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INOTIFY(7)                          Linux Programmer's Manual                          INOTIFY(7)



NAME
       inotify - monitoring file system events

DESCRIPTION
       The  inotify  API  provides a mechanism for monitoring file system events.  Inotify can be
       used to monitor individual files, or to monitor directories.  When a  directory  is  moni-
       tored,  inotify  will  return  events  for  the directory itself, and for files inside the
       directory.

       The following system calls are used with this API: inotify_init(2),  inotify_add_watch(2),
       inotify_rm_watch(2), read(2), and close(2).

       inotify_init(2) creates an inotify instance and returns a file descriptor referring to the
       inotify instance.

       inotify_add_watch(2) manipulates the "watch list" associated  with  an  inotify  instance.
       Each item ("watch") in the watch list specifies the pathname of a file or directory, along
       with some set of events that the kernel should monitor for the file referred  to  by  that
       pathname.   inotify_add_watch(2)  either creates a new watch item, or modifies an existing
       watch.  Each  watch  has  a  unique  "watch  descriptor",  an  integer  returned  by  ino-
       tify_add_watch(2) when the watch is created.

       inotify_rm_watch(2) removes an item from an inotify watch list.

       When  all file descriptors referring to an inotify instance have been closed, the underly-
       ing object and its resources are freed for re-use by the kernel;  all  associated  watches
       are automatically freed.

       To  determine  what  events  have  occurred, an application read(2)s from the inotify file
       descriptor.  If no events have so far occurred, then, assuming a blocking file descriptor,
       read(2)  will  block  until  at least one event occurs (unless interrupted by a signal, in
       which case the call fails with the error EINTR; see signal(7)).

       Each successful read(2) returns a buffer containing one or more of  the  following  struc-
       tures:

           struct inotify_event {
               int      wd;       /* Watch descriptor */
               uint32_t mask;     /* Mask of events */
               uint32_t cookie;   /* Unique cookie associating related
                                     events (for rename(2)) */
               uint32_t len;      /* Size of name field */
               char     name[];   /* Optional null-terminated name */
           };

       wd  identifies  the watch for which this event occurs.  It is one of the watch descriptors
       returned by a previous call to inotify_add_watch(2).

       mask contains bits that describe the event that occurred (see below).

       cookie is a unique integer that connects related events.  Currently this is only used  for
       rename  events,  and allows the resulting pair of IN_MOVE_FROM and IN_MOVE_TO events to be
       connected by the application.

       The name field is only present when an event is returned  for  a  file  inside  a  watched
       directory;  it identifies the file pathname relative to the watched directory.  This path-
       name is null-terminated, and may include further null bytes to align subsequent reads to a
       suitable address boundary.

       The  len  field  counts  all of the bytes in name, including the null bytes; the length of
       each inotify_event structure is thus sizeof(inotify_event)+len.

       The behavior when the buffer given to read(2) is too small to return information about the
       next  event  depends  on  the kernel version: in kernels before 2.6.21, read(2) returns 0;
       since kernel 2.6.21, read(2) fails with the error EINVAL.

   inotify events
       The inotify_add_watch(2) mask argument and the mask field of the  inotify_event  structure
       returned when read(2)ing an inotify file descriptor are both bit masks identifying inotify
       events.  The following bits can be specified in mask when calling inotify_add_watch(2) and
       may be returned in the mask field returned by read(2):

           IN_ACCESS         File was accessed (read) (*).
           IN_ATTRIB         Metadata    changed,   e.g.,   permissions,   timestamps,   extended
                             attributes, link count (since Linux 2.6.25), UID, GID, etc. (*).
           IN_CLOSE_WRITE    File opened for writing was closed (*).
           IN_CLOSE_NOWRITE  File not opened for writing was closed (*).
           IN_CREATE         File/directory created in watched directory (*).
           IN_DELETE         File/directory deleted from watched directory (*).
           IN_DELETE_SELF    Watched file/directory was itself deleted.
           IN_MODIFY         File was modified (*).
           IN_MOVE_SELF      Watched file/directory was itself moved.
           IN_MOVED_FROM     File moved out of watched directory (*).
           IN_MOVED_TO       File moved into watched directory (*).
           IN_OPEN           File was opened (*).

