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							54 lines
						
					
					
						
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				|                            How Fuse-1.3 Works | |
| 
 | |
| [Written by Terje Oseberg] | |
| 
 | |
| 1. The fuse library. | |
| 
 | |
| When your user mode program calls fuse_main() (lib/helper.c), | |
| fuse_main() parses the arguments passed to your user mode program, | |
| then calls fuse_mount() (lib/mount.c). | |
| 
 | |
| fuse_mount() creates a UNIX domain socket pair, then forks and execs | |
| fusermount (util/fusermount.c) passing it one end of the socket in the | |
| FUSE_COMMFD_ENV environment variable. | |
| 
 | |
| fusermount (util/fusermount.c) makes sure that the fuse module is | |
| loaded. fusermount then open /dev/fuse and send the file handle over a | |
| UNIX domain socket back to fuse_mount(). | |
| 
 | |
| fuse_mount() returns the filehandle for /dev/fuse to fuse_main(). | |
| 
 | |
| fuse_main() calls fuse_new() (lib/fuse.c) which allocates the struct | |
| fuse datastructure that stores and maintains a cached image of the | |
| filesystem data. | |
| 
 | |
| Lastly, fuse_main() calls either fuse_loop() (lib/fuse.c) or | |
| fuse_loop_mt() (lib/fuse_mt.c) which both start to read the filesystem | |
| system calls from the /dev/fuse, call the usermode functions | |
| stored in struct fuse_operations datastructure before calling | |
| fuse_main(). The results of those calls are then written back to the | |
| /dev/fuse file where they can be forwarded back to the system | |
| calls. | |
| 
 | |
| 2. The kernel module. | |
| 
 | |
| The kernel module consists of two parts. First the proc filesystem | |
| component in kernel/dev.c -and second the filesystem system calls | |
| kernel/file.c, kernel/inode.c, and kernel/dir.c | |
| 
 | |
| All the system calls in kernel/file.c, kernel/inode.c, and | |
| kernel/dir.c make calls to either request_send(), | |
| request_send_noreply(), or request_send_nonblock(). Most of the calls | |
| (all but 2) are to request_send(). request_send() adds the request to, | |
| "list of requests" structure (fc->pending), then waits for a response. | |
| request_send_noreply() and request_send_nonblock() are both similar in | |
| function to request_send() except that one is non-blocking, and the | |
| other does not respond with a reply. | |
| 
 | |
| The proc filesystem component in kernel/dev.c responds to file io | |
| requests to the file /dev/fuse. fuse_dev_read() handles the | |
| file reads and returns commands from the "list of requests" structure | |
| to the calling program. fuse_dev_write() handles file writes and takes | |
| the data written and places them into the req->out datastructure where | |
| they can be returned to the system call through the "list of requests" | |
| structure and request_send().
 |