NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | FILES | EXAMPLE | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON

LOOP(4)                   Linux Programmer's Manual                  LOOP(4)

NAME         top

       loop, loop-control - loop devices

SYNOPSIS         top

       #include <linux/loop.h>

DESCRIPTION         top

       The loop device is a block device that maps its data blocks not to a
       physical device such as a hard disk or optical disk drive, but to the
       blocks of a regular file in a filesystem or to another block device.
       This can be useful for example to provide a block device for a
       filesystem image stored in a file, so that it can be mounted with the
       mount(8) command.  You could do
              $ dd if=/dev/zero of=file.img bs=1MiB count=10
              $ sudo losetup /dev/loop4 file.img
              $ sudo mkfs -t ext4 /dev/loop4
              $ sudo mkdir /myloopdev
              $ sudo mount /dev/loop4 /myloopdev
       See losetup(8) for another example.
       A transfer function can be specified for each loop device for
       encryption and decryption purposes.
       The following ioctl(2) operations are provided by the loop block
       device:
       LOOP_SET_FD
              Associate the loop device with the open file whose file
              descriptor is passed as the (third) ioctl(2) argument.
       LOOP_CLR_FD
              Disassociate the loop device from any file descriptor.
       LOOP_SET_STATUS
              Set the status of the loop device using the (third) ioctl(2)
              argument.  This argument is a pointer to loop_info structure,
              defined in <linux/loop.h> as:
                  struct loop_info {
                      int           lo_number;            /* ioctl r/o */
                      dev_t         lo_device;            /* ioctl r/o */
                      unsigned long lo_inode;             /* ioctl r/o */
                      dev_t         lo_rdevice;           /* ioctl r/o */
                      int           lo_offset;
                      int           lo_encrypt_type;
                      int           lo_encrypt_key_size;  /* ioctl w/o */
                      int           lo_flags;             /* ioctl r/o */
                      char          lo_name[LO_NAME_SIZE];
                      unsigned char lo_encrypt_key[LO_KEY_SIZE];
                                                          /* ioctl w/o */
                      unsigned long lo_init[2];
                      char          reserved[4];
                  };
              The encryption type (lo_encrypt_type) should be one of
              LO_CRYPT_NONE, LO_CRYPT_XOR, LO_CRYPT_DES, LO_CRYPT_FISH2,
              LO_CRYPT_BLOW, LO_CRYPT_CAST128, LO_CRYPT_IDEA,
              LO_CRYPT_DUMMY, LO_CRYPT_SKIPJACK, or (since Linux 2.6.0)
              LO_CRYPT_CRYPTOAPI.
              The lo_flags field is a bit mask that can include zero or more
              of the following:
              LO_FLAGS_READ_ONLY
                     The loopback device is read-only.
              LO_FLAGS_AUTOCLEAR (since Linux 2.6.25)
                     The loopback device will autodestruct on last close.
              LO_FLAGS_PARTSCAN (since Linux 3.2)
                     Allow automatic partition scanning.
       LOOP_GET_STATUS
              Get the status of the loop device.  The (third) ioctl(2)
              argument must be a pointer to a struct loop_info.
       LOOP_CHANGE_FD (since Linux 2.6.5)
              Switch the backing store of the loop device to the new file
              identified file descriptor specified in the (third) ioctl(2)
              argument, which is an integer.  This operation is possible
              only if the loop device is read-only and the new backing store
              is the same size and type as the old backing store.
       LOOP_SET_CAPACITY (since Linux 2.6.30)
              Resize a live loop device.  One can change the size of the
              underlying backing store and then use this operation so that
              the loop driver learns about the new size.  This operation
              takes no argument.
       Since Linux 2.6, there are two new ioctl(2) operations:
       LOOP_SET_STATUS64, LOOP_GET_STATUS64
              These are similar to LOOP_SET_STATUS and LOOP_GET_STATUS
              described above but use the loop_info64 structure, which has
              some additional fields and a larger range for some other
              fields:
                  struct loop_info64 {
                      uint64_t lo_device;                   /* ioctl r/o */
                      uint64_t lo_inode;                    /* ioctl r/o */
                      uint64_t lo_rdevice;                  /* ioctl r/o */
                      uint64_t lo_offset;
                      uint64_t lo_sizelimit;/* bytes, 0 == max available */
                      uint32_t lo_number;                   /* ioctl r/o */
                      uint32_t lo_encrypt_type;
                      uint32_t lo_encrypt_key_size;         /* ioctl w/o */
                      uint32_t lo_flags;                    /* ioctl r/o */
                      uint8_t  lo_file_name[LO_NAME_SIZE];
                      uint8_t  lo_crypt_name[LO_NAME_SIZE];
                      uint8_t  lo_encrypt_key[LO_KEY_SIZE]; /* ioctl w/o */
                      uint64_t lo_init[2];
                  };
   /dev/loop-control
       Since Linux 3.1, the kernel provides the /dev/loop-control device,
       which permits an application to dynamically find a free device, and
       to add and remove loop devices from the system.  To perform these
       operations, one first opens /dev/loop-control and then employs one of
       the following ioctl(2) operations:
       LOOP_CTL_GET_FREE
              Allocate or find a free loop device for use.  On success, the
              device number is returned as the result of the call.  This
              operation takes no argument.
       LOOP_CTL_ADD
              Add the new loop device whose device number is specified as a
              long integer in the third ioctl(2) argument.  On success, the
              device index is returned as the result of the call.  If the
              device is already allocated, the call fails with the error
              EEXIST.
       LOOP_CTL_REMOVE
              Remove the loop device whose device number is specified as a
              long integer in the third ioctl(2) argument.  On success, the
              device number is returned as the result of the call.  If the
              device is in use, the call fails with the error EBUSY.

