filesys/t_statfs.c

This is filesys/t_statfs.c, an example to accompany the book, The Linux Programming Interface.

This file is not printed in the book; it is a supplementary file for Chapter 14.

The source code file is copyright 2024, Michael Kerrisk, and is licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 3.

In the listing below, the names of Linux system calls and C library functions are hyperlinked to manual pages from the Linux man-pages project, and the names of functions implemented in the book are hyperlinked to the implementations of those functions.

 

Download filesys/t_statfs.c

  Cover of The Linux Programming Interface

Function list (Bold in this list means a function is not static)

/* t_statfs.c

   Demonstrate the use of statfs() to retrieve information about
   a mounted file system.

   This program is Linux-specific.

   See also t_statvfs.c.
*/
#include <sys/statfs.h>
#include "tlpi_hdr.h"
int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    if (argc != 2 || strcmp(argv[1], "--help") == 0)
        usageErr("%s path\n", argv[0]);

    struct statfs sfs;
    if (statfs(argv[1], &sfs) == -1)
        errExit("statfs");

    printf("File system type:              %#lx\n",
            (unsigned long) sfs.f_type);
    printf("Optimal I/O block size:        %lu\n",
            (unsigned long) sfs.f_bsize);
    printf("Total data blocks:             %lu\n",
            (unsigned long) sfs.f_blocks);
    printf("Free data blocks:              %lu\n",
            (unsigned long) sfs.f_bfree);
    printf("Free blocks for nonsuperuser:  %lu\n",
            (unsigned long) sfs.f_bavail);
    printf("Total i-nodes:                 %lu\n",
            (unsigned long) sfs.f_files);
    printf("File system ID:                %#x, %#x\n",
            (unsigned) sfs.f_fsid.__val[0], (unsigned) sfs.f_fsid.__val[1]);
    printf("Free i-nodes:                  %lu\n",
            (unsigned long) sfs.f_ffree);
    printf("Maximum file name length:      %lu\n",
            (unsigned long) sfs.f_namelen);

    exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}

 

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Note that, in most cases, the programs rendered in these web pages are not free standing: you'll typically also need a few other source files (mostly in the lib/ subdirectory) as well. Generally, it's easier to just download the entire source tarball and build the programs with make(1). By hovering your mouse over the various hyperlinked include files and function calls above, you can see which other source files this file depends on.

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