/* * Wrapper functions for accessing the file_struct fd array. */ #ifndef __LINUX_FILE_H #define __LINUX_FILE_H extern void __fput(struct file *); /* * Check whether the specified task has the fd open. Since the task * may not have a files_struct, we must test for p->files != NULL. */ extern inline struct file * fcheck_task(struct task_struct *p, unsigned int fd) { struct file * file = NULL; if (p->files && fd < p->files->max_fds) file = p->files->fd[fd]; return file; } /* * Check whether the specified fd has an open file. */ extern inline struct file * fcheck(unsigned int fd) { struct file * file = NULL; if (fd < current->files->max_fds) file = current->files->fd[fd]; return file; } extern inline struct file * fget(unsigned int fd) { struct file * file = fcheck(fd); if (file) file->f_count++; return file; } /* * Install a file pointer in the fd array. */ extern inline void fd_install(unsigned int fd, struct file *file) { current->files->fd[fd] = file; } /* * 23/12/1998 Marcin Dalecki : * * Since those functions where calling other functions, it was compleatly * bogous to make them all "extern inline". * * The removal of this pseudo optimization saved me scandaleous: * * 3756 (i386 arch) * * precious bytes from my kernel, even without counting all the code compiled * as module! * * I suspect there are many other similar "optimizations" across the * kernel... */ extern void fput(struct file *file); extern void put_filp(struct file *file); #endif