1.\" $NetBSD: intro.2,v 1.50 2008/11/29 06:00:45 jnemeth Exp $ 2.\" 3.\" Copyright (c) 1980, 1983, 1986, 1991, 1993 4.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 5.\" 6.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 7.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 8.\" are met: 9.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 10.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 11.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 12.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 13.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 14.\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 15.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 16.\" without specific prior written permission. 17.\" 18.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 19.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 20.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 21.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 22.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 23.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 24.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 25.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 26.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 27.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 28.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 29.\" 30.\" @(#)intro.2 8.5 (Berkeley) 2/27/95 31.\" 32.Dd November 28, 2008 33.Dt INTRO 2 34.Os 35.Sh NAME 36.Nm intro , 37.Nm errno 38.Nd introduction to system calls and error numbers 39.Sh SYNOPSIS 40.In errno.h 41.Sh DESCRIPTION 42This section provides an overview of the system calls, 43their error returns, and other common definitions and concepts. 44.\".Pp 45.\".Sy System call restart 46.\".Pp 47.\"<more later...> 48.Sh DIAGNOSTICS 49Nearly all of the system calls provide an error number in the external 50variable 51.Va errno . 52.Va errno 53is implemented as a macro which expands to a modifiable lvalue of type 54.Fa int . 55.Pp 56When a system call detects an error, 57it returns an integer value 58indicating failure (usually \-1) 59and sets the variable 60.Va errno 61accordingly. 62(This allows interpretation of the failure on receiving 63a \-1 and to take action accordingly.) 64Successful calls never set 65.Va errno ; 66once set, it remains until another error occurs. 67It should only be examined after an error. 68Note that a number of system calls overload the meanings of these 69error numbers, and that the meanings must be interpreted according 70to the type and circumstances of the call. 71.Pp 72The manual page for each system call will list some of the common 73errno codes that system call can return, but that should not be 74considered an exhaustive list, i.e. 75a properly written program should be able to gracefully recover from 76any error that a system call might return. 77Documenting all the error codes that a system call can return in 78a more specification-like manner would take more resources than 79this project has available. 80.Pp 81The following is a complete list of the errors and their 82names as given in 83.Aq Pa errno.h . 84.Bl -hang -width Ds 85.It Er 0 Em "Error 0" . 86Not used. 87.It Er 1 EPERM Em "Operation not permitted" . 88An attempt was made to perform an operation limited to processes 89with appropriate privileges or to the owner of a file or other 90resources. 91.It Er 2 ENOENT Em "No such file or directory" . 92A component of a specified pathname did not exist, or the 93pathname was an empty string. 94.It Er 3 ESRCH Em "No such process" . 95No process could be found corresponding to that specified by the given 96process ID. 97.It Er 4 EINTR Em "Interrupted function call" . 98An asynchronous signal (such as 99.Dv SIGINT 100or 101.Dv SIGQUIT ) 102was caught by the process during the execution of an interruptible 103function. 104If the signal handler performs a normal return, the 105interrupted function call will seem to have returned the error condition. 106.It Er 5 EIO Em "Input/output error" . 107Some physical input or output error occurred. 108This error will not be reported until a subsequent operation on the same file 109descriptor and may be lost (over written) by any subsequent errors. 110.It Er 6 ENXIO Em "Device not configured" . 111Input or output on a special file referred to a device that did not 112exist, or 113made a request beyond the limits of the device. 114This error may also occur when, for example, 115a tape drive is not online or no disk pack is 116loaded on a drive. 117.It Er 7 E2BIG Em "Arg list too long" . 