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io_uring_prep_renameat(3) liburing Manual io_uring_prep_renameat(3)

NAME

io_uring_prep_renameat - prepare a renameat request

SYNOPSIS

#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <liburing.h>
void io_uring_prep_renameat(struct io_uring_sqe *sqe,
                            int olddirfd,
                            const char *oldpath,
                            int newdirfd,
                            const char *newpath,
                            unsigned int flags);
void io_uring_prep_rename(struct io_uring_sqe *sqe,
                          const char *oldpath,
                          const char *newpath,
                          unsigned int flags);

DESCRIPTION

The io_uring_prep_renameat(3) function prepares a renameat request. The submission queue entry sqe is setup to use the old directory file descriptor pointed to by olddirfd and old path pointed to by oldpath with the new directory file descriptor pointed to by newdirfd and the new path pointed to by newpath and using the specified flags in flags.

The io_uring_prep_rename(3) function prepares a rename request. The submission queue entry sqe is setup to use the old path pointed to by oldpath with the new path pointed to by newpath, both relative to the current working directory and using the specified flags in flags.

These functions prepare an async renameat2(2) or rename(2) request. If flags is zero, then this call is similar to the renameat(2) system call. See those man pages for details.

RETURN VALUE

None

ERRORS

The CQE res field will contain the result of the operation. See the related man page for details on possible values. Note that where synchronous system calls will return -1 on failure and set errno to the actual error value, io_uring never uses errno. Instead it returns the negated errno directly in the CQE res field.

NOTES

As with any request that passes in data in a struct, that data must remain valid until the request has been successfully submitted. It need not remain valid until completion. Once a request has been submitted, the in-kernel state is stable. Very early kernels (5.4 and earlier) required state to be stable until the completion occurred. Applications can test for this behavior by inspecting the IORING_FEAT_SUBMIT_STABLE flag passed back from io_uring_queue_init_params(3).

SEE ALSO

io_uring_get_sqe(3), io_uring_submit(3), renameat(2), renameat2(2), rename(2)

March 13, 2022 liburing-2.2