Awesome
execfuse is a implement FUSE filesystems using a bunch of scripts.
Consider it as a "shell FUSE binding".
For each FUSE call (except of ones that deals with file descriptors) execfuse calls your script. For opening files it provides a bit higher level abstraction: "read_file" script is called when file should be read and "write_file" is called when file should be saved.
Example:
$ mkdir -p m
$ ./execfuse examples/xmp m
$ ls -l m/bin/sh
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 Mar 26 00:26 m/bin/sh -> bash
(executes "examples/xmp/readlink /bin/bash" for this)
$ ls m/etc/iproute2/
ematch_map group rt_dsfield rt_protos rt_realms rt_scopes rt_tables
(executes "exampels/xmp/readdir /etc/iproute" for this)
$ m/bin/echo qqq
qqq
$ mkdir -p m/tmp/1/2/3
$ echo 12345 > m/tmp/12345
(executes "exampels/xmp/write_file /tmp/12345" with content piped to stdin)
$ rm -Rf m/tmp/1*
$ fusermount -u m
Limitations:
- Each file must fit in memory, can't write/read part of file
- Slow by design
- Limited error handling, especially for writing files
- Modifications to files are visible only after file closing
Filesystem examples:
examples/xmp
- try to be fusexmp_fhexamples/hello
- very simple demo filesystemexamples/video_frames
- extract frames from video as*.ppm
files and enumerate keyframes (using ffmpeg)