inotify — monitoring filesystem events
The inotify
API
provides a mechanism for monitoring filesystem events.
Inotify can be used to monitor individual files, or to
monitor directories. When a directory is monitored, 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)
creates an inotify instance and returns a file
descriptor referring to the inotify instance. The more
recent inotify_init1(2) is
like inotify_init(2), but
has a flags
argument that provides access to some extra
functionality.
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 inotify_add_watch(2) when the watch is created.
When events occur for monitored files and directories, those events are made available to the application as structured data that can be read from the inotify file descriptor using read(2) (see below).
inotify_rm_watch(2) removes an item from an inotify watch list.
When all file descriptors referring to an inotify instance have been closed (using close(2)), the underlying object and its resources are freed for reuse by the kernel; all associated watches are automatically freed.
With careful programming, an application can use inotify to efficiently monitor and cache the state of a set of filesystem objects. However, robust applications should allow for the fact that bugs in the monitoring logic or races of the kind described below may leave the cache inconsistent with the filesystem state. It is probably wise to do some consistency checking, and rebuild the cache when inconsistencies are detected.
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 structures:
struct inotify_event { int wd
; /* Watch descriptor */uint32_t mask
; /* Mask describing event */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 used only for rename events, and allows the
resulting pair of IN_MOVED_FROM
and IN_MOVED_TO
events to be connected by the
application. For all other event types, cookie
is set to 0.
The name
field
is present only when an event is returned for a file inside
a watched directory; it identifies the filename within to
the watched directory. This filename is null-terminated,
and may include further null bytes ('\0') 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(struct
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. Specifying a buffer of size
sizeof(struct inotify_event) + NAME_MAX + 1
will be sufficient to read at least one event.
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
(+)IN_ATTRIB
(*)Metadata changed—for example, permissions (e.g., chmod(2)), timestamps (e.g., utimensat(2)), extended attributes (setxattr(2)), link count (since Linux 2.6.25; e.g., for the target of link(2) and for unlink(2)), and user/group ID (e.g., chown(2)).
IN_CLOSE_WRITE
(+)File opened for writing was closed.
IN_CLOSE_NOWRITE
(*)File or directory not opened for writing was closed.
IN_CREATE
(+)File/directory created in watched directory (e.g., open(2)
O_CREAT
, mkdir(2), link(2), symlink(2), bind(2) on a UNIX domain socket).IN_DELETE
(+)File/directory deleted from watched directory.
IN_DELETE_SELF
Watched file/directory was itself deleted. (This event also occurs if an object is moved to another filesystem, since mv(1) in effect copies the file to the other filesystem and then deletes it from the original filesystem.) In addition, an
IN_IGNORED
event will subsequently be generated for the watch descriptor.IN_MODIFY
(+)File was modified (e.g., write(2), truncate(2)).
IN_MOVE_SELF
Watched file/directory was itself moved.
IN_MOVED_FROM
(+)Generated for the directory containing the old filename when a file is renamed.
IN_MOVED_TO
(+)Generated for the directory containing the new filename when a file is renamed.
IN_OPEN
(*)File or directory was opened.
When monitoring a directory:
the events marked above with an asterisk (*) can occur both for the directory itself and for objects inside the directory; and
the events marked with a plus sign (+) occur only for objects inside the directory (not for the directory itself).
When events are generated for objects inside a watched
directory, the name
field in the returned inotify_event
structure
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 defined:
IN_MOVE
Equates to IN_MOVED_FROM | IN_MOVED_TO.
IN_CLOSE
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_EXCL_UNLINK
(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). SpecifyingIN_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
If a watch instance already exists for the filesystem object corresponding to
pathname
, add (OR) the events inmask
to the watch mask (instead of replacing the mask).IN_ONESHOT
Monitor the filesystem object corresponding to
pathname
for one event, then remove from watch list.IN_ONLYDIR
(since Linux 2.6.15)Only watch
pathname
if it is a directory. Using this flag provides an application with a race-free way of ensuring that the monitored object 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 filesystem was unmounted). See also BUGS.
IN_ISDIR
Subject of this event is a directory.
IN_Q_OVERFLOW
Event queue overflowed (
wd
is −1 for this event).IN_UNMOUNT
Filesystem containing watched object was unmounted. In addition, an
IN_IGNORED
event will subsequently be generated for the watch descriptor.
Suppose an application is watching the directory
dir
and the file
dir/myfile
for
all events. The examples below show some events that will
be generated for these two objects.