118The number of bytes used for the argument and environment 119list of the new process exceeded the current limit of 120.if t 2\u\s-218\s+2\d 121.if n 2**18 122bytes 123.Pf ( Dv ARG_MAX 124in 125.Aq Pa sys/syslimits.h ) . 126.It Er 8 ENOEXEC Em "Exec format error" . 127A request was made to execute a file 128that, although it has the appropriate permissions, 129was not in the format required for an 130executable file. 131.It Er 9 EBADF Em "Bad file descriptor" . 132A file descriptor argument was out of range, referred to no open file, 133had been revoked by 134.Xr revoke 2 , 135or a 136.Xr read 2 137(or 138.Xr write 2 ) 139request was made to a file that was 140only open for writing (or reading). 141.It Er 10 ECHILD Em "\&No child processes" . 142A 143.Xr wait 2 144or 145.Xr waitpid 2 146function was executed by a process that had no existing or unwaited-for 147child processes. 148.It Er 11 EDEADLK Em "Resource deadlock avoided" . 149An attempt was made to lock a system resource that 150would have resulted in a deadlock situation. 151.It Er 12 ENOMEM Em "Cannot allocate memory" . 152The new process image required more memory than was allowed by the hardware 153or by system-imposed memory management constraints. 154A lack of swap space is normally temporary; however, 155a lack of core is not. 156Soft limits may be increased to their corresponding hard limits. 157.It Er 13 EACCES Em "Permission denied" . 158An attempt was made to access a file in a way forbidden 159by its file access permissions. 160.It Er 14 EFAULT Em "Bad address" . 161The system detected an invalid address in attempting to 162use an argument of a call. 163The reliable detection of this error cannot be guaranteed and when not detected 164may result in the generation of a signal, indicating an address violation, 165which is sent to the process. 166.It Er 15 ENOTBLK Em "Block device required" . 167A block device operation was attempted on a non-block device or file. 168.It Er 16 EBUSY Em "Resource busy" . 169An attempt to use a system resource which was in use at the time 170in a manner which would have conflicted with the request. 171.It Er 17 EEXIST Em "File exists" . 172An existing file was mentioned in an inappropriate context, 173for instance, as the new link name in a 174.Xr link 2 175function. 176.It Er 18 EXDEV Em "Improper link" . 177A hard link to a file on another file system 178was attempted. 179.It Er 19 ENODEV Em "Operation not supported by device" . 180An attempt was made to apply an inappropriate 181function to a device, 182for example, 183trying to read a write-only device such as a printer. 184.It Er 20 ENOTDIR Em "Not a directory" . 185A component of the specified pathname existed, but it was 186not a directory, when a directory was expected. 187.It Er 21 EISDIR Em "Is a directory" . 188An attempt was made to open a directory with write mode specified. 189.It Er 22 EINVAL Em "Invalid argument" . 190Some invalid argument was supplied. 191(For example, specifying an undefined signal to a 192.Xr signal 3 193or 194.Xr kill 2 195function). 196.It Er 23 ENFILE Em "Too many open files in system" . 197Maximum number of file descriptors allowable on the system 198has been reached and a requests for an open cannot be satisfied 199until at least one has been closed. 200.It Er 24 EMFILE Em "Too many open files" . 201\*[Lt]As released, the limit on the number of 202open files per process is 64.\*[Gt] 203The 204.Xr getrlimit 2 205call with the 206.Ar RLIMIT_NOFILE 207resource will obtain the current limit. 208.It Er 25 ENOTTY Em "Inappropriate ioctl for device" . 209A control function (see 210.Xr ioctl 2 ) 211was attempted for a file or 212special device for which the operation was inappropriate. 213.It Er 26 ETXTBSY Em "Text file busy" . 214The new process was a pure procedure (shared text) file 215which was open for writing by another process, or 216while the pure procedure file was being executed an 217.Xr open 2 218call requested write access. 219.It Er 27 EFBIG Em "File too large" . 220The size of a file exceeded the maximum. 221(The system-wide maximum file size is 222.if t 2\u\s-263\s+2\d 223.if n 2**63 224bytes. 225Each file system may impose a lower limit for files contained within it). 226.It Er 28 ENOSPC Em "Device out of space" . 227A 228.Xr write 2 229to an ordinary file, the creation of a 230directory or symbolic link, or the creation of a directory 231entry failed because no more disk blocks were available 232on the file system, or the allocation of an inode for a newly 233created file failed because no more inodes were available 234on the file system. 