Creates a filesystem node (file, device special file or named pipe) relative to a directory file descriptor.
This system call operates in exactly the same way as sys_mknod, except for the differences described below.
The newly created node will be owned by the effective user ID of the process. If the directory containing the node has the set-group-ID bit set, or if the filesystem is mounted with BSD group semantics, the new node will inherit the group ownership from its parent directory; otherwise it will be owned by the effective group ID of the process.
Arguments
eax |
297 |
ebx |
Directory file descriptor. |
ecx |
Pointer to a null-terminated string that specifies the pathname.
If the pathname is relative, then it is interpreted relative to the directory referred to by the file descriptor ebx (rather than relative to the current working directory of the calling process, as is done by sys_mknod for a relative pathname).
If the pathname is relative and ebx is the special value AT_FDCWD, then pathname is interpreted relative to the current working directory of the calling process.
If the pathname is absolute, then ebx is ignored. |
edx |
Mode. This argument specifies both the permissions to use and the type of node to be created. It should be a combination (using bitwise-or) of one of the file types listed below and the permissions for the new node.
The permissions are modified by the process's umask in the usual way: the permissions of the created node are (ecx & ~umask).
The file type must be one of the following:
S_IFREG |
A normal file (which will be created empty). |
S_IFCHR |
Character special file. |
S_IFBLK |
Block special file. |
S_IFIFO |
FIFO (named pipe). |
S_IFSOCK |
Unix domain socket. |
|
|
esi |
This argument is used only if file type is S_IFCHR or S_IFBLK in which case it specifies the major and minor numbers of the newly created device special file. Otherwise it's ignored. |
Return values
If the system call succeeds the return value is 0.
If the system call fails the return value is one of the following errno values:
-EACCES |
The parent directory does not allow write permission to the process, or one of the directories in the path prefix did not allow search permission |
-EEXIST |
Path pointed by ecx already exists. |
-EFAULT |
Path pointed by ecx points outside your accessible address space. |
-EINVAL |
edx requested creation of something other than a normal file, device special file, FIFO or socket. |
-ELOOP |
Too many symbolic links were encountered in resolving the path pointed by ecx. |
-ENAMETOOLONG |
Path pointed by ecx was too long. |
-ENOENT |
A directory component in the path pointed by ecx does not exist or is a dangling symbolic link. |
-ENOMEM |
Insufficient kernel memory was available. |
-ENOSPC |
The device containing the path pointed by ecx has no room for the new node. |
-ENOTDIR |
A component used as a directory in the path pointed by ecx is not, in fact, a directory.
-or-
Pathname is a relative path and ebx is a file descriptor referring to a file other than a directory. |
-EPERM |
edx requested creation of something other than a regular file, FIFO (named pipe), or Unix domain socket, and the caller is not privileged (does not have the CAP_MKNOD capability); also returned if the filesystem containing the path pointed by ebx does not support the type of node requested. |
-EROFS |
Path pointed by ecx refers to a file on a read-only filesystem. |
-EBADF |
ebx is not a valid file descriptor. |
|
Remarks
n/a
Compatibility
Available since 2.6.16. |