CONTENTS
VASResult shore_vas::mkPool(
const Path name,
mode_t mode,
lrid_t *result
);
VASResult shore_vas::rmPool(
const Path name
);
Within a Shore file system, objects
are located in
Storage Manager files
When objects are created, they are created
"in" a file, and that file is chosen by the
creator of the object.
This allows an application to determine a certain amount of logical and
physical clustering of the objects it creates.
A
pool
is a Shore object that has an associated file.
When a pool is created, an empty file is created.
A pool cannot be destroyed unless it is empty.
We say that objects reside "in" the pool,
although, in fact they reside in the Storage Manager file associated with the pool.
(A pool is a registered object, so it resides with all other registered
objects, in the Storage Manager file for registered objects.)
The objects in a pool are
anonymous.
They have no place in the naming hierarchy on the volume.
They are identified only by their object identifiers.
A pool can be
scanned
to find the object identifiers
of the objects in the pool,
and to inspect or update the objects in the pool.
Anonymous objects inherit some system properties from their pools,
and have no need for others (such as the reference counts).
Consequently, the storage overhead for anonymous objects
is minimal.
The properties inherited from the pool are:
uid,
gid,
and
mode.
These properties of a pool determine the access controls on
all objects in the pool.
The argument
name
to both
mkPool
and
rmPool
is the path name of the pool.
The argument
mode
to
mkPool
is the permission bits for the pool and all objects in the pool.
The argument
result
for
mkPool
is an address in the caller's address space.
It may not be null.
After creating the pool and its associated file,
the SVAS returns the logical object identifier for
the pool by writing into this location.
All operations on pools take place on the server.
These methods can be used only in a transaction.
Deadlocks can occur while locks are being acquired. See
transaction(svas)
for information about deadlocks.
A complete list of errors is in
errors(svas).
This manual page applies to Version 1.1 of the Shore software.
The Shore project is sponsored by the Advanced Research Project Agency, ARPA
order number 018 (formerly 8230), monitored by the U.S. Army Research
Laboratory under contract DAAB07-91-C-Q518.
Copyright © 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997,
Computer Sciences Department, University of
Wisconsin -- Madison. All Rights Reserved.
file_system(svas),
anonymous(svas),
registered(svas),
unixfile(svas),
sysprops(svas),
transaction(svas),
errors(svas)
and
poolscan(svas).