# fuse-native Multithreaded FUSE bindings for Node JS. ## Features * N-API support means we ship prebuilds and in general works on new Node.js releases. * Multithreading support means multiple calls to FUSE can run in parallel. * Close to feature complete in terms of the the FUSE API. * Embedded shared library support means users do not have to install FUSE from a 3rd party. * API support for initial FUSE kernel extension configuration so you can control the user experience. ## Installation ``` npm i fuse-native --save ``` ## Example ```js const ops = { readdir: function (path, cb) { if (path === '/') return cb(null, ['test']) return cb(Fuse.ENOENT) }, getattr: function (path, cb) { if (path === '/') return cb(null, stat({ mode: 'dir', size: 4096 })) if (path === '/test') return cb(null, stat({ mode: 'file', size: 11 })) return cb(Fuse.ENOENT) }, open: function (path, flags, cb) { return cb(0, 42) }, release: function (path, fd, cb) { return cb(0) }, read: function (path, fd, buf, len, pos, cb) { var str = 'hello world'.slice(pos, pos + len) if (!str) return cb(0) buf.write(str) return cb(str.length) } } const fuse = new Fuse(mnt, ops, { debug: true }) fuse.mount(function (err) { fs.readFile(path.join(mnt, 'test'), function (err, buf) { // buf should be 'hello world' }) }) ``` ## API In order to create a FUSE mountpoint, you first need to create a `Fuse` object that wraps a set of implemented FUSE syscall handlers: #### `const fuse = new Fuse(mnt, handlers, opts = {})` Create a new `Fuse` object. `mnt` is the string path of your desired mountpoint. `handlers` is an object mapping syscall names to implementations. The complete list of available syscalls is described below. As an example, if you wanted to implement a filesystem that only supports `getattr`, your handle object would look like: ```js { getattr: function (path, cb) { if (path === '/') return process.nextTick(cb, null, stat({ mode: 'dir', size: 4096 })) if (path === '/test') return process.nextTick(cb, null, stat({ mode: 'file', size: 11 })) return process.nextTick(cb, Fuse.ENOENT) } } ``` `opts` can be include: ``` displayFolder: 'Folder Name', // Add a name/icon to the mount volume on OSX, debug: false, // Enable detailed tracing of operations. ``` Additionally, all (FUSE-specific options)[http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man8/mount.fuse.8.html] will be passed to the underlying FUSE module (though we use camel casing instead of snake casing). #### `Fuse.isConfigured(cb)` Returns `true` if FUSE has been configured on your machine and ready to be used, `false` otherwise. #### `Fuse.configure(cb)` Configures FUSE on your machine by enabling the FUSE kernel extension. You usually want to do this as part of an installation phase for your app. Might require `sudo` access. #### `Fuse.unconfigure(cb)` Unconfigures FUSE on your machine. Basically undos any change the above method does. ### FUSE API Most of the [FUSE api](http://fuse.sourceforge.net/doxygen/structfuse__operations.html) is supported. In general the callback for each op should be called with `cb(returnCode, [value])` where the return code is a number (`0` for OK and `< 0` for errors). See below for a list of POSIX error codes. #### `ops.init(cb)` Called on filesystem init. #### `ops.access(path, mode, cb)` Called before the filesystem accessed a file #### `ops.statfs(path, cb)` Called when the filesystem is being stat'ed. Accepts a fs stat object after the return code in the callback. ``` js ops.statfs = function (path, cb) { cb(0, { bsize: 1000000, frsize: 1000000, blocks: 1000000, bfree: 1000000, bavail: 1000000, files: 1000000, ffree: 1000000, favail: 1000000, fsid: 1000000, flag: 1000000, namemax: 1000000 }) } ``` #### `ops.getattr(path, cb)` Called when a path is being stat'ed. Accepts a stat object (similar to the one returned in `fs.stat(path, cb)`) after the return code in the callback. ``` js ops.getattr = function (path, cb) { cb(0, { mtime: new Date(), atime: new Date(), ctime: new Date(), size: 100, mode: 16877, uid: process.getuid(), gid: process.getgid() }) } ``` #### `ops.fgetattr(path, fd, cb)` Same as above but is called when someone stats a file descriptor #### `ops.flush(path, fd, cb)` Called when a file descriptor is being flushed #### `ops.fsync(path, fd, datasync, cb)` Called when a file descriptor is being fsync'ed. #### `ops.fsyncdir(path, fd, datasync, cb)` Same as above but on a directory #### `ops.readdir(path, cb)` Called