- fd = open("dir/myfile", O_RDWR);
Generates
IN_OPEN
events for bothdir
anddir/myfile
.- read(fd, buf, count);
Generates
IN_ACCESS
events for bothdir
anddir/myfile
.- write(fd, buf, count);
Generates
IN_MODIFY
events for bothdir
anddir/myfile
.- fchmod(fd, mode);
Generates
IN_ATTRIB
events for bothdir
anddir/myfile
.- close(fd);
Generates
IN_CLOSE_WRITE
events for bothdir
anddir/myfile
.
Suppose an application is watching the directories
dir1
and
dir2
, and the
file dir1/myfile
.
The following examples show some events that may be
generated.
- link("dir1/myfile", "dir2/new");
Generates an
IN_ATTRIB
event formyfile
and anIN_CREATE
event fordir2
.- rename("dir1/myfile", "dir2/myfile");
Generates an
IN_MOVED_FROM
event fordir1
, anIN_MOVED_TO
event fordir2
, and anIN_MOVE_SELF
event formyfile
. TheIN_MOVED_FROM
andIN_MOVED_TO
events will have the samecookie
value.
Suppose that dir1/xx
and dir2/yy
are (the only)
links to the same file, and an application is watching
dir1
, dir2
, dir1/xx
, and dir2/yy
. Executing the
following calls in the order given below will generate the
following events:
- unlink("dir2/yy");
Generates an
IN_ATTRIB
event forxx
(because its link count changes) and anIN_DELETE
event fordir2
.- unlink("dir1/xx");
Generates
IN_ATTRIB
,IN_DELETE_SELF
, andIN_IGNORED
events forxx
, and anIN_DELETE
event fordir1
.
Suppose an application is watching the directory
dir
and (the
empty) directory dir/subdir
. The following
examples show some events that may be generated.
- mkdir("dir/new", mode);
Generates an IN_CREATE | IN_ISDIR event for
dir
.- rmdir("dir/subdir");
Generates
IN_DELETE_SELF
andIN_IGNORED
events forsubdir
, and an IN_DELETE | IN_ISDIR event fordir
.
The following interfaces can be used to limit the amount of kernel memory consumed by inotify:
/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 created per real user ID.
/proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_watches
This specifies an upper limit on the number of watches that can be created per real user ID.
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 added in glibc version
2.5.)
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 descriptors; 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 if the older event has not yet been read
(but see BUGS). This reduces the amount of kernel memory
required for the event queue, but also means that an
application can't use inotify to reliably count file
events.
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 set of watch descriptors that is being monitored via
an inotify file descriptor can be viewed via the entry for
the inotify file descriptor in the process's /proc/[pid]/fdinfo
directory. See proc(5) for further
details. The FIONREAD
ioctl(2) returns the number
of bytes available to read from an inotify file
descriptor.
The inotify API provides no information about the user or process that triggered the inotify event. In particular, there is no easy way for a process that is monitoring events via inotify to distinguish events that it triggers itself from those that are triggered by other processes.
Inotify reports only events that a user-space program
triggers through the filesystem API. As a result, it does
not catch remote events that occur on network filesystems.
(Applications must fall back to polling the filesystem to
catch such events.) Furthermore, various pseudo-filesystems
such as /proc
, /sys
, and /dev/pts
are not monitorable with
inotify.
The inotify API does not report file accesses and modifications that may occur because of mmap(2), msync(2), and munmap(2).
The inotify API identifies affected files by filename. However, by the time an application processes an inotify event, the filename may already have been deleted or renamed.
The inotify API identifies events via watch descriptors. It is the application's responsibility to cache a mapping (if one is needed) between watch descriptors and pathnames. Be aware that directory renamings may affect multiple cached pathnames.
Inotify monitoring of directories is not recursive: to monitor subdirectories under a directory, additional watches must be created. This can take a significant amount time for large directory trees.
If monitoring an entire directory subtree, and a new subdirectory is created in that tree or an existing directory is renamed into that tree, be aware that by the time you create a watch for the new subdirectory, new files (and subdirectories) may already exist inside the subdirectory. Therefore, you may want to scan the contents of the subdirectory immediately after adding the watch (and, if desired, recursively add watches for any subdirectories that it contains).
Note that the event queue can overflow. In this case, events are lost. Robust applications should handle the possibility of lost events gracefully. For example, it may be necessary to rebuild part or all of the application cache. (One simple, but possibly expensive, approach is to close the inotify file descriptor, empty the cache, create a new inotify file descriptor, and then re-create watches and cache entries for the objects to be monitored.)
As noted above, the IN_MOVED_FROM
and IN_MOVED_TO
event pair that is generated
by rename(2) can be matched
up via their shared cookie value. However, the task of
matching has some challenges.
