Esempio n. 1
0
func main() {
	flag.Usage = Usage
	flag.Parse()

	if flag.NArg() != 1 {
		Usage()
		os.Exit(2)
	}
	mountpoint := flag.Arg(0)

	c, err := fuse.Mount(
		mountpoint,
		fuse.FSName("helloworld"),
		fuse.Subtype("hellofs"),
		fuse.LocalVolume(),
		fuse.VolumeName("Hello world!"),
	)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer c.Close()

	err = fs.Serve(c, FS{})
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}

	// check if the mount process has an error to report
	<-c.Ready
	if err := c.MountError; err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
}
Esempio n. 2
0
func main() {
	flag.Usage = usage
	flag.Parse()

	if flag.NArg() != 1 {
		usage()
		os.Exit(2)
	}
	mountpoint := flag.Arg(0)

	c, err := fuse.Mount(
		mountpoint,
		fuse.FSName("clock"),
		fuse.Subtype("clockfsfs"),
		fuse.LocalVolume(),
		fuse.VolumeName("Clock filesystem"),
	)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer c.Close()

	srv := fs.New(c, nil)
	filesys := &FS{
		// We pre-create the clock node so that it's always the same
		// object returned from all the Lookups. You could carefully
		// track its lifetime between Lookup&Forget, and have the
		// ticking & invalidation happen only when active, but let's
		// keep this example simple.
		clockFile: &File{
			fuse: srv,
		},
	}
	filesys.clockFile.tick()
	// This goroutine never exits. That's fine for this example.
	go filesys.clockFile.update()
	if err := srv.Serve(filesys); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}

	// Check if the mount process has an error to report.
	<-c.Ready
	if err := c.MountError; err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
}