235.It Er 29 ESPIPE Em "Illegal seek" . 236An 237.Xr lseek 2 238function was issued on a socket, pipe or 239.Tn FIFO . 240.It Er 30 EROFS Em "Read-only file system" . 241An attempt was made to modify a file or directory 242was made 243on a file system that was read-only at the time. 244.It Er 31 EMLINK Em "Too many links" . 245The number of hard links to a single file has exceeded the maximum. 246(The system-wide maximum number of hard links is 32767. 247Each file system may impose a lower limit for files contained within it). 248.It Er 32 EPIPE Em "Broken pipe" . 249A write on a pipe, socket or 250.Tn FIFO 251for which there is no process 252to read the data. 253.It Er 33 EDOM Em "Numerical argument out of domain" . 254A numerical input argument was outside the defined domain of the mathematical 255function. 256.It Er 34 ERANGE Em "Result too large or too small" . 257The result of the function is too large or too small to be represented 258in the available space. 259.It Er 35 EAGAIN Em "Resource temporarily unavailable" . 260This is a temporary condition and later calls to the 261same routine may complete normally. 262.It Er 36 EINPROGRESS Em "Operation now in progress" . 263An operation that takes a long time to complete (such as 264a 265.Xr connect 2 ) 266was attempted on a non-blocking object (see 267.Xr fcntl 2 ) . 268.It Er 37 EALREADY Em "Operation already in progress" . 269An operation was attempted on a non-blocking object that already 270had an operation in progress. 271.It Er 38 ENOTSOCK Em "Socket operation on non-socket" . 272Self-explanatory. 273.It Er 39 EDESTADDRREQ Em "Destination address required" . 274A required address was omitted from an operation on a socket. 275.It Er 40 EMSGSIZE Em "Message too long" . 276A message sent on a socket was larger than the internal message buffer 277or some other network limit. 278.It Er 41 EPROTOTYPE Em "Protocol wrong type for socket" . 279A protocol was specified that does not support the semantics of the 280socket type requested. 281For example, you cannot use the 282.Tn ARPA 283Internet 284.Tn UDP 285protocol with type 286.Dv SOCK_STREAM . 287.It Er 42 ENOPROTOOPT Em "Protocol option not available" . 288A bad option or level was specified in a 289.Xr getsockopt 2 290or 291.Xr setsockopt 2 292call. 293.It Er 43 EPROTONOSUPPORT Em "Protocol not supported" . 294The protocol has not been configured into the 295system or no implementation for it exists. 296.It Er 44 ESOCKTNOSUPPORT Em "Socket type not supported" . 297The support for the socket type has not been configured into the 298system or no implementation for it exists. 299.It Er 45 EOPNOTSUPP Em "Operation not supported" . 300The attempted operation is not supported for the type of object referenced. 301Usually this occurs when a file descriptor refers to a file or socket 302that cannot support this operation, 303for example, trying to 304.Em accept 305a connection on a datagram socket. 306.It Er 46 EPFNOSUPPORT Em "Protocol family not supported" . 307The protocol family has not been configured into the 308system or no implementation for it exists. 309.It Er 47 EAFNOSUPPORT Em "Address family not supported by protocol family" . 310An address incompatible with the requested protocol was used. 311For example, you shouldn't necessarily expect to be able to use 312.Tn NS 313addresses with 314.Tn ARPA 315Internet protocols. 316.It Er 48 EADDRINUSE Em "Address already in use" . 317Only one usage of each address is normally permitted. 318.It Er 49 EADDRNOTAVAIL Em "Cannot assign requested address" . 319Normally results from an attempt to create a socket with an 320address not on this machine. 321.It Er 50 ENETDOWN Em "Network is down" . 322A socket operation encountered a dead network. 323.It Er 51 ENETUNREACH Em "Network is unreachable" . 324A socket operation was attempted to an unreachable network. 325.It Er 52 ENETRESET Em "Network dropped connection on reset" . 326The host you were connected to crashed and rebooted. 327.It Er 53 ECONNABORTED Em "Software caused connection abort" . 328A connection abort was caused internal to your host machine. 329.It Er 54 ECONNRESET Em "Connection reset by peer" . 330A connection was forcibly closed by a peer. 331This normally results from a loss of the connection on the remote 332socket due to a timeout or a reboot. 333.It Er 55 ENOBUFS Em "\&No buffer space available" . 334An operation on a socket or pipe was not performed because 335the system lacked sufficient buffer space or because a queue was full. 336.It Er 56 EISCONN Em "Socket is already connected" . 