Windows PowerShell command on Get-command resetmnttab
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Manual Pages for UNIX Operating System command usage for man resetmnttab

Standard C Library Functions getmntent(3C)

NAME

getmntent, getmntany, getextmntent, hasmntopt, putmntent,

resetmnttab - get mounted device information

SYNOPSIS

#include

#include

int getmntent(FILE *fp, struct mnttab *mp); int getmntany(FILE *fp, struct mnttab *mp, struct mnttab *mpref); int getextmntent(FILE *fp, struct extmnttab *mp, int len); char *hasmntopt(struct mnttab *mnt, char *opt); int putmntent(FILE *iop, struct mnttab *mp);

void resetmnttab(FILE *fp);

DESCRIPTION

getmntent() and getmntany() The getmntent() and getmntany() functions each fill in the

structure pointed to by mp with the broken-out fields of a

line in the mnttab file. Each line read from the file con-

tains a mnttab structure, which is defined in the header. The structure contains the following

members, which correspond to the broken-out fields from a

line in /etc/mnttab (see mnttab(4)).

char *mnt_special; /* name of mounted resource */

char *mnt_mountp; /* mount point */

char *mnt_fstype; /* type of file system mounted */

char *mnt_mntopts; /* options for this mount */

char *mnt_time; /* time file system mounted */

Fields with no actual content in /etc/mnttab are represented

in the file as "-". To clearly distinguish empty fields,

getmntent() set the corresponding field in mp to NULL. Each getmntent() call causes a new line to be read from the mnttab file. Successive calls can be used to search the entire list. The getmntany() function searches the file

SunOS 5.11 Last change: 22 Mar 2004 1

Standard C Library Functions getmntent(3C) referenced by fp until a match is found between a line in

the file and mpref. A match occurs if all non-null entries

in mpref match the corresponding fields in the file. These functions do not open, close, or rewind the file. getextmntent() The getextmntent() function is an extended version of the

getmntent() function that returns, in addition to the infor-

mation that getmntent() returns, the major and minor number of the mounted resource to which the line in mnttab corresponds. The getextmntent() function also fills in the extmntent structure defined in the header. For getextmntent() to function properly, it must be notified when the mnttab file has been reopened or rewound since a

previous getextmntent() call. This notification is accom-

plished by calling resetmnttab(). Otherwise, it behaves

exactly as getmntent() described above The data pointed to by the mnttab structure members are stored in a static area and must be copied to be saved between successive calls. hasmntopt()

The hasmntopt() function scans the mnt_mntopts member of the

mnttab structure mnt for a substring that matches opt. It returns the address of the substring if a match is found; otherwise it returns 0. Substrings are delimited by commas

and the end of the mnt_mntopts string.

putmntent() The putmntent() function is obsolete and no longer has any effect. Entries appear in mnttab as a side effect of a

mount(2) call. The function name is still defined for tran-

sition purposes.

resetmnttab()

The resetmnttab() function notifies getextmntent() to reload

from the kernel the device information that corresponds to the new snapshot of the mnttab information (see mnttab(4)). Subsequent getextmntent() calls then return correct

extmnttab information. This function should be called when-

ever the mnttab file is either rewound or closed and reo-

pened before any calls are made to getextmntent().

RETURN VALUES

getmntent() and getmntany() If the next entry is successfully read by getmntent() or a match is found with getmntany(), 0 is returned. If an EOF

is encountered on reading, these functions return -1. If an

error is encountered, a value greater than 0 is returned. The following error values are defined in :

SunOS 5.11 Last change: 22 Mar 2004 2

Standard C Library Functions getmntent(3C)

MNT_TOOLONG A line in the file exceeded the internal

buffer size of MNT_LINE_MAX.

MNT_TOOMANY A line in the file contains too many fields.

MNT_TOOFEW A line in the file contains too few fields.

hasmntopt() Upon successful completion, hasmntopt() returns the address of the substring if a match is found. Otherwise, it returns 0. putmntent()

The putmntent() is obsolete and always returns -1.

ATTRIBUTES

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attri-

butes:

____________________________________________________________

| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

| MT-Level | Safe |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

SEE ALSO

mount(2), mnttab(4), attributes(5)

SunOS 5.11 Last change: 22 Mar 2004 3




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