Chmod Event
Fires when the OS needs to change the permission bits of a file.
Syntax
ANSI (Cross Platform) virtual int FireChmod(FUSEChmodEventParams *e);
typedef struct {
const char *Path;
int FileContext;
int Mode;
int Result; int reserved; } FUSEChmodEventParams; Unicode (Windows) virtual INT FireChmod(FUSEChmodEventParams *e);
typedef struct {
LPCWSTR Path;
INT FileContext;
INT Mode;
INT Result; INT reserved; } FUSEChmodEventParams;
#define EID_FUSE_CHMOD 2 virtual INT CBFSFUSE_CALL FireChmod(LPWSTR &lpszPath, INT &iFileContext, INT &iMode, INT &iResult);
Remarks
Windows:
This event is not used.
Linux:
This event fires when the OS needs to change the permission bits of a file or directory, identified either by Path or FileContext.
Mode contains the new permission bits.
The ResultCode parameter will always be 0 when the event is fired. If the event cannot be handled in a "successful" manner for some reason (e.g., a resource isn't available, security checks failed, etc.), set it to a negative error code value (e.g. -ENOENT to indicate that the file does not exist) to report an appropriate error. Please refer to the Error Reporting and Handling topic for more information.