZLIB_EARLY_EOF 0xE830FEA1 8976 8977 /** 8978 * Checksum area or checksum tag appear corrupted (WARNING,HIGH, -352) 8979 * @since 0.6.22 8980 */ 8981 #define ISO_MD5_AREA_CORRUPTED 0xD030FEA0 8982 8983 /** 8984 * Checksum mismatch between checksum tag and data blocks 8985 * (FAILURE, HIGH, -353) 8986 * @since 0.6.22 8987 */ 8988 #define ISO_MD5_TAG_MISMATCH 0xE830FE9F 8989 8990 /** 8991 * Checksum mismatch in System Area, Volume Descriptors, or directory tree. 8992 * (FAILURE, HIGH, -354) 8993 * @since 0.6.22 8994 */ 8995 #define ISO_SB_TREE_CORRUPTED 0xE830FE9E 8996 8997 /** 8998 * Unexpected checksum tag type encountered. (WARNING, HIGH, -355) 8999 * @since 0.6.22 9000 */ 9001 #define ISO_MD5_TAG_UNEXPECTED 0xD030FE9D 9002 9003 /** 9004 * Misplaced checksum tag encountered. (WARNING, HIGH, -356) 9005 * @since 0.6.22 9006 */ 9007 #define ISO_MD5_TAG_MISPLACED 0xD030FE9C 9008 9009 /** 9010 * Checksum tag with unexpected address range encountered. 9011 * (WARNING, HIGH, -357) 9012 * @since 0.6.22 9013 */ 9014 #define ISO_MD5_TAG_OTHER_RANGE 0xD030FE9B 9015 9016 /** 9017 * Detected file content changes while it was written into the image. 9018 * (MISHAP, HIGH, -358) 9019 * @since 0.6.22 9020 */ 9021 #define ISO_MD5_STREAM_CHANGE 0xE430FE9A 9022 9023 /** 9024 * Session does not start at LBA 0. scdbackup checksum tag not written. 9025 * (WARNING, HIGH, -359) 9026 * @since 0.6.24 9027 */ 9028 #define ISO_SCDBACKUP_TAG_NOT_0 0xD030FE99 9029 9030 /** 9031 * The setting of iso_write_opts_set_ms_block() leaves not enough room 9032 * for the prescibed size of iso_write_opts_set_overwrite_buf(). 9033 * (FAILURE, HIGH, -360) 9034 * @since 0.6.36 9035 */ 9036 #define ISO_OVWRT_MS_TOO_SMALL 0xE830FE98 9037 9038 /** 9039 * The partition offset is not 0 and leaves not not enough room for 9040 * system area, volume descriptors, and checksum tags of the first tree. 9041 * (FAILURE, HIGH, -361) 9042 */ 9043 #define ISO_PART_OFFST_TOO_SMALL 0xE830FE97 9044 9045 /** 9046 * The ring buffer is smaller than 64 kB + partition offset. 9047 * (FAILURE, HIGH, -362) 9048 */ 9049 #define ISO_OVWRT_FIFO_TOO_SMALL 0xE830FE96 9050 9051 /** Use of libjte was not enabled at compile time (FAILURE, HIGH, -363) */ 9052 #define ISO_LIBJTE_NOT_ENABLED 0xE830FE95 9053 9054 /** Failed to start up Jigdo Template Extraction (FAILURE, HIGH, -364) */ 9055 #define ISO_LIBJTE_START_FAILED 0xE830FE94 9056 9057 /** Failed to finish Jigdo Template Extraction (FAILURE, HIGH, -365) */ 9058 #define ISO_LIBJTE_END_FAILED 0xE830FE93 9059 9060 /** Failed to process file for Jigdo Template Extraction 9061 (MISHAP, HIGH, -366) */ 9062 #define ISO_LIBJTE_FILE_FAILED 0xE430FE92 9063 9064 /** Too many MIPS Big Endian boot files given (max. 15) (FAILURE, HIGH, -367)*/ 9065 #define ISO_BOOT_TOO_MANY_MIPS 0xE830FE91 9066 9067 /** Boot file missing in image (MISHAP, HIGH, -368) */ 9068 #define ISO_BOOT_FILE_MISSING 0xE430FE90 9069 9070 /** Partition number out of range (FAILURE, HIGH, -369) */ 9071 #define ISO_BAD_PARTITION_NO 0xE830FE8F 9072 9073 /** Cannot open data file for appended partition (FAILURE, HIGH, -370) */ 9074 #define ISO_BAD_PARTITION_FILE 0xE830FE8E 9075 9076 /** May not combine MBR partition with non-MBR system area 9077 (FAILURE, HIGH, -371) */ 9078 #define ISO_NON_MBR_SYS_AREA 0xE830FE8D 9079 9080 /** Displacement offset leads outside 32 bit range (FAILURE, HIGH, -372) */ 9081 #define ISO_DISPLACE_ROLLOVER 0xE830FE8C 9082 9083 /** File name cannot be written into ECMA-119 untranslated 9084 (FAILURE, HIGH, -373) */ 9085 #define ISO_NAME_NEEDS_TRANSL 