Copyright | (c) 2013-2015 Leon P Smith |
---|---|
License | BSD3 |
Maintainer | leon@melding-monads.com |
Safe Haskell | None |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Although this module copies portions of inotify's manual page, it may be useful to consult the original in conjunction with this documentation:
Synopsis
- data Inotify
- newtype Watch = Watch CInt
- data Event = Event {}
- newtype Mask a = Mask Word32
- isect :: Mask a -> Mask a -> Mask a
- isSubset :: Mask a -> Mask a -> Bool
- hasOverlap :: Mask a -> Mask a -> Bool
- data WatchFlag
- data EventFlag
- newtype Cookie = Cookie Word32
- init :: IO Inotify
- close :: Inotify -> IO ()
- isClosed :: Inotify -> IO Bool
- initWith :: InotifyOptions -> IO Inotify
- newtype InotifyOptions = InotifyOptions {
- bufferSize :: Int
- defaultInotifyOptions :: InotifyOptions
- addWatch :: Inotify -> FilePath -> Mask WatchFlag -> IO Watch
- addWatch_ :: Inotify -> RawFilePath -> Mask WatchFlag -> IO Watch
- rmWatch :: Inotify -> Watch -> IO ()
- getEvent :: Inotify -> IO Event
- getEventNonBlocking :: Inotify -> IO (Maybe Event)
- getEventFromBuffer :: Inotify -> IO (Maybe Event)
- peekEvent :: Inotify -> IO Event
- peekEventNonBlocking :: Inotify -> IO (Maybe Event)
- peekEventFromBuffer :: Inotify -> IO (Maybe Event)
- in_ACCESS :: Mask a
- in_ATTRIB :: Mask a
- in_CLOSE :: Mask a
- in_CLOSE_WRITE :: Mask a
- in_CLOSE_NOWRITE :: Mask a
- in_CREATE :: Mask a
- in_DELETE :: Mask a
- in_DELETE_SELF :: Mask a
- in_MODIFY :: Mask a
- in_MOVE_SELF :: Mask a
- in_MOVE :: Mask a
- in_MOVED_FROM :: Mask a
- in_MOVED_TO :: Mask a
- in_OPEN :: Mask a
- in_ALL_EVENTS :: Mask a
- in_DONT_FOLLOW :: Mask WatchFlag
- in_EXCL_UNLINK :: Mask WatchFlag
- in_MASK_ADD :: Mask WatchFlag
- in_ONESHOT :: Mask WatchFlag
- in_ONLYDIR :: Mask WatchFlag
- in_IGNORED :: Mask EventFlag
- in_ISDIR :: Mask EventFlag
- in_Q_OVERFLOW :: Mask EventFlag
- in_UNMOUNT :: Mask EventFlag
Documentation
Inotify
represents an inotify descriptor, to which watches can be added
and events can be read from. Internally, it also includes a buffer
of events that have been delivered to the application from the kernel
but haven't been processed.
Watch
represents a watch descriptor, which is used to identify
events and to cancel the watch. Every watch descriptor is associated
with a particular inotify descriptor and can only be
used with that descriptor; incorrect behavior will otherwise result.
Event | |
|
Represents the mask, which in inotify terminology is a union of bit flags representing various event types and watch options.
The type parameter is a phantom type that tracks whether
a particular flag is used to set up a watch (WatchFlag
) or
when receiving an event. (EventFlag
) Polymorphic
parameters mean that the flag may appear in either context.
isSubset :: Mask a -> Mask a -> Bool Source #
Are the bits of the first mask a subset of the bits of the second?
An empty type used to denote Mask
values that can be sent to
the kernel when setting up an inotify watch.
An empty type used to denote Mask
values that can be received
from the kernel in an inotify event message.
Creates an inotify socket descriptor that watches can be added to and events can be read from.
close :: Inotify -> IO () Source #
Closes an inotify descriptor, freeing the resources associated
with it. This will also raise an IOException
in any threads that
are blocked on getEvent
.
Attempting to use a descriptor after it is closed will safely raise
an exception. It is perfectly safe to call close
multiple times, which
is idempotent and will not result in an exception.
Descriptors will be closed after they are garbage collected, via
a finalizer, although it is often preferable to call close
yourself.
initWith :: InotifyOptions -> IO Inotify Source #
Creates an inotify socket descriptor with custom configuration options.
Calls inotify_init1(IN_NONBLOCK | IN_CLOEXEC)
.
newtype InotifyOptions Source #
Additional configuration options for creating an Inotify descriptor.
InotifyOptions | |
|
defaultInotifyOptions :: InotifyOptions Source #
Default configuration options
addWatch :: Inotify -> FilePath -> Mask WatchFlag -> IO Watch Source #
Adds a watch on the inotify descriptor, returns a watch descriptor. The mask controls which events are delivered to your application, as well as some additional options. This function is thread safe.
addWatch_ :: Inotify -> RawFilePath -> Mask WatchFlag -> IO Watch Source #
A variant of addWatch
that operates on a RawFilePath
, which is
a file path represented as strict ByteString
. One weakness of the
current implementation is that if addWatch_
throws an IOException
,
then any unicode paths will be mangled in the error message.
rmWatch :: Inotify -> Watch -> IO () Source #
Stops watching a path for changes. This watch descriptor must be associated with the particular inotify port, otherwise undefined behavior can happen.
