- infos = All information you want to know is in keys below
- infos/author = Markus Raab elektra@markus-raab.org
- infos/licence = BSD
- infos/provides = resolver
- infos/needs =
- infos/placements = rollback getresolver setresolver commit
- infos/status = productive maintained specific unittest tested libc nodep configurable
- infos/description = system independent resolver
The @PLUGIN_SHORT_NAME@ handles operating system dependent tasks. One task is the resolving of the filenames for user and system (hence its name).
Use following command to see to which file is resolved to:
kdb file <Elektra path you are interested in>
See the constants of this plugin for further information, they are:
system/elektra/modules/@PLUGIN_SHORT_NAME@/constants
system/elektra/modules/@PLUGIN_SHORT_NAME@/constants/ELEKTRA_VARIANT_SYSTEM
system/elektra/modules/@PLUGIN_SHORT_NAME@/constants/ELEKTRA_VARIANT_USER
system/elektra/modules/@PLUGIN_SHORT_NAME@/constants/KDB_DB_HOME
system/elektra/modules/@PLUGIN_SHORT_NAME@/constants/KDB_DB_SYSTEM
system/elektra/modules/@PLUGIN_SHORT_NAME@/constants/KDB_DB_USER
system/elektra/modules/@PLUGIN_SHORT_NAME@/constants/KDB_DB_SPEC
system/elektra/modules/@PLUGIN_SHORT_NAME@/constants/KDB_DB_DIR
The build-in resolving considers following cases:
- for spec with absolute path: path
- for spec with relative path: KDB_DB_SPEC + path
- for dir with absolute path:
pwd
+ path (or above when path is found) - for dir with relative path:
pwd
+ KDB_DB_DIR + path (or above when path is found) - for user with absolute path: ~ + path
- for user with relative path: ~ + KDB_DB_USER + path
- for system with absolute path: path
- for system with relative path: KDB_DB_SYSTEM + path
(~ and pwd
are resolved from system)
For an absolute path /example.ini, you might get following values:
- for spec: /example.ini
- for dir:
pwd
/example.ini - for user: ~/example.ini
- for system: /example.ini
For an relative path example.ini, you might get following values:
- for spec: /usr/share/elektra/specification/example.ini
- for dir:
pwd
/.dir/example.ini - for user: ~/.config/example.ini
- for system: /etc/kdb/example.ini
See the mount tutorial for more examples.
Many variants exist that additionally influence the resolving process, typically by using environment variables.
Environment variables are very simple for one-time usage but their maintenance in start-up scripts is problematic. Additionally, they are controlled by the user, so they cannot be trusted. So it is not recommended to use environment variables.
Note that the file permissions apply, so it might be possible for
non-root to modify keys in system
.
See COMPILE.md for a documentation of possible variants.
The resolver is fully XDG compatible if configured with the variant:
- xp, xh or xu for user (either using passwd, HOME or USER as fallback or any combination of these fallbacks)
- x for system, no fallback necessary
Additionally KDB_DB_USER
needs to be left unchanged as .config
.
XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
will be used to resolve system paths the following
way:
- if unset or empty
/etc/xdg
will be used instead - all elements are searched in order of importance
- if a file was found, the search process is stopped
- if no file was found, the least important element will be used for potential write attempts.
- If no update needed (unchanged modification time): quit successfully
- Otherwise call (storage) plugin(s) to read configuration
- remember the last stat time (last update)
- On unchanged configuration: quit successfully
- On empty configuration: remove the configuration file and quit successfully
- Otherwise, open the configuration file If not available recursively create directories and retry. #ifdef ELEKTRA_LOCK_MUTEX
- Try to lock a global mutex, if not possible -> conflict #endif #ifdef ELEKTRA_LOCK_FILE
- Try to lock the configuration file, if not possible -> conflict #endif
- Check the update time -> might lead to conflict
- Update the update time (in order to not self-conflict)
We have an optimistic approach. Locking is only used to detect concurrent cooperative processes in the short moment between prepare and commit. A conflict will be raised in that situation. When processes do not lock the file it might be overwritten. This is, however, very unlikely on file systems with nanosecond precision.