0xE830FE8B 9086 9087 /** Data file input stream object offers no cloning method 9088 (FAILURE, HIGH, -374) */ 9089 #define ISO_STREAM_NO_CLONE 0xE830FE8A 9090 9091 /** Extended information class offers no cloning method 9092 (FAILURE, HIGH, -375) */ 9093 #define ISO_XINFO_NO_CLONE 0xE830FE89 9094 9095 /** Found copied superblock checksum tag (WARNING, HIGH, -376) */ 9096 #define ISO_MD5_TAG_COPIED 0xD030FE88 9097 9098 /** Rock Ridge leaf name too long (FAILURE, HIGH, -377) */ 9099 #define ISO_RR_NAME_TOO_LONG 0xE830FE87 9100 9101 /** Reserved Rock Ridge leaf name (FAILURE, HIGH, -378) */ 9102 #define ISO_RR_NAME_RESERVED 0xE830FE86 9103 9104 /** Rock Ridge path too long (FAILURE, HIGH, -379) */ 9105 #define ISO_RR_PATH_TOO_LONG 0xE830FE85 9106 9107 /** Attribute name cannot be represented (FAILURE, HIGH, -380) */ 9108 #define ISO_AAIP_BAD_ATTR_NAME 0xE830FE84 9109 9110 /** ACL text contains multiple entries of user::, group::, other:: 9111 (FAILURE, HIGH, -381) */ 9112 #define ISO_AAIP_ACL_MULT_OBJ 0xE830FE83 9113 9114 /** File sections do not form consecutive array of blocks 9115 (FAILURE, HIGH, -382) */ 9116 #define ISO_SECT_SCATTERED 0xE830FE82 9117 9118 /** Too many Apple Partition Map entries requested (FAILURE, HIGH, -383) */ 9119 #define ISO_BOOT_TOO_MANY_APM 0xE830FE81 9120 9121 /** Overlapping Apple Partition Map entries requested (FAILURE, HIGH, -384) */ 9122 #define ISO_BOOT_APM_OVERLAP 0xE830FE80 9123 9124 /** Too many GPT entries requested (FAILURE, HIGH, -385) */ 9125 #define ISO_BOOT_TOO_MANY_GPT 0xE830FE7F 9126 9127 /** Overlapping GPT entries requested (FAILURE, HIGH, -386) */ 9128 #define ISO_BOOT_GPT_OVERLAP 0xE830FE7E 9129 9130 /** Too many MBR partition entries requested (FAILURE, HIGH, -387) */ 9131 #define ISO_BOOT_TOO_MANY_MBR 0xE830FE7D 9132 9133 /** Overlapping MBR partition entries requested (FAILURE, HIGH, -388) */ 9134 #define ISO_BOOT_MBR_OVERLAP 0xE830FE7C 9135 9136 /** Attempt to use an MBR partition entry twice (FAILURE, HIGH, -389) */ 9137 #define ISO_BOOT_MBR_COLLISION 0xE830FE7B 9138 9139 /** No suitable El Torito EFI boot image for exposure as GPT partition 9140 (FAILURE, HIGH, -390) */ 9141 #define ISO_BOOT_NO_EFI_ELTO 0xE830FE7A 9142 9143 /** Not a supported HFS+ or APM block size (FAILURE, HIGH, -391) */ 9144 #define ISO_BOOT_HFSP_BAD_BSIZE 0xE830FE79 9145 9146 /** APM block size prevents coexistence with GPT (FAILURE, HIGH, -392) */ 9147 #define ISO_BOOT_APM_GPT_BSIZE 0xE830FE78 9148 9149 /** Name collision in HFS+, mangling not possible (FAILURE, HIGH, -393) */ 9150 #define ISO_HFSP_NO_MANGLE 0xE830FE77 9151 9152 /** Symbolic link cannot be resolved (FAILURE, HIGH, -394) */ 9153 #define ISO_DEAD_SYMLINK 0xE830FE76 9154 9155 /** Too many chained symbolic links (FAILURE, HIGH, -395) */ 9156 #define ISO_DEEP_SYMLINK 0xE830FE75 9157 9158 /** Unrecognized file type in ISO image (FAILURE, HIGH, -396) */ 9159 #define ISO_BAD_ISO_FILETYPE 0xE830FE74 9160 9161 /** Filename not suitable for character set UCS-2 (WARNING, HIGH, -397) */ 9162 #define ISO_NAME_NOT_UCS2 0xD030FE73 9163 9164 /** File name collision during ISO image import (WARNING, HIGH, -398) */ 9165 #define ISO_IMPORT_COLLISION 0xD030FE72 9166 9167 /** Incomplete HP-PA PALO boot parameters (FAILURE, HIGH, -399) */ 9168 #define ISO_HPPA_PALO_INCOMPL 0xE830FE71 9169 9170 /** HP-PA PALO boot address exceeds 2 GB (FAILURE, HIGH, -400) */ 9171 #define ISO_HPPA_PALO_OFLOW 0xE830FE70 9172 9173 /** HP-PA PALO file is not a data file (FAILURE, HIGH, -401) */ 9174 #define ISO_HPPA_PALO_NOTREG 0xE830FE6F 9175 9176 /** HP-PA PALO