       When monitoring a directory, the events marked with an asterisk (*) above  can  occur  for
       files  in the directory, in which case the name field in the returned inotify_event struc-
       ture identifies the name of the file within the directory.

       The IN_ALL_EVENTS macro is defined as a bit mask of all of the above events.   This  macro
       can be used as the mask argument when calling inotify_add_watch(2).

       Two additional convenience macros are IN_MOVE, which equates to IN_MOVED_FROM|IN_MOVED_TO,
       and IN_CLOSE which equates to IN_CLOSE_WRITE|IN_CLOSE_NOWRITE.

       The following further bits can be specified in mask when calling inotify_add_watch(2):

           IN_DONT_FOLLOW (since Linux 2.6.15)
                             Don't dereference pathname if it is a symbolic link.
           IN_MASK_ADD       Add (OR) events to watch mask for this pathname if it already exists
                             (instead of replacing mask).
           IN_ONESHOT        Monitor pathname for one event, then remove from watch list.
           IN_ONLYDIR (since Linux 2.6.15)
                             Only watch pathname if it is a directory.

       The following bits may be set in the mask field returned by read(2):

           IN_IGNORED        Watch  was removed explicitly (inotify_rm_watch(2)) or automatically
                             (file was deleted, or file system was unmounted).
           IN_ISDIR          Subject of this event is a directory.
           IN_Q_OVERFLOW     Event queue overflowed (wd is -1 for this event).
           IN_UNMOUNT        File system containing watched object was unmounted.

   /proc interfaces
       The following interfaces can be used to limit the amount of kernel memory consumed by ino-
       tify:

       /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_queued_events
              The  value in this file is used when an application calls inotify_init(2) to set an
              upper limit on the number of events that can be queued to the corresponding inotify
              instance.   Events  in excess of this limit are dropped, but an IN_Q_OVERFLOW event
              is always generated.

       /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_instances
              This specifies an upper limit on the number of inotify instances that can  be  cre-
              ated per real user ID.

       /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_watches
              This  specifies  a  limit on the number of watches that can be associated with each
              inotify instance.

VERSIONS
       Inotify was merged into the 2.6.13 Linux kernel.  The  required  library  interfaces  were
       added  to  glibc  in  version 2.4.  (IN_DONT_FOLLOW, IN_MASK_ADD, and IN_ONLYDIR were only
       added in version 2.5.)

CONFORMING TO
       The inotify API is Linux-specific.

NOTES
       Inotify file descriptors can be monitored using select(2), poll(2), and epoll(7).  When an
       event is available, the file descriptor indicates as readable.

       Since  Linux 2.6.25, signal-driven I/O notification is available for inotify file descrip-
       tors; see the discussion of F_SETFL (for setting the O_ASYNC flag), F_SETOWN, and F_SETSIG
       in  fcntl(2).   The  siginfo_t structure (described in sigaction(2)) that is passed to the
       signal handler has the following fields set: si_fd is set to the inotify  file  descriptor
       number; si_signo is set to the signal number; si_code is set to POLL_IN; and POLLIN is set
       in si_band.

       If successive output inotify events produced on the inotify file descriptor are  identical
       (same wd, mask, cookie, and name) then they are coalesced into a single event.

       The  events  returned  by  reading  from an inotify file descriptor form an ordered queue.
       Thus, for example, it is guaranteed that when renaming  from  one  directory  to  another,
       events will be produced in the correct order on the inotify file descriptor.

       The  FIONREAD  ioctl(2) returns the number of bytes available to read from an inotify file
       descriptor.

       Inotify monitoring of directories is not recursive:  to  monitor  subdirectories  under  a
       directory, additional watches must be created.

BUGS
       In kernels before 2.6.16, the IN_ONESHOT mask flag does not work.

SEE ALSO
       inotify_add_watch(2),  inotify_init(2),  inotify_rm_watch(2), read(2), stat(2), Documenta-
       tion/filesystems/inotify.txt.

COLOPHON
       This page is part of release 3.05 of the Linux man-pages project.  A  description  of  the
       project,   and   information  about  reporting  bugs,  can  be  found  at  http://www.ker-
       nel.org/doc/man-pages/.



Linux                                       2008-05-15                                 INOTIFY(7)

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