These two events are usually consecutive in the event
stream available when reading from the inotify file
descriptor. However, this is not guaranteed. If multiple
processes are triggering events for monitored objects, then
(on rare occasions) an arbitrary number of other events may
appear between the IN_MOVED_FROM
and IN_MOVED_TO
events. Furthermore, it is
not guaranteed that the event pair is atomically inserted
into the queue: there may be a brief interval where the
IN_MOVED_FROM
has appeared,
but the IN_MOVED_TO
has
not.
Matching up the IN_MOVED_FROM
and IN_MOVED_TO
event pair generated by
rename(2) is thus
inherently racy. (Don't forget that if an object is renamed
outside of a monitored directory, there may not even be an
IN_MOVED_TO
event.) Heuristic
approaches (e.g., assume the events are always consecutive)
can be used to ensure a match in most cases, but will
inevitably miss some cases, causing the application to
perceive the IN_MOVED_FROM
and IN_MOVED_TO
events as
being unrelated. If watch descriptors are destroyed and
re-created as a result, then those watch descriptors will
be inconsistent with the watch descriptors in any pending
events. (Re-creating the inotify file descriptor and
rebuilding the cache may be useful to deal with this
scenario.)
Applications should also allow for the possibility that
the IN_MOVED_FROM
event was
the last event that could fit in the buffer returned by the
current call to read(2), and the
accompanying IN_MOVED_TO
event might be fetched only on the next read(2), which should be
done with a (small) timeout to allow for the fact that
insertion of the IN_MOVED_FROM
-IN_MOVED_TO
event pair is not atomic, and
also the possibility that there may not be any IN_MOVED_TO
event.
Before Linux 3.19, fallocate(2) did not create
any inotify events. Since Linux 3.19, calls to fallocate(2) generate
IN_MODIFY
events.
In kernels before 2.6.16, the IN_ONESHOT
mask
flag does not work.
As originally designed and implemented, the IN_ONESHOT
flag did not cause an
IN_IGNORED
event to be
generated when the watch was dropped after one event.
However, as an unintended effect of other changes, since
Linux 2.6.36, an IN_IGNORED
event is generated in this case.
Before kernel 2.6.25, the kernel code that was intended to
coalesce successive identical events (i.e., the two most
recent events could potentially be coalesced if the older had
not yet been read) instead checked if the most recent event
could be coalesced with the oldest
unread event.
When a watch descriptor is removed by calling inotify_rm_watch(2) (or
because a watch file is deleted or the filesystem that
contains it is unmounted), any pending unread events for that
watch descriptor remain available to read. As watch
descriptors are subsequently allocated with inotify_add_watch(2), the
kernel cycles through the range of possible watch descriptors
(0 to INT_MAX
) incrementally.
When allocating a free watch descriptor, no check is made to
see whether that watch descriptor number has any pending
unread events in the inotify queue. Thus, it can happen that
a watch descriptor is reallocated even when pending unread
events exist for a previous incarnation of that watch
descriptor number, with the result that the application might
then read those events and interpret them as belonging to the
file associated with the newly recycled watch descriptor. In
practice, the likelihood of hitting this bug may be extremely
low, since it requires that an application cycle through
INT_MAX
watch descriptors,
release a watch descriptor while leaving unread events for
that watch descriptor in the queue, and then recycle that
watch descriptor. For this reason, and because there have
been no reports of the bug occurring in real-world
applications, as of Linux 3.15, no kernel changes have yet
been made to eliminate this possible bug.
The following program demonstrates the usage of the
inotify API. It marks the directories passed as a
command-line arguments and waits for events of type
IN_OPEN
, IN_CLOSE_NOWRITE
and IN_CLOSE_WRITE
.
The following output was recorded while editing the file
/home/user/temp/foo
and listing
directory /tmp
. Before the file
and the directory were opened, IN_OPEN
events occurred. After the file was
closed, an IN_CLOSE_WRITE
event
occurred. After the directory was closed, an IN_CLOSE_NOWRITE
event occurred. Execution
of the program ended when the user pressed the ENTER key.
$ ./a.out /tmp /home/user/temp Press enter key to terminate. Listening for events. IN_OPEN: /home/user/temp/foo [file] IN_CLOSE_WRITE: /home/user/temp/foo [file] IN_OPEN: /tmp/ [directory] IN_CLOSE_NOWRITE: /tmp/ [directory] Listening for events stopped.