command line too long (FAILURE, HIGH, -402) */ 9177 #define ISO_HPPA_PALO_CMDLEN 0xE830FE6E 9178 9179 /** Problems encountered during inspection of System Area (WARN, HIGH, -403) */ 9180 #define ISO_SYSAREA_PROBLEMS 0xD030FE6D 9181 9182 /** Unrecognized inquiry for system area property (FAILURE, HIGH, -404) */ 9183 #define ISO_INQ_SYSAREA_PROP 0xE830FE6C 9184 9185 /** DEC Alpha Boot Loader file is not a data file (FAILURE, HIGH, -405) */ 9186 #define ISO_ALPHA_BOOT_NOTREG 0xE830FE6B 9187 9188 /** No data source of imported ISO image available (WARNING, HIGH, -406) */ 9189 #define ISO_NO_KEPT_DATA_SRC 0xD030FE6A 9190 9191 /** Malformed description string for interval reader (FAILURE, HIGH, -407) */ 9192 #define ISO_MALFORMED_READ_INTVL 0xE830FE69 9193 9194 /** Unreadable file, premature EOF, or failure to seek for interval reader 9195 (WARNING, HIGH, -408) */ 9196 #define ISO_INTVL_READ_PROBLEM 0xD030FE68 9197 9198 /** Cannot arrange content of data files in surely reproducible way 9199 (NOTE, HIGH, -409) */ 9200 #define ISO_NOT_REPRODUCIBLE 0xB030FE67 9201 9202 /** May not write boot info into filtered stream of boot image 9203 (FAILURE, HIGH, -410) */ 9204 #define ISO_PATCH_FILTERED_BOOT 0xE830FE66 9205 9206 /** Boot image to large to buffer for writing boot info 9207 (FAILURE, HIGH, -411) */ 9208 #define ISO_PATCH_OVERSIZED_BOOT 0xE830FE65 9209 9210 /** File name had to be truncated and MD5 marked (WARNING, HIGH, -412) */ 9211 #define ISO_RR_NAME_TRUNCATED 0xD030FE64 9212 9213 /** File name truncation length changed by loaded image info 9214 (NOTE, HIGH, -413) */ 9215 #define ISO_TRUNCATE_ISOFSNT 0xB030FE63 9216 9217 /** General note (NOTE, HIGH, -414) */ 9218 #define ISO_GENERAL_NOTE 0xB030FE62 9219 9220 /** Unrecognized file type of IsoFileSrc object (SORRY, HIGH, -415) */ 9221 #define ISO_BAD_FSRC_FILETYPE 0xE030FE61 9222 9223 /** Cannot derive GPT GUID from undefined pseudo-UUID volume timestamp 9224 (FAILURE, HIGH, -416) */ 9225 #define ISO_GPT_NO_VOL_UUID 0xE830FE60 9226 9227 /** Unrecognized GPT disk GUID setup mode 9228 (FAILURE, HIGH, -417) */ 9229 #define ISO_BAD_GPT_GUID_MODE 0xE830FE5F 9230 9231 /** Unable to obtain root directory (FATAL,HIGH, -418) */ 9232 #define ISO_NO_ROOT_DIR 0xF030FE5E 9233 9234 /** Zero sized, oversized, or mislocated SUSP CE area found 9235 (FAILURE, HIGH, -419) */ 9236 #define ISO_SUSP_WRONG_CE_SIZE 0xE830FE5D 9237 9238 /** Multi-session would overwrite imported_iso interval 9239 (FAILURE, HIGH, -420) */ 9240 #define ISO_MULTI_OVER_IMPORTED 0xE830FE5C 9241 9242 /** El-Torito EFI image is hidden (NOTE,HIGH, -421) */ 9243 #define ISO_ELTO_EFI_HIDDEN 0xB030FE5B 9244 9245 /** Too many files in HFS+ directory tree (FAILURE, HIGH, -422) */ 9246 #define ISO_HFSPLUS_TOO_MANY_FILES 0xE830FE5A 9247 9248 /** Too many zisofs block pointers needed overall (FAILURE, HIGH, -423) */ 9249 #define ISO_ZISOFS_TOO_MANY_PTR 0xE830FE59 9250 9251 /** Prevented zisofs block pointer counter underrun (WARNING,MEDIUM, -424) */ 9252 #define ISO_ZISOFS_BPT_UNDERRUN 0xD020FE58 9253 9254 /** Cannot obtain size of zisofs compressed stream (FAILURE, HIGH, -425) */ 9255 #define ISO_ZISOFS_UNKNOWN_SIZE 0xE830FE57 9256 9257 9258 /* Internal developer note: 9259 Place new error codes directly above this comment. 