Difference between revisions of "Inode"

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{{Draft}}
 
 
[[wikipedia:inode]]
 
[[wikipedia:inode]]
  
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* Timestamps telling when the inode itself was last modified (ctime, inode change time), the file content last modified (mtime, modification time), and last accessed (atime, access time).
 
* Timestamps telling when the inode itself was last modified (ctime, inode change time), the file content last modified (mtime, modification time), and last accessed (atime, access time).
 
* The preferred I/O block size.
 
* The preferred I/O block size.
( The number of blocks allocated to this file.
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* The number of blocks allocated to this file.
  
  
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* [[File descriptor]]
 
* [[File descriptor]]
 
* <code>[[stat]]</code>
 
* <code>[[stat]]</code>
* [[inotify]]
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* <code>[[inotify]]</code>
 
* <code>[[noatime]]</code> [[mount option]]
 
* <code>[[noatime]]</code> [[mount option]]
 
* <code>[[inode_readahead_blks]]</code> [[mount option]]
 
* <code>[[inode_readahead_blks]]</code> [[mount option]]
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* [[Drop caches]]
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Latest revision as of 10:39, 16 March 2023

wikipedia:inode


filename to inode lookup


Inodes store information about files and directories (folders), such as file ownership, access mode (read, write, execute permissions), and file type.


Within a POSIX system, a file has the following attributes[10] which may be retrieved by the stat system call:

  • Device ID (this identifies the device containing the file; that is, the scope of uniqueness of the serial number).
  • File serial numbers. (Inode)
  • The file mode which determines the file type and how the file's owner, its group, and others can access the file.
  • A link count telling how many hard links point to the inode.
  • The User ID of the file's owner.
  • The Group ID of the file.
  • The device ID of the file if it is a device file.
  • The size of the file in bytes.
  • Timestamps telling when the inode itself was last modified (ctime, inode change time), the file content last modified (mtime, modification time), and last accessed (atime, access time).
  • The preferred I/O block size.
  • The number of blocks allocated to this file.


Related terms[edit]

See also[edit]

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