QUOTACTL
Section: System Calls (2)
Index
Return to Main Contents
NAME
quotactl - manipulate disk quotas
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/quota.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <xfs/xqm.h>
long quotactl(int cmd, char *special, int id, caddr_t addr)
DESCRIPTION
The
quotactl()
call manipulates disk quotas.
cmd
indicates a command to be applied to
UID
id
or
GID
id.
To set the type of quota use the
QCMD(cmd, type)
macro.
special
is a pointer to a null-terminated string containing the path
name of the block special device for the filesystem being manipulated.
addr
is the address of an optional, command specific, data structure
which is copied in or out of the system. The interpretation of
addr
is given with each command below.
- Q_QUOTAON
-
Turn on quotas for a filesystem.
id
is the identification number of the quota format to be used. Format numbers
are defined in the header file of appropriate format. Currently there are
two supported quota formats whose numbers are defined by constants
QFMT_VFS_OLD
(original quota format) and
QFMT_VFS_V0
(new VFS v0 quota format).
addr
points to the path name of file containing the quotas for the filesystem.
The quota file must exist; it is normally created with the
quotacheck(8)
program. This call is restricted to the super-user.
- Q_QUOTAOFF
-
Turn off quotas for a filesystem.
addr
and
id
are ignored.
This call is restricted to the super-user.
- Q_GETQUOTA
-
Get disk quota limits and current usage for user or group
id.
addr
is a pointer to an
dqblk
structure (defined in
<sys/quota.h>).
The field
dqb_valid
defines the entries in the structure which are set correctly. On
Q_GETQUOTA
call all entries are valid. Only the super-user may get the quotas
of a user other than himself.
- Q_SETQUOTA
-
Set current quota information for user or group
id.
addr
is a pointer to an
dqblk
structure (defined in
<sys/quota.h>).
The field
dqb_valid
defines which entries in the quota structure are valid and should be set. The constants for
dqb_valid
field are defined in the
<sys/quota.h>
header file. This call obsoletes calls
Q_SETQLIM
and
Q_SETUSE
in the previous quota interfaces. This call is restricted to the super-user.
- Q_GETINFO
-
Get information (like grace times) about quotafile.
addr
should be a pointer to an
dqinfo
structure (defined in
<sys/quota.h>).
The
dqi_valid
field in the structure defines entries in it
which are valid. On
Q_GETINFO
call all entries are valid.
Parameter
id
is ignored.
- Q_SETINFO
-
Set information about quotafile.
addr
should be a pointer to
dqinfo
structure (defined in
<sys/quota.h>).
The field
dqi_valid
defines which entries in the quota info structure are valid and should be set. The constants for
dqi_valid
field are defined in the
<sys/quota.h>
header file. This call obsoletes calls
Q_SETGRACE
and
Q_SETFLAGS
in the previous quota interfaces. Parameter
id
is ignored. This operation is restricted to super-user.
- Q_GETFMT
-
Get quota format used on the specified filesystem.
addr
should be a pointer to a memory (4 bytes) where the format number will be stored.
- Q_SYNC
-
Update the on-disk copy of quota usages for a filesystem.
If
special
is null then all filesystems with active quotas are sync'ed.
addr
and
id
are ignored.
- Q_GETSTATS
-
Get statistics and other generic information about quota subsystem.
addr
should be a pointer to
dqstats
structure (defined in
<sys/quota.h>)
in which data should be stored.
special
and
id
are ignored.
- For XFS filesystems making use of the XFS Quota Manager (XQM), the above commands are bypassed and the following commands are used:
-
- Q_XQUOTAON
-
Turn on quotas for an XFS filesystem.
XFS provides the ability to turn on/off quota limit enforcement
with quota accounting.
Therefore, XFS expects the addr to be a pointer to an unsigned int
that contains either the flags XFS_QUOTA_UDQ_ACCT and/or
XFS_QUOTA_UDQ_ENFD (for user quota), or XFS_QUOTA_GDQ_ACCT and/or
XFS_QUOTA_GDQ_ENFD (for group quota), as defined in
<xfs/xqm.h>.
This call is restricted to the superuser.
- Q_XQUOTAOFF
-
Turn off quotas for an XFS filesystem.
As in Q_QUOTAON, XFS filesystems expect a pointer to an unsigned int
that specifies whether quota accounting and/or limit enforcement need
to be turned off.
This call is restricted to the superuser.
- Q_XGETQUOTA
-
Get disk quota limits and current usage for user
id.
addr
is a pointer to a
fs_disk_quota
structure (defined in
<xfs/xqm.h>).
Only the superuser may get the quotas of a user other than himself.
- Q_XSETQLIM
-
Set disk quota limits for user
id.
addr
is a pointer to a
fs_disk_quota
structure (defined in
<xfs/xqm.h>).
This call is restricted to the superuser.
- Q_XGETQSTAT
-
Returns a
fs_quota_stat
structure containing XFS filesystem specific quota information.
This is useful in finding out how much space is spent to store quota
information, and also to get quotaon/off status of a given local XFS
filesystem.
- Q_XQUOTARM
-
Free the disk space taken by disk quotas.
Quotas must have already been turned off.
There is no command equivalent to
Q_SYNC
for XFS since
sync(1)
writes quota information to disk (in addition to the other filesystem
metadata it writes out).
RETURN VALUES
quotactl()
returns:
- 0
-
on success.
- -1
-
on failure and sets
errno
to indicate the error.
ERRORS
- EFAULT
-
addr
or
special
are invalid.
- ENOSYS
-
The kernel has not been compiled with the
QUOTA
option.
- EINVAL
-
-
cmd
or
type
is invalid.
- ENOENT
-
The file specified by
special
or
addr
does not exist.
- ENOTBLK
-
special
is not a block device.
- EPERM
-
The call is privileged and the caller was not the super-user.
- ESRCH
-
No disc quota is found for the indicated user.
-
Quotas have not been turned on for this filesystem.
If
cmd
is
Q_QUOTAON,
quotactl()
may set errno to:
- EACCES
-
The quota file pointed to by
addr
exists but is not a regular file.
-
The quota file pointed to by
addr
exists but is not on the
filesystem pointed to by
special.
- EINVAL
-
The quota file is corrupted.
- ESRCH
-
Specified quota format was not found.
- EBUSY
-
Q_QUOTAON
attempted while another
Q_QUOTAON
has already taken place.
SEE ALSO
quota(1),
getrlimit(2),
quotacheck(8),
quotaon(8)