337A 338.Xr connect 2 339request was made on an already connected socket; or, 340a 341.Xr sendto 2 342or 343.Xr sendmsg 2 344request on a connected socket specified a destination 345when already connected. 346.It Er 57 ENOTCONN Em "Socket is not connected" . 347An request to send or receive data was disallowed because 348the socket was not connected and (when sending on a datagram socket) 349no address was supplied. 350.It Er 58 ESHUTDOWN Em "Cannot send after socket shutdown" . 351A request to send data was disallowed because the socket 352had already been shut down with a previous 353.Xr shutdown 2 354call. 355.It Er 60 ETIMEDOUT Em "Operation timed out" . 356A 357.Xr connect 2 358or 359.Xr send 2 360request failed because the connected party did not 361properly respond after a period of time. 362(The timeout period is dependent on the communication protocol). 363.It Er 61 ECONNREFUSED Em "Connection refused" . 364No connection could be made because the target machine actively 365refused it. 366This usually results from trying to connect 367to a service that is inactive on the foreign host. 368.It Er 62 ELOOP Em "Too many levels of symbolic links" . 369A path name lookup involved more than 32 370.Pq Dv MAXSYMLINKS 371symbolic links. 372.It Er 63 ENAMETOOLONG Em "File name too long" . 373A component of a path name exceeded 255 374.Pq Dv MAXNAMELEN 375characters, or an entire 376path name exceeded 1023 377.Pq Dv MAXPATHLEN Ns \-1 378characters. 379.It Er 64 EHOSTDOWN Em "Host is down" . 380A socket operation failed because the destination host was down. 381.It Er 65 EHOSTUNREACH Em "No route to host" . 382A socket operation was attempted to an unreachable host. 383.It Er 66 ENOTEMPTY Em "Directory not empty" . 384A directory with entries other than 385.Ql \&. 386and 387.Ql \&.. 388was supplied to a remove directory or rename call. 389.It Er 67 EPROCLIM Em "Too many processes" . 390.It Er 68 EUSERS Em "Too many users" . 391The quota system ran out of table entries. 392.It Er 69 EDQUOT Em "Disc quota exceeded" . 393A 394.Xr write 2 395to an ordinary file, the creation of a 396directory or symbolic link, or the creation of a directory 397entry failed because the user's quota of disk blocks was 398exhausted, or the allocation of an inode for a newly 399created file failed because the user's quota of inodes 400was exhausted. 401.It Er 70 ESTALE Em "Stale NFS file handle" . 402An attempt was made to access an open file (on an 403.Tn NFS 404filesystem) 405which is now unavailable as referenced by the file descriptor. 406This may indicate the file was deleted on the 407.Tn NFS 408server or some other catastrophic event occurred. 409.It Er 72 EBADRPC Em "RPC struct is bad" . 410Exchange of 411.Tn RPC 412information was unsuccessful. 413.It Er 73 ERPCMISMATCH Em "RPC version wrong" . 414The version of 415.Tn RPC 416on the remote peer is not compatible with 417the local version. 418.It Er 74 EPROGUNAVAIL Em "RPC prog. not avail" . 419The requested program is not registered on the remote host. 420.It Er 75 EPROGMISMATCH Em "Program version wrong" . 421The requested version of the program is not available 422on the remote host 423.Pq Tn RPC . 424.It Er 76 EPROCUNAVAIL Em "Bad procedure for program" . 425An 426.Tn RPC 427call was attempted for a procedure which doesn't exist 428in the remote program. 429.It Er 77 ENOLCK Em "No locks available" . 430A system-imposed limit on the number of simultaneous file 431locks was reached. 432.It Er 78 ENOSYS Em "Function not implemented" . 433Attempted a system call that is not available on this 434system. 435.It Er 79 EFTYPE Em "Inappropriate file type or format" . 436Attempted a file operation on a file of a type for which it was invalid. 437.It Er 80 EAUTH Em "Authentication error" . 438Attempted to use an invalid authentication ticket to mount an 439.Tn NFS 440filesystem. 441.It Er 81 ENEEDAUTH Em "Need authenticator" . 442An authentication ticket must be obtained before the given 443.Tn NFS 444filesystem may be mounted. 445.It Er 82 EIDRM Em "Identifier removed" . 446An IPC identifier was removed while the current process was waiting on it. 447.It Er 83 ENOMSG Em "No message of the desired type" . 448An IPC message queue does not contain a message of the desired type, 449or a message catalog does not contain the requested message. 450.It Er 84 EOVERFLOW Em "Value too large to be stored in data type" . 451A numerical result of the function was too large to be stored in the 452caller-provided space. 453.It Er 85 EILSEQ Em "Illegal byte sequence" . 454A wide character/multibyte character encoding error occurred. 455.It Er 86 ENOTSUP Em "Not supported" . 