#include <errno.h> #include <poll.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <sys/inotify.h> #include <unistd.h> /* Read all available inotify events from the file descriptor 'fd'. wd is the table of watch descriptors for the directories in argv. argc is the length of wd and argv. argv is the list of watched directories. Entry 0 of wd and argv is unused. */ static void handle_events(int fd, int *wd, int argc, char* argv[]) { /* Some systems cannot read integer variables if they are not properly aligned. On other systems, incorrect alignment may decrease performance. Hence, the buffer used for reading from the inotify file descriptor should have the same alignment as struct inotify_event. */ char buf[4096] __attribute__ ((aligned(__alignof__(struct inotify_event)))); const struct inotify_event *event; int i; ssize_t len; char *ptr; /* Loop while events can be read from inotify file descriptor. */ for (;;) { /* Read some events. */ len = read(fd, buf, sizeof buf); if (len == −1 && errno != EAGAIN) { perror("read"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } /* If the nonblocking read() found no events to read, then it returns −1 with errno set to EAGAIN. In that case, we exit the loop. */ if (len <= 0) break; /* Loop over all events in the buffer */ for (ptr = buf; ptr < buf + len; ptr += sizeof(struct inotify_event) + event−>len) { event = (const struct inotify_event *) ptr; /* Print event type */ if (event−>mask & IN_OPEN) printf("IN_OPEN: "); if (event−>mask & IN_CLOSE_NOWRITE) printf("IN_CLOSE_NOWRITE: "); if (event−>mask & IN_CLOSE_WRITE) printf("IN_CLOSE_WRITE: "); /* Print the name of the watched directory */ for (i = 1; i < argc; ++i) { if (wd[i] == event−>wd) { printf("%s/", argv[i]); break; } } /* Print the name of the file */ if (event−>len) printf("%s", event−>name); /* Print type of filesystem object */ if (event−>mask & IN_ISDIR) printf(" [directory]\n"); else printf(" [file]\n"); } } } int main(int argc, char* argv[]) { char buf; int fd, i, poll_num; int *wd; nfds_t nfds; struct pollfd fds[2]; if (argc < 2) { printf("Usage: %s PATH [PATH ...]\n", argv[0]); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } printf("Press ENTER key to terminate.\n"); /* Create the file descriptor for accessing the inotify API */ fd = inotify_init1(IN_NONBLOCK); if (fd == −1) { perror("inotify_init1"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } /* Allocate memory for watch descriptors */ wd = calloc(argc, sizeof(int)); if (wd == NULL) { perror("calloc"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } /* Mark directories for events − file was opened − file was closed */ for (i = 1; i < argc; i++) { wd[i] = inotify_add_watch(fd, argv[i], IN_OPEN | IN_CLOSE); if (wd[i] == −1) { fprintf(stderr, "Cannot watch '%s'\n", argv[i]); perror("inotify_add_watch"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } } /* Prepare for polling */ nfds = 2; /* Console input */ fds[0].fd = STDIN_FILENO; fds[0].events = POLLIN; /* Inotify input */ fds[1].fd = fd; fds[1].events = POLLIN; /* Wait for events and/or terminal input */ printf("Listening for events.\n"); while (1) { poll_num = poll(fds, nfds, −1); if (poll_num == −1) { if (errno == EINTR) continue; perror("poll"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } if (poll_num > 0) { if (fds[0].revents & POLLIN) { /* Console input is available. Empty stdin and quit */ while (read(STDIN_FILENO, &buf, 1) > 0 && buf != '\n') continue; break; } if (fds[1].revents & POLLIN) { /* Inotify events are available */ handle_events(fd, wd, argc, argv); } } } printf("Listening for events stopped.\n"); /* Close inotify file descriptor */ close(fd); free(wd); exit(EXIT_SUCCESS); }
inotifywait(1), inotifywatch(1), inotify_add_watch(2), inotify_init(2), inotify_init1(2), inotify_rm_watch(2), read(2), stat(2), fanotify(7)
Documentation/filesystems/inotify.txt
in
the Linux kernel source tree
This page is part of release 4.07 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs,
and the latest version of this page, can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/man−pages/.
t Copyright (C) 2006, 2014 Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpagesgmail.com> Copyright (C) 2014 Heinrich Schuchardt <xypron.glpkgmx.de> %%%LICENSE_START(VERBATIM) Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Since the Linux kernel and libraries are constantly changing, this manual page may be incorrect or out-of-date. The author(s) assume no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein. The author(s) may not have taken the same level of care in the production of this manual, which is licensed free of charge, as they might when working professionally. Formatted or processed versions of this manual, if unaccompanied by the source, must acknowledge the copyright and authors of this work. %%%LICENSE_END |