# AbleOS VFS ## Public API ``` // reads the whole file pub fn read(file: FileHandle) -> Vec // reads up to 4096 bytes of the file pub fn read_block(file: FileHandle) -> Vec // overwrites the contents of the file pub fn write(file: FileHandle, data: Vec) // writes 4096 bytes to the file pub fn write_block(file: FileHandle, data: Vec) // opens a file for reading and writing pub fn open(path: Path) // closes the file pub fn close(file: FileHandle) // deletes a file pub fn delete(path: Path) ``` Opening a file opens it using the corresponding filesystem. Multiple processes can open the same file in any mode, and the file only leaves the FS cache when no process has it open anymore. ## Minimal FS API ``` trait FileIO { // reads the whole file pub fn read(path: Path) -> Vec // overwrites the file contents pub fn write(path: Path, data: Vec) // opens a file for reading and writing pub fn open(path: Path) // closes a file, removing it from the cache pub fn close(path: Path) // deletes a file pub fn delete(path: Path) } ``` All filesystems must expose at least these functions in order to work with the VFS. ## Structure ### Mount Point ``` path_len: u64 path: [u8; ] entries: u64 addr: u64 ``` There is one of these for each mount point, stored sequentially within the root directory it belongs to. The list ends when it finds a `path_len` of 0 ### Inode ``` name_len: u64 name: [u8; ] next: u64 flags: u8 entries: u64 addr: u64 ``` There can be many of these in a mount point, and they can be nested within eachother. If this is the last entry in the parent, `next` will refer to this inode, otherwise it will be the address of the next inode under the parent. `entries` specifies the number of inodes within a directory #### Flags | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | |:---:|:---:|:---:|:---:|:---:|:---:|:---:|:---:| | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | dir | mnt | `dir` is set if the inode is a directory, or unset if it's a file. `mnt` is set if the inode is a mount point #### create_inode 1. traverse the path until we reach the last element or a nonexistent directory 2. if any path elements are mount points, request the filesystem belonging to it to create the item and if it succeeds create the inode