This function is thread safe. This binding ignores inotify_rm_watch
's
errno when it is EINVAL
, so it is ok to delete a previously
removed or non-existent watch descriptor.
However long lived applications that set and remove many watches
should still endeavor to avoid calling rmWatch
on removed
watch descriptors, due to possible wrap-around bugs.
getEvent :: Inotify -> IO Event Source #
Returns an inotify event, blocking until one is available.
If the inotify descriptor is closed, this function will return
an event from the buffer, if available. Otherwise, it will
throw an IOException
.
It is safe to call this function from multiple threads at the same time.
getEventNonBlocking :: Inotify -> IO (Maybe Event) Source #
Returns an inotify event only if one is immediately available.
If the inotify descriptor is closed, this function will return
an event from the buffer, if available. Otherwise, it will
throw an IOException
.
One possible downside of the current implementation is that
returning Nothing
necessarily results in a system call.
It is safe to call this function from multiple threads at the same time.
getEventFromBuffer :: Inotify -> IO (Maybe Event) Source #
Returns an inotify event only if one is available in 'Inotify'\'s buffer. This won't ever make a system call, and should not ever throw an exception.
It is safe to call this function from multiple threads at the same time.
peekEvent :: Inotify -> IO Event Source #
Returns an inotify event, blocking until one is available.
After this returns an event, the next read from the inotify descriptor will return the same event. This read will not result in a system call.
If the inotify descriptor is closed, this function will return
an event from the buffer, if available. Otherwise, it will
throw an IOException
.
It is safe to call this function from multiple threads at the same time.
peekEventNonBlocking :: Inotify -> IO (Maybe Event) Source #
Returns an inotify event only if one is immediately available.
If this returns an event, then the next read from the inotify descriptor will return the same event, and this read will not result in a system call.
If the inotify descriptor is closed, this function will return
an event from the buffer, if available. Otherwise, it will
throw an IOException
.
One possible downside of the current implementation is that
returning Nothing
necessarily results in a system call.
It is safe to call this function from multiple threads at the same time.
peekEventFromBuffer :: Inotify -> IO (Maybe Event) Source #
Returns an inotify event only if one is available in 'Inotify'\'s buffer. This won't ever make a system call, and should not ever throw an exception.
If this returns an event, then the next read from the inotify descriptor will return the same event, and this read will not result in a system call.
It is safe to call this function from multiple threads at the same time.
Metadata changed, e.g., permissions, timestamps, extended attributes, link count (since Linux 2.6.25), UID, GID, etc. Includes the files of a watched directory.
File was closed. This is not a separate flag, but a convenience definition
such that in_CLOSE
==
in_CLOSE_WRITE
<>
in_CLOSE_NOWRITE
in_CLOSE_WRITE :: Mask a Source #
File opened for writing was closed. Includes the files of a watched directory.
in_CLOSE_NOWRITE :: Mask a Source #
File not opened for writing was closed. Includes the files of a watched directory.
in_DELETE_SELF :: Mask a Source #
Watched file/directory was itself deleted.
in_MOVE_SELF :: Mask a Source #
Watched file/directory was itself moved.
File was moved. This is not a separate flag, but a convenience definition
such that in_MOVE
==
in_MOVED_FROM
<>
in_MOVED_TO
.
in_MOVED_FROM :: Mask a Source #
File moved out of watched directory. Includes the files of a watched directory.
in_MOVED_TO :: Mask a Source #
File moved into watched directory. Includes the files of a watched directory.
in_ALL_EVENTS :: Mask a Source #
A union of all flags above; this is not a separate flag but a convenience definition.
in_DONT_FOLLOW :: Mask WatchFlag Source #
(since Linux 2.6.15) Don't dereference pathname if it is a symbolic link.
in_EXCL_UNLINK :: Mask WatchFlag Source #
(since Linux 2.6.36) By default, when watching events on the children of a directory, events are generated for children even after they have been unlinked from the directory. This can result in large numbers of uninteresting events for some applications (e.g., if watching /tmp, in which many applications create temporary files whose names are immediately unlinked). Specifying IN_EXCL_UNLINK changes the default behavior, so that events are not generated for children after they have been unlinked from the watched directory.
in_MASK_ADD :: Mask WatchFlag Source #
Add (OR) events to watch mask for this pathname if it already exists (instead of replacing mask).
in_ONESHOT :: Mask WatchFlag Source #
Monitor pathname for one event, then remove from watch list.
in_ONLYDIR :: Mask WatchFlag Source #
(since Linux 2.6.15) Only watch pathname if it is a directory.
in_IGNORED :: Mask EventFlag Source #
Watch was removed explicitly (rmWatch
) or automatically
(file was deleted, or file system was unmounted).
in_Q_OVERFLOW :: Mask EventFlag Source #
Event queue overflowed (wd is -1 for this event). The size of the
queue is available at procsysfsinotify/max_queued_events
.
in_UNMOUNT :: Mask EventFlag Source #
File system containing watched object was unmounted.