456An attempt was made to set or change a parameter to an unsupported 457value. 458.It Er 87 ECANCELED Em "Operation canceled" . 459The requested operation was canceled. 460.It Er 88 EBADMSG Em "Bad or corrupt message" . 461A message in the specified message catalog did not satisfy implementation 462defined criteria, or a STREAMS operation encountered an invalid message or 463a file descriptor at the STREAM head. 464.It Er 89 ENODATA Em "No message available" . 465No message is available on the STREAM head read queue 466.It Er 90 ENOSR Em "No STREAM resources" . 467Buffers could not be allocated due to insufficient STREAMs memory resources. 468.It Er 91 ENOSTR Em "Not a STREAM" . 469A STREAM is not associated with the specified file descriptor. 470.It Er 92 ETIME Em "STREAM ioctl timeout" . 471The timer set for a STREAMS 472.Xr ioctl 2 473operation has expired. 474.It Er 93 ENOATTR Em "Attribute not found" . 475The specified extended attribute does not exist. 476.It Er 94 EMULTIHOP Em "Multihop attempted" . 477Components of path require hopping to multiple remote machines and the 478file system does not allow it. 479It occurs when users try to access remote resources which are not directly 480accessible. 481.It Er 95 ENOLINK Em "Link has been severed" . 482Occurs when the link (virtual circuit) connecting to a remote machine is gone. 483.It Er 96 EPROTO Em "Protocol error" . 484Some protocol error occurred. 485This error is device-specific, but is generally not related to a hardware 486failure. 487.El 488.Sh DEFINITIONS 489.Bl -tag -width Ds 490.It Process ID 491Each active process in the system is uniquely identified by a non-negative 492integer called a process ID. 493The range of this ID is from 0 to 30000. 494.It Parent process ID 495A new process is created by a currently active process; (see 496.Xr fork 2 ) . 497The parent process ID of a process is initially the process ID of its creator. 498If the creating process exits, 499the parent process ID of each child is set to the ID of a system process, 500.Xr init 8 . 501.It Process Group 502Each active process is a member of a process group that is identified by 503a non-negative integer called the process group ID. 504This is the process ID of the group leader. 505This grouping permits the signaling of related processes (see 506.Xr termios 4 ) 507and the job control mechanisms of 508.Xr csh 1 . 509.It Session 510A session is a set of one or more process groups. 511A session is created by a successful call to 512.Xr setsid 2 , 513which causes the caller to become the only member of the only process 514group in the new session. 515.It Session leader 516A process that has created a new session by a successful call to 517.Xr setsid 2 , 518is known as a session leader. 519Only a session leader may acquire a terminal as its controlling terminal (see 520.Xr termios 4 ) . 521.It Controlling process 522A session leader with a controlling terminal is a controlling process. 523.It Controlling terminal 524A terminal that is associated with a session is known as the controlling 525terminal for that session and its members. 526.It "Terminal Process Group ID" 527A terminal may be acquired by a session leader as its controlling terminal. 528Once a terminal is associated with a session, any of the process groups 529within the session may be placed into the foreground by setting 530the terminal process group ID to the ID of the process group. 531This facility is used 532to arbitrate between multiple jobs contending for the same terminal. 533(See 534.Xr csh 1 535and 536.Xr tty 4 537for more information on job control.) 538.It "Orphaned Process Group" 539A process group is considered to be 540.Em orphaned 541if it is not under the control of a job control shell. 542More precisely, a process group is orphaned 543when none of its members has a parent process that is in the same session 544as the group, 545but is in a different process group. 546Note that when a process exits, the parent process for its children 547is changed to be 548.Xr init 8 , 549which is in a separate session. 550Not all members of an orphaned process group are necessarily orphaned 551processes (those whose creating process has exited). 552The process group of a session leader is orphaned by definition. 553.It "Real User ID and Real Group ID" 554Each user on the system is identified by a positive integer 555termed the real user ID. 556.Pp 557Each user is also a member of one or more groups. 558One of these groups is distinguished from others and 559used in implementing accounting facilities. 