FILES         top

       /dev/loop*: the loop block special device files

EXAMPLE         top

       The program below uses the /dev/loop-control device to find a free
       loop device, opens the loop device, opens a file to be used as the
       underlying storage for the device, and then associates the loop
       device with the backing store.  The following shell session
       demonstrates the use of the program:
           $ dd if=/dev/zero of=file.img bs=1MiB count=10
           10+0 records in
           10+0 records out
           10485760 bytes (10 MB) copied, 0.00609385 s, 1.7 GB/s
           $ sudo ./mnt_loop file.img
           loopname = /dev/loop5
   Program source
       #include <fcntl.h>
       #include <linux/loop.h>
       #include <sys/ioctl.h>
       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <stdlib.h>
       #include <unistd.h>
       #define errExit(msg)    do { perror(msg); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); \
                               } while (0)
       int
       main(int argc, char *argv[])
       {
           int loopctlfd, loopfd, backingfile;
           long devnr;
           char loopname[4096];
           if (argc != 2) {
               fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s backing-file\n", argv[0]);
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }
           loopctlfd = open("/dev/loop-control", O_RDWR);
           if (loopctlfd == -1)
               errExit("open: /dev/loop-control");
           devnr = ioctl(loopctlfd, LOOP_CTL_GET_FREE);
           if (devnr == -1)
               errExit("ioctl-LOOP_CTL_GET_FREE");
           sprintf(loopname, "/dev/loop%ld", devnr);
           printf("loopname = %s\n", loopname);
           loopfd = open(loopname, O_RDWR);
           if (loopfd == -1)
               errExit("open: loopname");
           backingfile = open(argv[1], O_RDWR);
           if (backingfile == -1)
               errExit("open: backing-file");
           if (ioctl(loopfd, LOOP_SET_FD, backingfile) == -1)
               errExit("ioctl-LOOP_SET_FD");
           exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
       }

SEE ALSO         top

       losetup(8), mount(8)

COLOPHON         top

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Linux                            2016-10-08                          LOOP(4)