9260 Newly introduced errors must get a message entry in 9261 libisofs/messages.c, function iso_error_to_msg() 9262 */ 9263 9264 /* ! PLACE NEW ERROR CODES ABOVE. NOT AFTER THIS LINE ! */ 9265 9266 9267 /** Read error occurred with IsoDataSource (SORRY,HIGH, -513) */ 9268 #define ISO_DATA_SOURCE_SORRY 0xE030FCFF 9269 9270 /** Read error occurred with IsoDataSource (MISHAP,HIGH, -513) */ 9271 #define ISO_DATA_SOURCE_MISHAP 0xE430FCFF 9272 9273 /** Read error occurred with IsoDataSource (FAILURE,HIGH, -513) */ 9274 #define ISO_DATA_SOURCE_FAILURE 0xE830FCFF 9275 9276 /** Read error occurred with IsoDataSource (FATAL,HIGH, -513) */ 9277 #define ISO_DATA_SOURCE_FATAL 0xF030FCFF 9278 9279 9280 /* ! PLACE NEW ERROR CODES SEVERAL LINES ABOVE. NOT HERE ! */ 9281 9282 9283 /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ 9284 9285 #ifdef LIBISOFS_WITHOUT_LIBBURN 9286 9287 /** 9288 This is a copy from the API of libburn-0.6.0 (under GPL). 9289 It is supposed to be as stable as any overall include of libburn.h. 9290 I.e. if this definition is out of sync then you cannot rely on any 9291 contract that was made with libburn.h. 9292 9293 Libisofs does not need to be linked with libburn at all. But if it is 9294 linked with libburn then it must be libburn-0.4.2 or later. 9295 9296 An application that provides own struct burn_source objects and does not 9297 include libburn/libburn.h has to define LIBISOFS_WITHOUT_LIBBURN before 9298 including libisofs/libisofs.h in order to make this copy available. 9299 */ 9300 9301 9302 /** Data source interface for tracks. 9303 This allows to use arbitrary program code as provider of track input data. 9304 9305 Objects compliant to this interface are either provided by the application 9306 or by API calls of libburn: burn_fd_source_new(), burn_file_source_new(), 9307 and burn_fifo_source_new(). 9308 9309 libisofs acts as "application" and implements an own class of burn_source. 9310 Instances of that class are handed out by iso_image_create_burn_source(). 9311 9312 */ 9313 struct burn_source { 9314 9315 /** Reference count for the data source. MUST be 1 when a new source 9316 is created and thus the first reference is handed out. Increment 9317 it to take more references for yourself. Use burn_source_free() 9318 to destroy your references to it. */ 9319 int refcount; 9320 9321 9322 /** Read data from the source. Semantics like with read(2), but MUST 9323 either deliver the full buffer as defined by size or MUST deliver 9324 EOF (return 0) or failure (return -1) at this call or at the 9325 next following call. I.e. the only incomplete buffer may be the 9326 last one from that source. 9327 libburn will read a single sector by each call to (*read). 9328 The size of a sector depends on BURN_MODE_*. The known range is 9329 2048 to 2352. 9330 9331 If this call is reading from a pipe then it will learn 9332 about the end of data only when that pipe gets closed on the 9333 feeder side. So if the track size is not fixed or if the pipe 9334 delivers less than the predicted amount or if the size is not 9335 block aligned, then burning will halt until the input process 9336 closes the pipe. 9337 9338 IMPORTANT: 9339 If this function pointer is NULL, then the struct burn_source is of 9340 version >= 1 and the job of .(*read)() is done by .(*read_xt)(). 9341 See below, member .version. 9342 */ 9343 int (*read)(struct burn_source *, unsigned char *buffer, int size); 9344 9345 9346 /** Read subchannel data from the source (NULL if lib generated) 9347 WARNING: This is an obscure feature with CD raw write modes. 9348 Unless you checked the libburn code for correctness in that aspect 9349 you should not rely on raw writing with own subchannels. 