/* * Copyright (c) 2012 Apple Inc. All rights reserved. * * @APPLE_OSREFERENCE_LICENSE_HEADER_START@ * * This file contains Original Code and/or Modifications of Original Code * as defined in and that are subject to the Apple Public Source License * Version 2.0 (the 'License'). You may not use this file except in * compliance with the License. The rights granted to you under the License * may not be used to create, or enable the creation or redistribution of, * unlawful or unlicensed copies of an Apple operating system, or to * circumvent, violate, or enable the circumvention or violation of, any * terms of an Apple operating system software license agreement. * * Please obtain a copy of the License at * http://www.opensource.apple.com/apsl/ and read it before using this file. * * The Original Code and all software distributed under the License are * distributed on an 'AS IS' basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AND APPLE HEREBY DISCLAIMS ALL SUCH WARRANTIES, * INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, QUIET ENJOYMENT OR NON-INFRINGEMENT. * Please see the License for the specific language governing rights and * limitations under the License. * * @APPLE_OSREFERENCE_LICENSE_HEADER_END@ */ #ifndef MOCKFS_H #define MOCKFS_H #if MOCKFS #include #include #include /* * mockfs is effectively a "fake" filesystem; the primary motivation for it being that we may have cases * where our userspace needs are extremely simple/consistent and can provided by a single binary. mockfs * uses an in-memory tree to define the structure for an extremely simple filesystem, which makes the * assumption that our root device is in fact a mach-o file, and provides a minimal filesystem to support * this: the root directory, a mountpoint for devfs (given that very basic userspace code may assume the * existance of /dev/), and an executable representing the root device. * * The functionality supported by mockfs is minimal: it is read-only, and does not support user initiated IO, * but it supports lookup (so it should be possible for the user to access /dev/). * * mockfs is primarily targeted towards memory-backed devices, and will (when possible) attempt to inform the * VM that we are using a memory-backed device, so that we can eschew IO to the backing device completely, * and avoid having an extra copy of the data in the UBC (as well as the overhead associated with creating * that copy). * * For the moment, mockfs is not marked in vfs_conf.c as being threadsafe. */ extern lck_attr_t * mockfs_mtx_attr; extern lck_grp_attr_t * mockfs_grp_attr; extern lck_grp_t * mockfs_mtx_grp; struct mockfs_mount { lck_mtx_t mockfs_mnt_mtx; /* Mount-wide (and tree-wide) mutex */ mockfs_fsnode_t mockfs_root; /* Root of the node tree */ boolean_t mockfs_memory_backed; /* Does the backing store reside in memory */ boolean_t mockfs_physical_memory; /* (valid if memory backed) */ uint32_t mockfs_memdev_base; /* Base page of the backing store (valid if memory backed) */ uint64_t mockfs_memdev_size; /* Size of the backing store (valid if memory backed) */ }; typedef struct mockfs_mount * mockfs_mount_t; #endif /* MOCKFS */ #endif /* MOCKFS_H */