when a directory is being listed. Accepts an array of file/directory names after the return code in the callback ``` js ops.readdir = function (path, cb) { cb(0, ['file-1.txt', 'dir']) } ``` #### `ops.truncate(path, size, cb)` Called when a path is being truncated to a specific size #### `ops.ftruncate(path, fd, size, cb)` Same as above but on a file descriptor #### `ops.readlink(path, cb)` Called when a symlink is being resolved. Accepts a pathname (that the link should resolve to) after the return code in the callback ``` js ops.readlink = function (path, cb) { cb(null, 'file.txt') // make link point to file.txt } ``` #### `ops.chown(path, uid, gid, cb)` Called when ownership of a path is being changed #### `ops.chmod(path, mode, cb)` Called when the mode of a path is being changed #### `ops.mknod(path, mode, dev, cb)` Called when the a new device file is being made. #### `ops.setxattr(path, name, buffer, length, offset, flags, cb)` Called when extended attributes is being set (see the extended docs for your platform). Currently you can read the attribute value being set in `buffer` at `offset`. #### `ops.getxattr(path, name, buffer, length, offset, cb)` Called when extended attributes is being read. Currently you have to write the result to the provided `buffer` at `offset`. #### `ops.listxattr(path, buffer, length, cb)` Called when extended attributes of a path are being listed. `buffer` should be filled with the extended attribute names as *null-terminated* strings, one after the other, up to a total of `length` in length. (`ERANGE` should be passed to the callback if `length` is insufficient.) The size of buffer required to hold all the names should be passed to the callback either on success, or if the supplied `length` was zero. #### `ops.removexattr(path, name, cb)` Called when an extended attribute is being removed. #### `ops.open(path, flags, cb)` Called when a path is being opened. `flags` in a number containing the permissions being requested. Accepts a file descriptor after the return code in the callback. ``` js var toFlag = function(flags) { flags = flags & 3 if (flags === 0) return 'r' if (flags === 1) return 'w' return 'r+' } ops.open = function (path, flags, cb) { var flag = toFlag(flags) // convert flags to a node style string ... cb(0, 42) // 42 is a file descriptor } ``` #### `ops.opendir(path, flags, cb)` Same as above but for directories #### `ops.read(path, fd, buffer, length, position, cb)` Called when contents of a file is being read. You should write the result of the read to the `buffer` and return the number of bytes written as the first argument in the callback. If no bytes were written (read is complete) return 0 in the callback. ``` js var data = new Buffer('hello world') ops.read = function (path, fd, buffer, length, position, cb) { if (position >= data.length) return cb(0) // done var part = data.slice(position, position + length) part.copy(buffer) // write the result of the read to the result buffer cb(part.length) // return the number of bytes read } ``` #### `ops.write(path, fd, buffer, length, position, cb)` Called when a file is being written to. You can get the data being written in `buffer` and you should return the number of bytes written in the callback as the first argument. ``` js ops.write = function (path, fd, buffer, length, position, cb) { console.log('writing', buffer.slice(0, length)) cb(length) // we handled all the data } ``` #### `ops.release(path, fd, cb)` Called when a file descriptor is being released. Happens when a read/write is done etc. #### `ops.releasedir(path, fd, cb)` Same as above but for directories #### `ops.create(path, mode, cb)` Called when a new file is being opened. #### `ops.utimens(path, atime, mtime, cb)` Called when the atime/mtime of a file is being changed. #### `ops.unlink(path, cb)` Called when a file is being unlinked. #### `ops.rename(src, dest, cb)` Called when a file is being renamed. #### `ops.link(src, dest, cb)` Called when a new link is created. #### `ops.symlink(src, dest, cb)` Called when a new symlink is created #### `ops.mkdir(path, mode, cb)` Called when a new directory is being created #### `ops.rmdir(path, cb)` Called when a directory is being removed ## License MIT for these bindings. See the [OSXFUSE](https://github.com/osxfuse/osxfuse) license for MacOS and the [libfuse](https://github.com/libfuse/libfuse) license for Linux/BSD for the FUSE shared library licence.