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   sys_stat.h.0p    ( 10 )

данные, возвращаемые функцией stat (data returned by the stat() function)

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Обоснование (Rationale)

A conforming C-language application must include <sys/stat.h> for functions that have arguments or return values of type mode_t, so that symbolic values for that type can be used. An alternative would be to require that these constants are also defined by including <sys/types.h>.

The S_ISUID and S_ISGID bits may be cleared on any write, not just on open(), as some historical implementations do.

System calls that update the time entry fields in the stat structure must be documented by the implementors. POSIX- conforming systems should not update the time entry fields for functions listed in the System Interfaces volume of POSIX.1‐2017 unless the standard requires that they do, except in the case of documented extensions to the standard.

Upon assignment, file timestamps are immediately converted to the resolution of the file system by truncation (i.e., the recorded time can be older than the actual time). For example, if the file system resolution is 1 microsecond, then a conforming stat() must always return an st_mtim.tv_nsec that is a multiple of 1000. Some older implementations returned higher-resolution timestamps while the inode information was cached, and then spontaneously truncated the tv_nsec fields when they were stored to and retrieved from disk, but this behavior does not conform.

Note that st_dev must be unique within a Local Area Network (LAN) in a ``system'' made up of multiple computers' file systems connected by a LAN.

Networked implementations of a POSIX-conforming system must guarantee that all files visible within the file tree (including parts of the tree that may be remotely mounted from other machines on the network) on each individual processor are uniquely identified by the combination of the st_ino and st_dev fields.

The unit for the st_blocks member of the stat structure is not defined within POSIX.1‐2008. In some implementations it is 512 bytes. It may differ on a file system basis. There is no correlation between values of the st_blocks and st_blksize, and the f_bsize (from <sys/statvfs.h>) structure members.

Traditionally, some implementations defined the multiplier for st_blocks in <sys/param.h> as the symbol DEV_BSIZE.

Some earlier versions of this standard did not specify values for the file mode bit macros. The expectation was that some implementors might choose to use a different encoding for these bits than the traditional one, and that new applications would use symbolic file modes instead of numeric. This version of the standard specifies the traditional encoding, in recognition that nearly 20 years after the first publication of this standard numeric file modes are still in widespread use by application developers, and that all conforming implementations still use the traditional encoding.