Mercurial > emacs
changeset 105458:4d2aa5860e37
(Ffile_attributes): Doc fix. (Bug#4638)
author | Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 05 Oct 2009 08:35:12 +0000 |
parents | 9e55a1fc3a53 |
children | 114186285f98 |
files | src/dired.c |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 16 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/src/dired.c Mon Oct 05 08:11:56 2009 +0000 +++ b/src/dired.c Mon Oct 05 08:35:12 2009 +0000 @@ -973,20 +973,26 @@ 3. File gid, likewise. 4. Last access time, as a list of two integers. First integer has high-order 16 bits of time, second has low 16 bits. - (See a note below about FAT-based filesystems.) - 5. Last modification time, likewise. - 6. Last status change time, likewise. + (See a note below about access time on FAT-based filesystems.) + 5. Last modification time, likewise. This is the time of the last + change to the file's contents. + 6. Last status change time, likewise. This is the time of last change + to the file's attributes: owner and group, access mode bits, etc. 7. Size in bytes. This is a floating point number if the size is too large for an integer. 8. File modes, as a string of ten letters or dashes as in ls -l. 9. t if file's gid would change if file were deleted and recreated. -10. inode number. If inode number is larger than the Emacs integer, - but still fits into a 32-bit number, this is a cons cell containing two - integers: first the high part, then the low 16 bits. If the inode number - is wider than 32 bits, this is a cons cell containing three integers: - first the high 24 bits, then middle 24 bits, and finally the low 16 bits. -11. Device number. If it is larger than the Emacs integer, this is - a cons cell, similar to the inode number. +10. inode number. If inode number is larger than what Emacs integer + can hold, but still fits into a 32-bit number, this is a cons cell + containing two integers: first the high part, then the low 16 bits. + If the inode number is wider than 32 bits, this is of the form + (HIGH MIDDLE . LOW): first the high 24 bits, then middle 24 bits, + and finally the low 16 bits. +11. Filesystem device number. If it is larger than what the Emacs + integer can hold, this is a cons cell, similar to the inode number. + +On most filesystems, the combination of the inode and the device +number uniquely identifies the file. On MS-Windows, performance depends on `w32-get-true-file-attributes', which see.