560The positive integer corresponding to this distinguished group is 561termed the real group ID. 562.Pp 563All processes have a real user ID and real group ID. 564These are initialized from the equivalent attributes 565of the process that created it. 566.It "Effective User Id, Effective Group Id, and Group Access List" 567Access to system resources is governed by two values: 568the effective user ID, and the group access list. 569The first member of the group access list is also known as the 570effective group ID. 571(In POSIX.1, the group access list is known as the set of supplementary 572group IDs, and it is unspecified whether the effective group ID is 573a member of the list.) 574.Pp 575The effective user ID and effective group ID are initially the 576process's real user ID and real group ID respectively. 577Either may be modified through execution of a set-user-ID or 578set-group-ID file (possibly by one of its ancestors) (see 579.Xr execve 2 ) . 580By convention, the effective group ID (the first member of the group access 581list) is duplicated, so that the execution of a set-group-ID program 582does not result in the loss of the original (real) group ID. 583.Pp 584The group access list is a set of group IDs 585used only in determining resource accessibility. 586Access checks are performed as described below in 587.Qq File Access Permissions . 588.It "Saved Set User ID and Saved Set Group ID" 589When a process executes a new file, the effective user ID is set 590to the owner of the file if the file is set-user-ID, and the effective 591group ID (first element of the group access list) is set to the group 592of the file if the file is set-group-ID. 593The effective user ID of the process is then recorded as the saved set-user-ID, 594and the effective group ID of the process is recorded as the saved set-group-ID. 595These values may be used to regain those values as the effective user 596or group ID after reverting to the real ID (see 597.Xr setuid 2 ) . 598(In POSIX.1, the saved set-user-ID and saved set-group-ID are optional, 599and are used in setuid and setgid, but this does not work as desired 600for the super-user.) 601.It Super-user 602A process is recognized as a 603.Em super-user 604process and is granted special privileges if its effective user ID is 0. 605.It Special Processes 606The processes with process IDs of 0 and 1 are special. 607Process 0 is the scheduler. 608Process 1 is the initialization process 609.Xr init 8 , 610and is the ancestor (parent) of every other process in the system. 611It is used to control the process structure. 612The kernel will allocate other kernel threads to handle certain 613periodic tasks or device related tasks, such as: 614.Bl -tag -width pagedaemon 615.It Sy acctwatch 616System accounting disk watcher, see 617.Xr acct 2 , 618.Xr acct 5 . 619.It Sy aiodoned 620Asynchronous I/O done handler, see 621.Xr uvm 9 . 622.It Sy atabusX 623ATA bus handler, see 624.Xr ata 4 . 625.It Sy cardslotX 626CardBus slot watcher thread, see 627.Xr cardslot 4 . 628.It Sy cryptoret 629The software crypto daemon. 630.It Sy fssbsX 631File system snapshot thread, see 632.Xr fss 4 . 633.It Sy ioflush 634The in-kernel periodic flush the buffer cache to disk task, 635which replaces the old 636.Sy update 637program. 638.It Sy nfsio , nfskqpoll 639NFS handing daemons. 640.It Sy lfs_writer 641Log filesystem writer. 642.It Sy pagedaemon 643The page daemon. 644.It Sy raidX , raidioX , raid_parity , raid_recon , raid_reconip , raid_copyback 645Raid framework related threads, see 646.Xr raid 4 . 647.It Sy scsibusX 648SCSI bus handler, see 649.Xr scsi 4 . 650.It Sy smbiodX , smbkq 651SMBFS handling daemon, see 652.Xr netsmb 4 . 653.It Sy swdmover 654The software data mover I/O thread, see 655.Xr dmoverio 4 . 656.It Sy sysmon 657The systems monitoring framework daemon. 658.It Sy usbX , usbtask 659USB bus handler, see 660.Xr usb 4 . 661.El 662.Pp 663There are more machine-dependent kernel threads allocated by 664different drivers. 665See the specific driver manual pages for more information. 666.It Descriptor 667An integer assigned by the system when a file is referenced 668by 669.Xr open 2 670or 671.Xr dup 2 , 672or when a socket is created by 673.Xr pipe 2 , 674.Xr socket 2 , 675or 676.Xr socketpair 2 , 677which uniquely identifies an access path to that file or socket from 678a given process or any of its children. 679.It File Name 680Names consisting of up to 255 681.Pq Dv MAXNAMELEN 682characters may be used to name 683an ordinary file, special file, or directory. 684.Pp 685These characters may be selected from the set of all 686.Tn ASCII 687character 688excluding 0 (NUL) and the 689.Tn ASCII 690code for 691.Ql \&/ 692(slash). 