Jaa


List Handles

The List Handles operation returns a list of open handles on a directory or a file. Optionally, it can recursively enumerate opened handles on directories and files. This API is available beginning in version 2018-11-09.

Protocol availability

Enabled file share protocol Available
SMB Yes
NFS No

Request

You can construct the List Handles request as follows. HTTPS is recommended.

Method Request URI HTTP version
GET https://myaccount.file.core.windows.net/myshare/mydirectorypath/myfileordirectory?comp=listhandles HTTP/1.1

Replace the path components shown in the request URI with your own, as follows:

Path component Description
myaccount The name of your storage account.
myshare The name of your file share.
mydirectorypath Optional. The path to the directory.
myfileordirectory The name of the file or directory.

For details on path naming restrictions, see Naming and referencing shares, directories, files, and metadata.

URI parameters

You can specify the following additional parameters on the URI.

Parameter Description
marker Optional. A string value that identifies the portion of the list to be returned with the next List Handles operation. The operation returns a marker value within the response body, if the list returned wasn't complete. You can then use the marker value in a subsequent call to request the next set of list items.

The marker value is opaque to the client.
maxresults Optional. Specifies the maximum number of handles taken on files or directories to return.

Setting maxresults to a value less than or equal to zero results in error response code 400 (Bad Request).
timeout Optional. The timeout parameter is expressed in seconds. For more information, see Setting timeouts for Azure Files operations.
sharesnapshot Optional. The sharesnapshot parameter is an opaque DateTime value that, when present, specifies the share snapshot to query for the list of handles.

Request headers

The following table describes required and optional request headers.

Request header Description
Authorization Required. Specifies the authorization scheme, account name, and signature. For more information, see Authorize requests to Azure Storage.
Date or x-ms-date Required. Specifies the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) for the request. For more information, see Authorize requests to Azure Storage.
x-ms-version Required for all authorized requests, optional for anonymous requests. Specifies the version of the operation to use for this request. For more information, see Versioning for the Azure Storage services.
x-ms-client-request-id Optional. Provides a client-generated, opaque value with a 1-kibibyte (KiB) character limit that's recorded in the logs when logging is configured. We highly recommend that you use this header to correlate client-side activities with requests that the server receives. For more information, see Monitor Azure Files.
x-ms-recursive Optional. A Boolean value that specifies if the operation should also apply to the files and subdirectories of the directory specified in the URI.
x-ms-file-request-intent Required if Authorization header specifies an OAuth token. Acceptable value is backup. This header specifies that the Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts/fileServices/readFileBackupSemantics/action or Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts/fileServices/writeFileBackupSemantics/action should be granted if they are included in the RBAC policy assigned to the identity that is authorized using the Authorization header. Available for version 2022-11-02 and later.
x-ms-allow-trailing-dot: { <Boolean> } Optional. Version 2022-11-02 and later. The Boolean value specifies if a trailing dot present in request url should be trimmed or not. For more information, see Naming and referencing shares, directories, files, and metadata.

Request body

None.

Response

The response includes an HTTP status code, a set of response headers, and a response body in XML format.

Status code

A successful operation returns status code 200 (OK). For information about status codes, see Status and error codes.

Response headers

The response for this operation includes the following headers. The response can also include additional, standard HTTP headers. All standard headers conform to the HTTP/1.1 protocol specification.

Response header Description
Content-Type Specifies the format in which the results are returned. Currently this value is application/xml.
x-ms-request-id This header uniquely identifies the request that was made, and can be used for troubleshooting the request. For more information, see Troubleshooting API operations.
x-ms-version Indicates the version of Azure Files used to run the request.
Date A UTC date/time value that indicates the time at which the response was initiated. The service generates this value.
x-ms-client-request-id You can use this header to troubleshoot requests and corresponding responses. The value of this header is equal to the value of the x-ms-client-request-id header, if it's present in the request. The value is at most 1024 visible ASCII characters. If the x-ms-client-request-id header isn't present in the request, this header won't be present in the response.

Response body

The format of the XML response is as follows. Note that the Marker, ShareSnapshot, and MaxResults elements are present only if you specified them on the request URI. The NextMarker element has a value only if the list results aren't complete.

ClientName field in response is optional and returned only when available to the service.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>  
<EnumerationResults>
    <HandleList>
        <Handle>
            <HandleId>handle-id</HandleId>
            <Path>file-or-directory-name-including-full-path</Path>
            <FileId>file-id</FileId>
            <ParentId>parent-file-id</ParentId>
            <SessionId>session-id</SessionId>
            <ClientIp>client-ip</ClientIp>
            <ClientName>client-name</ClientName>
            <OpenTime>opened-time</OpenTime>
            <LastReconnectTime>lastreconnect-time</LastReconnectTime>
            <AccessRightList>
                <AccessRight>Read</AccessRight>
                <AccessRight>Write</AccessRight>
                <AccessRight>Delete</AccessRight>
            </AccessRightList>
        </Handle>
        ...
    </HandleList>
    <NextMarker>next-marker</NextMarker>
</EnumerationResults>

The following table describes fields of the response body:

Field Description Purpose
HandleId XSMB service handle ID, UINT64. Used to identify handle.
Path File name, including the full path, starting from the share root. String. Used to identify the name of the object for which the handle is open.
ClientIp Client IP that opened the handle. String. Used to decide if the handle might have been leaked.
ClientName Optional field. Supported in 2024-02-04 and above. Client Name (Workstation or OS User Name) that opened the handle. String. Used to decide if the handle might have been leaked.
OpenTime Time handle was opened (UTC). DateTime as String. Used to decide if handle might have been leaked. Leaked handles have typically been open for a long time.
LastReconnectTime Time handle was opened (UTC). DateTime as String. Used to decide if handle was reopened after a client/server disconnect, due to networking or other faults. The field is included in the response body only if the disconnect event occurred and the handle was reopened.
FileId File ID, UINT64. FileId uniquely identifies the file. It is useful during renames, because the FileId doesn't change.
ParentId Parent File ID, UINT64. ParentId uniquely identifies the directory. This is useful during renames, because the ParentId doesn't change.
SessionId SMB session ID that specifies the context in which the file handle was opened. UINT64. SessionId is included in event viewer logs when sessions are forcibly disconnected. It allows you to associate a specific batch of leaked handles with a specific network incident.
AccessRightList The access permissions granted to the open handle on file or directory. Available in service version 2023-01-03 and later.

Used to query access permissions held on a file or directory by various open handles. Possible values are READ, WRITE, and DELETE, or a combination of these values.
NextMarker A string that describes the next handle to be listed. It is returned when more handles need to be listed in order to complete the request. The string is used in subsequent requests to list remaining handles. The absence of NextMarker indicates that all relevant handles were listed.

In versions 2021-12-02 and newer, List Handles will percent-encode (per RFC 2396) all Path element values which contain characters invalid in XML (specifically, U+FFFE or U+FFFF). If encoded, the Path element will include an Encoded=true attribute. Note that this will only occur for the Path element values containing the characters invalid in XML, not the remaining Path elements in the response.

ClientName is supported in version 2024-02-04 and later.

Authorization

Only the account owner can call this operation.

Remarks

The HandleId is a service-side handle ID, distinct from the client handle ID. Mapping between the two is possible at the client.

See also