Extended attributes are name:value
pairs associated with inodes (files, directories, symlinks, etc).
They are extensions to the normal attributes which are associated
with all inodes in the system (i.e. the
stat(2)
data).
A complete overview of extended attributes concepts can be found in
attr(5).
listxattr() retrieves the
list of extended attribute names associated with the given
path in the filesystem.
The list is the set of (null-terminated) names, one after the other.
Names of extended attributes to which the calling process does not
have access may be omitted from the list.
The length of the attribute name
list is returned.
llistxattr() is identical to
listxattr(), except in the case of a symbolic link, where the list of names of
extended attributes associated with the link itself is retrieved,
not the file that it refers to.
flistxattr() is identical to
listxattr(), only the open file pointed to by
filedes (as returned by
open(2))
is interrogated in place of
path.
A single extended attribute
name is a simple null-terminated string.
The name includes a namespace prefix; there may be several, disjoint
namespaces associated with an individual inode.
An empty buffer of
size zero can be passed into these calls to return the current size of the
list of extended attribute names, which can be used to estimate the
size of a buffer which is sufficiently large to hold the list of names.
The
list of names is returned as an unordered array of null-terminated character
strings (attribute names are separated by null bytes (\0)), like this:
user.name1\0system.name1\0user.name2\0
Filesystems like ext2, ext3 and XFS which implement POSIX ACLs using
extended attributes, might return a
list like this:
On success, a positive number is returned indicating the size of the
extended attribute name list.
On failure, -1 is returned and
errno is set appropriately.
If the
size of the
list buffer is too small to hold the result,
errno is set to ERANGE.
If extended attributes are not supported by the filesystem, or are disabled,
errno is set to ENOTSUP.
The errors documented for the
stat(2)
system call are also applicable here.