693(The parity bit, bit 7, must be 0). 694.Pp 695Note that it is generally unwise to use 696.Ql \&* , 697.Ql \&? , 698.Ql \&[ 699or 700.Ql \&] 701as part of 702file names because of the special meaning attached to these characters 703by the shell. 704.It Pathname 705A path name is a 706.Tn NUL Ns -terminated 707character string starting with an 708optional slash 709.Ql \&/ , 710followed by zero or more directory names separated 711by slashes, optionally followed by a file name. 712The total length of a path name must be less than 1024 713.Pq Dv MAXPATHLEN 714characters. 715.Pp 716If a path name begins with a slash, the path search begins at the 717.Em root 718directory. 719Otherwise, the search begins from the current working directory. 720A slash by itself names the root directory. 721An empty string is not a valid pathname. 722.It Directory 723A directory is a special type of file that contains entries 724that are references to other files. 725Directory entries are called links. 726By convention, a directory contains at least two links, 727.Ql \&. 728and 729.Ql \&.. , 730referred to as 731.Em dot 732and 733.Em dot-dot 734respectively. 735Dot refers to the directory itself and dot-dot refers to its parent directory. 736.It "Root Directory and Current Working Directory" 737Each process has associated with it a concept of a root directory 738and a current working directory for the purpose of resolving path 739name searches. 740A process's root directory need not be the root 741directory of the root file system. 742.It File Access Permissions 743Every file in the file system has a set of access permissions. 744These permissions are used in determining whether a process 745may perform a requested operation on the file (such as opening 746a file for writing). 747Access permissions are established at the time a file is created. 748They may be changed at some later time through the 749.Xr chmod 2 750call. 751.Pp 752File access is broken down according to whether a file may be: read, 753written, or executed. 754Directory files use the execute permission to control if the 755directory may be searched. 756.Pp 757File access permissions are interpreted by the system as 758they apply to three different classes of users: the owner 759of the file, those users in the file's group, anyone else. 760Every file has an independent set of access permissions for 761each of these classes. 762When an access check is made, the system decides if permission should be 763granted by checking the access information applicable to the caller. 764.Pp 765Read, write, and execute/search permissions on 766a file are granted to a process if: 767.Pp 768The process's effective user ID is that of the super-user. 769(Note: even the super-user cannot execute a non-executable file). 770.Pp 771The process's effective user ID matches the user ID of the owner 772of the file and the owner permissions allow the access. 773.Pp 774The process's effective user ID does not match the user ID of the 775owner of the file, and either the process's effective 776group ID matches the group ID 777of the file, or the group ID of the file is in 778the process's group access list, 779and the group permissions allow the access. 780.Pp 781Neither the effective user ID nor effective group ID 782and group access list of the process 783match the corresponding user ID and group ID of the file, 784but the permissions for ``other users'' allow access. 785.Pp 786Otherwise, permission is denied. 787.It Sockets and Address Families 788A socket is an endpoint for communication between processes. 789Each socket has queues for sending and receiving data. 790.Pp 791Sockets are typed according to their communications properties. 792These properties include whether messages sent and received 793at a socket require the name of the partner, whether communication 794is reliable, the format used in naming message recipients, etc. 795.Pp 796Each instance of the system supports some 797collection of socket types; consult 798.Xr socket 2 799for more information about the types available and 800their properties. 801.Pp 802Each instance of the system supports some number of sets of 803communications protocols. 804Each protocol set supports addresses of a certain format. 805An Address Family is the set of addresses for a specific group of protocols. 806Each socket has an address 807chosen from the address family in which the socket was created. 808.El 809.Sh SEE ALSO 810.Xr intro 3 , 811.Xr perror 3 812.Sh HISTORY 813An 814.Nm intro 815manual page appeared in 816.At v6 . 817