9350 ADVICE: Set this pointer to NULL. 9351 */ 9352 int (*read_sub)(struct burn_source *, unsigned char *buffer, int size); 9353 9354 9355 /** Get the size of the source's data. Return 0 means unpredictable 9356 size. If application provided (*get_size) allows return 0, then 9357 the application MUST provide a fully functional (*set_size). 9358 */ 9359 off_t (*get_size)(struct burn_source *); 9360 9361 9362 /* @since 0.3.2 */ 9363 /** Program the reply of (*get_size) to a fixed value. It is advised 9364 to implement this by a attribute off_t fixed_size; in *data . 9365 The read() function does not have to take into respect this fake 9366 setting. It is rather a note of libburn to itself. Eventually 9367 necessary truncation or padding is done in libburn. Truncation 9368 is usually considered a misburn. Padding is considered ok. 9369 9370 libburn is supposed to work even if (*get_size) ignores the 9371 setting by (*set_size). But your application will not be able to 9372 enforce fixed track sizes by burn_track_set_size() and possibly 9373 even padding might be left out. 9374 */ 9375 int (*set_size)(struct burn_source *source, off_t size); 9376 9377 9378 /** Clean up the source specific data. This function will be called 9379 once by burn_source_free() when the last referer disposes the 9380 source. 9381 */ 9382 void (*free_data)(struct burn_source *); 9383 9384 9385 /** Next source, for when a source runs dry and padding is disabled 9386 WARNING: This is an obscure feature. Set to NULL at creation and 9387 from then on leave untouched and uninterpreted. 9388 */ 9389 struct burn_source *next; 9390 9391 9392 /** Source specific data. Here the various source classes express their 9393 specific properties and the instance objects store their individual 9394 management data. 9395 E.g. data could point to a struct like this: 9396 struct app_burn_source 9397 { 9398 struct my_app *app_handle; 9399 ... other individual source parameters ... 9400 off_t fixed_size; 9401 }; 9402 9403 Function (*free_data) has to be prepared to clean up and free 9404 the struct. 9405 */ 9406 void *data; 9407 9408 9409 /* @since 0.4.2 */ 9410 /** Valid only if above member .(*read)() is NULL. This indicates a 9411 version of struct burn_source younger than 0. 9412 From then on, member .version tells which further members exist 9413 in the memory layout of struct burn_source. libburn will only touch 9414 those announced extensions. 9415 9416 Versions: 9417 0 has .(*read)() != NULL, not even .version is present. 9418 1 has .version, .(*read_xt)(), .(*cancel)() 9419 */ 9420 int version; 9421 9422 /** This substitutes for (*read)() in versions above 0. */ 9423 int (*read_xt)(struct burn_source *, unsigned char *buffer, int size); 9424 9425 /** Informs the burn_source that the consumer of data prematurely 9426 ended reading. This call may or may not be issued by libburn 9427 before (*free_data)() is called. 9428 */ 9429 int (*cancel)(struct burn_source *source); 9430 }; 9431 9432 #endif /* LIBISOFS_WITHOUT_LIBBURN */ 9433 9434 /* ----------------------------- Bug Fixes ----------------------------- */ 9435 9436 /* currently none being tested */ 9437 9438 9439 /* ---------------------------- Improvements --------------------------- */ 9440 9441 /* currently none being tested */ 9442 9443 9444 /* ---------------------------- Experiments ---------------------------- */ 9445 9446 9447 /* Experiment: Write obsolete RR entries with Rock Ridge. 9448 I suspect Solaris wants to see them. 9449 DID NOT HELP: Solaris knows only RRIP_1991A. 9450 9451 #define Libisofs_with_rrip_rR yes 9452 */ 9453 9454 #ifdef __cplusplus 9455 } /* extern "C" */ 9456 #endif 9457 9458 #endif /*LIBISO_LIBISOFS_H_*/ 9459