In Unix and Unix-like computer operating systems, a file descriptor (FD, less frequently fildes) is a process-unique identifier (handle) for a file or other input/outputresource, such as a pipe or network socket.
File descriptors typically have non-negative integer values, with negative values being reserved to indicate "no value" or error conditions.
File descriptors are a part of the POSIX API. Each Unix process (except perhaps daemons) should have three standard POSIX file descriptors, corresponding to the three standard streams:
Overview
In the traditional implementation of Unix, file descriptors index into a per-process file descriptor table maintained by the kernel, that in turn indexes into a system-wide table of files opened by all processes, called the file table. This table records the mode with which the file (or other resource) has been opened: for reading, writing, appending, and possibly other modes. It also indexes into a third table called the inode table that describes the actual underlying files.[3] To perform input or output, the process passes the file descriptor to the kernel through a system call, and the kernel will access the file on behalf of the process. The process does not have direct access to the file or inode tables.
On Linux, the set of file descriptors open in a process can be accessed under the path /proc/PID/fd/, where PID is the process identifier. File descriptor /proc/PID/fd/0 is stdin, /proc/PID/fd/1 is stdout, and /proc/PID/fd/2 is stderr. As a shortcut to these, any running process can also access its own file descriptors through the folders /proc/self/fd and /dev/fd.[4]
The FILE data structure in the C standard I/O library usually includes a low level file descriptor for the object in question on Unix-like systems. The overall data structure provides additional abstraction and is instead known as a file handle.
Operations on file descriptors
The following lists typical operations on file descriptors on modern Unix-like systems. Most of these functions are declared in the <unistd.h> header, but some are in the <fcntl.h> header instead.
The fcntl() function is used to perform various operations on a file descriptor, depending on the command argument passed to it. There are commands to get and set attributes associated with a file descriptor, including F_GETFD, F_SETFD, F_GETFL and F_SETFL.
closefrom() (BSD and Solaris only; deletes all file descriptors greater than or equal to specified number)
close_range() (for Linux)[6]
dup() (duplicates an existing file descriptor guaranteeing to be the lowest number available file descriptor)
dup2(), dup3() (Close fd1 if necessary, and make file descriptor fd1 point to the open file of fd2)
fcntl (F_DUPFD)
Operations that modify process state
fchdir() (sets the process's current working directory based on a directory file descriptor)
mmap() (maps ranges of a file into the process's address space)
File locking
flock()
fcntl() (F_GETLK, F_SETLK and F_SETLKW)
lockf()
Sockets
connect()
bind()
listen()
accept() (creates a new file descriptor for an incoming connection)
getsockname()
getpeername()
getsockopt()
setsockopt()
shutdown() (shuts down one or both halves of a full duplex connection)
Miscellaneous
ioctl() (a large collection of miscellaneous operations on a single file descriptor, often associated with a device)
Upcoming operations
A series of new operations on file descriptors has been added to many modern Unix-like systems, as well as numerous C libraries, to be standardized in a future version of POSIX.[7] The at suffix signifies that the function takes an additional first argument supplying a file descriptor from which relative paths are resolved, the forms lacking the at suffix thus becoming equivalent to passing a file descriptor corresponding to the current working directory. The purpose of these new operations is to defend against a certain class of TOCTOU attacks.
openat()
faccessat()
fchmodat()
fchownat()
fstatat()
futimesat()
linkat()
mkdirat()
mknodat()
readlinkat()
renameat()
symlinkat()
unlinkat()
mkfifoat()
fdopendir()
File descriptors as capabilities
Unix file descriptors behave in many ways as capabilities. They can be passed between processes across Unix domain sockets using the sendmsg() system call. Note, however, that what is actually passed is a reference to an "open file description" that has mutable state (the file offset, and the file status and access flags). This complicates the secure use of file descriptors as capabilities, since when programs share access to the same open file description, they can interfere with each other's use of it by changing its offset or whether it is blocking or non-blocking, for example.[8][9] In operating systems that are specifically designed as capability systems, there is very rarely any mutable state associated with a capability itself.
A Unix process' file descriptor table is an example of a C-list.
File Control Block (FCB) - an alternative scheme in CP/M and early versions of DOS
References
^The Open Group. "The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, IEEE Std 1003.1-2008, 2016 Edition". Retrieved 2017-09-21.
^The Open Group. "The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, IEEE Std 1003.1-2008, 2016 Edition". <stdio.h>. Retrieved 2017-09-21.
^ a bBach, Maurice J. (1986). The Design of the UNIX Operating System (8 ed.). Prentice-Hall. pp. 92–96. ISBN 9780132017992.
^"Devices - What does the output of 'll /Proc/Self/Fd/' (From 'll /Dev/Fd') mean?".
^The Open Group. "The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, IEEE Std 1003.1-2008, 2018 Edition – creat". Retrieved 2019-04-11.
^Stephen Kitt, Michael Kerrisk. "close_range(2) — Linux manual page". Retrieved 2021-03-22.
^Extended API Set, Part 2. The Open Group. October 2006. ISBN 1931624674.
^Brinkmann, Marcus (2009-02-04). "Building a bridge: library API's and file descriptors?". cap-talk. Archived from the original on 2012-07-30. Retrieved 2017-09-21.
^de Boyne Pollard, Jonathan (2007). "Don't set shared file descriptors to non-blocking I/O mode". Retrieved 2017-09-21.