Hi everybody,
though looking and grepping through the sources I couldn't find a way (via
fcntl() or whatever) to allow an existing file to get holes.
I found that cp has a parameter --sparse (or suchlike) - but strace shows
it doing a open(,O_TRUNC) which has a bit of impact on previous filedata :-)
What I'd like to do is something like
fh=open( ... , O_RDWR);
lseek(fh, position ,SEEK_START);
// where position is a multiple of fs block size
fcntl(fh,F_MAKESPARSE,16384);
to create a 16kB hole in a file.
If the underlying fs doesn't support holes, I'd get ENOSYS or something.
What I'd like to use that for:
I imagine having a file on hd (eg. tar) and not enough space to decompress.
So with SOME space at least I'd open the file and stream it's data to tar,
after each few kB read I'd free some space - so this could eventually succeed.
I also thought about simple reversing the filedata - so I'd read off the
end of the file and truncate() downwards - but that would mean reversing
the whole file which could take some time on creation and would solve only
this specific case.
Ideas, anyone?
Regards,
Phil
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