On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 10:03 AM, Jan Engelhardt <jengelh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I beg to differ. ctime is not completely useless. It reflects changes on > the inode for when you don't you change the content. Uh. Yes. Except that why is file metadata really different from file data? Most people really don't care. And a lot of people have asked for creation dates - and I seriously doubt that Windows people complain a lot about the fact that there you have mtime for metadata changes too. The point being that Unix ctime semantics certainly have well-defined semantics, but they are in no way "better" than having a real creation time, and are often worse. Just imagine what you could do as an MIS person if you actually had a creation time you could somewhat trust? You talk about seeing somebody change the permissions of /etc/passwd, but realistically, absent preexisting semantics, who would really ask for that? The only reason you mention that as an example of what you can do with ctime is that that is indeed pretty much the _only_ thing you can do with ctime, and it really isn't that useful. In contrast, with a creation date, you see the difference between people overwriting files by writing to them, or overwriting files by creating a new one and moving it over the old one. At a guess, that would be quite as useful to a sysadmin as ctime is now (my gut feel is that it would be more so, but whatever). IOW, there really isn't anything magically good about UNIX ctime semantics, and in fact they are totally broken in the presence of extended attributes (that's file data, but it only changes ctime? WTF is up with that? Yes, I know why it happens, and it makes sense within the insane unix ctime rules, but no way does it make sense in a bigger picture unless you are in total denial and try to claim that xattrs are just metadata despite having contents). And yes, I am also sure that there are applications that do depend on ctime semantics. Trond mentioned NFS serving, and that's unfortunate. I bet there are others. That's inevitable when you have 40 years of history. So I'm not claiming that re-using ctime is painfree, but for somebody that cares about samba a lot, I bet it's a _lot_ better than adding a new time that almost nobody actually supports as things stand now. Of people can just use xattrs and do it all entirely in user space. I assume that's what samba does now, even outside of birthtime. Linus -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html