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FltGetTunneledName function (fltkernel.h)

The FltGetTunneledName routine retrieves the tunneled name for a file, given the normalized name returned for the file by a previous call to FltGetFileNameInformation, FltGetFileNameInformationUnsafe, or FltGetDestinationFileNameInformation.

Syntax

NTSTATUS FLTAPI FltGetTunneledName(
  [in]  PFLT_CALLBACK_DATA         CallbackData,
  [in]  PFLT_FILE_NAME_INFORMATION FileNameInformation,
  [out] PFLT_FILE_NAME_INFORMATION *RetTunneledFileNameInformation
);

Parameters

[in] CallbackData

Pointer to the callback data structure for the I/O operation (FLT_CALLBACK_DATA). This parameter is required and cannot be NULL.

[in] FileNameInformation

Pointer to an FLT_FILE_NAME_INFORMATION structure containing normalized name information returned by a previous call to FltGetFileNameInformation, FltGetFileNameInformationUnsafe, or FltGetDestinationFileNameInformation for the file.

[out] RetTunneledFileNameInformation

Pointer to a caller-allocated variable that receives the address of a newly allocated structure containing the tunneled file name. If no tunneled name is found, this variable receives NULL. This parameter is required and cannot be NULL on input.

Return value

FltGetTunneledName returns STATUS_SUCCESS if the tunneled name is found or if there is no tunneled name for the file. Otherwise, it returns an NTSTATUS value, such as the following:

Return code Description
STATUS_INSUFFICIENT_RESOURCES FltGetTunneledName encountered a pool allocation failure. This is an error code.

Remarks

File systems, such as NTFS and FAT, use a per-volume tunnel cache to briefly preserve file names and other metadata for files that are being renamed, linked to, or deleted. File name tunneling can cause the final component in normalized file name information returned by a preoperation call to FltGetFileNameInformation, FltGetFileNameInformationUnsafe, or FltGetDestinationFileNameInformation to be invalidated.

If a minifilter driver retrieves normalized file name information in the preoperation callback routine (PFLT_PRE_OPERATION_CALLBACK) for a create (IRP_MJ_CREATE), hard-link (IRP_MJ_SET_INFORMATION with FILE_INFORMATION_CLASS set to FileLinkInformation), or rename operation (IRP_MJ_SET_INFORMATION with FILE_INFORMATION_CLASS set to FileRenameInformation), it must call FltGetTunneledName from its postoperation callback routine (PFLT_POST_OPERATION_CALLBACK) to retrieve the correct file name information for the file.

Only normalized file name information is affected by tunneling. The Filter Manager cannot ensure that the final component is normalized until after the create, hard-link, or rename operation has actually occurred, because tunneling can cause a short name to be changed to a long name. Thus a minifilter driver must call FltGetTunneledName from its postoperation callback routine to determine whether the normalized file name information retrieved in the preoperation callback routine is valid.

For more information about normalized file name information, see FLT_FILE_NAME_INFORMATION.

Minifilter drivers that only retrieve short or opened file name information should not call FltGetTunneledName.

After calling FltGetFileNameInformation, FltGetFileNameInformationUnsafe, or FltGetDestinationFileNameInformation in the preoperation callback routine, the minifilter driver must store the returned FileNameInformation pointer in the preoperation callback routine's CompletionContext structure so that the postoperation callback can pass this pointer in the FileNameInformation parameter to FltGetTunneledName.

Note

File name tunneling affects only create, hard-link, and rename operations in this way. It does not affect other I/O operations, such as read and write.

The following paired operations can cause the file name name to be tunneled:

  • delete(name)/create(name)
  • delete(name)/rename(source, name)
  • rename(name, newname)/create(name)
  • rename(name, newname)/rename(source, name)

If no tunneled name is found for the file, the RetTunneledFileNameInformation parameter receives NULL.

After a successful call to FltGetTunneledName, the caller is responsible for releasing the RetTunneledFileNameInformation and FileNameInformation pointers when they are no longer needed by calling FltReleaseFileNameInformation.

FltGetTunneledName should only be called from a minifilter driver's postoperation callback routine for IRP_MJ_CREATE or IRP_MJ_SET_INFORMATION. Calling FltGetTunneledName from a postoperation callback routine for any other type of I/O operation, or calling it from a preoperation callback routine, is a programming error.

The caller must not modify the contents of the structure returned in the RetTunneledFileNameInformation parameter, because this structure is cached by the Filter Manager so that all minifilter drivers can use it.

File tunneling enables compatibility with programs that rely on file systems to preserve file meta-information for a short period of time; for example, for the safe save process. Tunneling preserves the association between a file's long and short (8.3) name. When a file name is removed from a directory (rename or delete), its short and long name pair and creation time are saved in a tunnel cache, keyed by the name that was removed. When a name is added to a directory (rename or create), the cache is searched to determine if there is information to restore. The cache is effective per instance of a directory. If a directory is deleted, its cache is removed.

Requirements

Requirement Value
Target Platform Universal
Header fltkernel.h (include Fltkernel.h)
Library FltMgr.lib
DLL Fltmgr.sys
IRQL <= APC_LEVEL

See also

FLT_CALLBACK_DATA

FLT_FILE_NAME_INFORMATION

FltGetDestinationFileNameInformation

FltGetFileNameInformation

FltGetFileNameInformationUnsafe

FltParseFileNameInformation

FltReferenceFileNameInformation

FltReleaseFileNameInformation

PFLT_POST_OPERATION_CALLBACK

PFLT_PRE_OPERATION_CALLBACK