On Wed, Mar 15, 2023 at 11:08:23AM +0000, Luís Henriques wrote: > > So, actually I think this patch doesn't make sense. If ceph is doing the above > > in its ->lookup() anyway, then it just should do the exact same thing in its > > ->atomic_open() too. > > In fact, my initial fix for the cephfs bug was doing just that. It was a > single patch to ceph_atomic_open() that would simply do: > > if (IS_ENCRYPTED(dir)) { > set_bit(CEPH_MDS_R_FSCRYPT_FILE, &req->r_req_flags); > err = __fscrypt_prepare_readdir(dir); > if (!err && !fscrypt_has_encryption_key(dir)) { > spin_lock(&dentry->d_lock); > dentry->d_flags |= DCACHE_NOKEY_NAME; > spin_unlock(&dentry->d_lock); > } > } > > What made me want to create a new helper was that I simply needed to call > fscrypt_get_encryption_info() to force the encryption info to be set in > the parent directory. But this function was only accessible through > __fscrypt_prepare_readdir(), which isn't really a great function name for > what I need here. > > Since __fscrypt_prepare_readdir() doesn't seem to be used anywhere else, > maybe it could be removed and fscrypt_get_encryption_info() be exported > instead? Well, fscrypt_get_encryption_info() *used* to be exported, but it was hard to keep track of its use cases (some of which were not actually necessary), which is why it eventually got replaced with use-case oriented helper functions. Maybe just use fscrypt_prepare_lookup_partial() for the name of your new helper function (instead of fscrypt_prepare_atomic_open())? - Eric