ATTACH(5)ATTACH(5)NAME
attach, auth - messages to establish a connection
SYNOPSIS
size[4] Tauth tag[2] afid[4] uname[s] aname[s]
size[4] Rauth tag[2] aqid[13]
size[4] Tattach tag[2] fid[4] afid[4] uname[s] aname[s]
size[4] Rattach tag[2] qid[13]
DESCRIPTION
The attach message serves as a fresh introduction from a user on the
client machine to the server. The message identifies the user (uname)
and may select the file tree to access (aname). The afid argument
specifies a fid previously established by an auth message, as described
below.
As a result of the attach transaction, the client will have a connec‐
tion to the root directory of the desired file tree, represented by
fid. An error is returned if fid is already in use. The server's idea
of the root of the file tree is represented by the returned qid.
If the client does not wish to authenticate the connection, or knows
that authentication is not required, the afid field in the attach mes‐
sage should be set to NOFID, defined as (u32int)~0 in <fcall.h>. If
the client does wish to authenticate, it must acquire and validate an
afid using an auth message before doing the attach.
The auth message contains afid, a new fid to be established for authen‐
tication, and the uname and aname that will be those of the following
attach message. If the server does not require authentication, it
returns Rerror to the Tauth message.
If the server does require authentication, it returns aqid defining a
file of type QTAUTH (see intro(5)) that may be read and written (using
read and write messages in the usual way) to execute an authentication
protocol. That protocol's definition is not part of 9P itself.
Once the protocol is complete, the same afid is presented in the attach
message for the user, granting entry. The same validated afid may be
used for multiple attach messages with the same uname and aname.
ENTRY POINTS
An attach transaction will be generated for kernel devices (see
intro(3)) when a system call evaluates a file name beginning with Sys-
pipe(2) generates an attach on the kernel device pipe(3). The mount
call (see sys-bind(2)) generates an attach message to the remote file
server. When the kernel boots, an attach is made to the root device,
root(3), and then an attach is made to the requested file server
machine.
An auth transaction is generated by the sys-fauth(2) system call or by
the first mount system call on an uninitialized connection.
SEE ALSOsys-bind(2), sys-fauth(2), intro(3), root(3), version(5)ATTACH(5)