On Tuesday, May 29, 2018 11:23:17 PM IST Eric Biggers wrote: > Hi Chandan, > > On Tue, May 29, 2018 at 08:34:21AM +0530, Chandan Rajendra wrote: > > On Tuesday, May 29, 2018 1:04:37 AM IST Theodore Y. Ts'o wrote: > > > On Mon, May 28, 2018 at 11:05:52AM +0530, Chandan Rajendra wrote: > > > > > Can you describe more of what you are doing here; specifically, you > > > > > deleted all of fs/ext4/readpage.c --- was this because you moved > > > > > functionality back into fs/mpage.c? Did you make sure all of the > > > > > local changes in fs/ext4/readpage was moved back to fs/mpage.c? > > > > > > > > > > If the goal is to refactor code to remove the need for > > > > > fs/ext4/readpage.c, you should probably make that be the first patch > > > > > as a prerequisite patch. And we then need to make sure we don't > > > > > accidentally break anyone else who might be using fs/mpage.c. Saying > > > > > a bit more about why you think the refactor is a good thing would also > > > > > be useful. > > > > > > > > I will split this patch into two as suggested by you. Also, I will update > > > > the commit messages. > > > > > > Note that I was planning on making changes to fs/ext4/readpage.c as > > > part of integrating fsverity[1][2] support into ext4. Basically, I > > > need to do something like [3] to fs/ext4/readpage.c. > > > > > > [1] https://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-fsdevel/msg121182.html > > > [2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlEWcVuRbNA > > > [3] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mhalcrow/linux.git/commit/?h=fs-verity-dev&id=827faba05972517f49fa2f2aaf272150f5766af2 > > > > > > Which is why I'm really interested in your reasoning for why you > > > propose to drop fs/ext4/readpage.c. :-) > > > > > > > The first patchset to support encryption in subpage-blocksize scenario copied > > the block_read_full_page() from fs/buffer.c to ext4/readpage.c and had made > > changes required to support encryption in that function. However, the > > conclusion was to not create copies of existing code but rather add support > > for decryption inside generic mpage_readpage[s] functions. Hence this patchset > > implements the required decryption logic in the generic mpage_readpage[s] > > functions. Since this makes the code in ext4/readpage.c redundant, I had > > decided to delete the ext4/readpage.c. > > > > Strictly speaking, I don't think anything has been "concluded" yet. The issue, > as I saw it, was that your original patchset just copy-and-pasted lots more > generic code from fs/buffer.c into ext4, without consideration of alternatives > that would allow the code to be shared, such as adding a postprocessing callback > to mpage_readpage{,s}(). My hope was that you would thoughtfully consider the > alternatives and make a decision of what was the best solution, and then explain > that decision as part of your patchset -- not just implement some solution > without much explanation, which makes it very difficult for people to decide > whether it's the best solution or not. > > And yes, now that fs-verity is planned to be a thing too, we should stop > thinking of the problem as specifically "how to support decryption", but rather > how to support the ability to post-process the data using potentially multiple > length-preserving postprocessing steps such as decryption, > integrity/authenticity verification, etc. > > I'll take a closer look at this patch when I have a chance, but as Ted pointed > out it really needs to be split out into multiple patches. Just as a > preliminary comment, it looks like you are directly calling into fs/crypto/ from > fs/buffer.c, e.g. fscrypt_enqueue_decrypt_bio(). I don't understand that. If > you're doing that (which would start requiring that fscrypt be built-in, not > modular) then there should be no need for the filesystem to pass a > postprocessing callback to the generic code, as you could just check > S_ISREG(inode->i_mode) && IS_ENCRYPTED(inode) in generic code to tell whether > decryption needs to be done. The whole point of the postprocessing callback > would be to allow the generic read code to be used without it having to be aware > of all the specific types of post-read processing that filesystems may want. Hi Eric, I had misunderstood the requirement. Sorry about that. I had written the patchset in its current form with the understanding that fs/buffer.c and fs/ext4/*.c would need to get compiled even when fscrypt code isn't compiled at all. When the fscrypt module isn't selected for build in the kernel config, calls to fscrypt_*() functions would end up calling the equivalent nop functions in fscrypt_notsupp.h file. For the generic code to be completely unaware of several stages of "post processing" functionality, I would most likely have to add more callback pointers into the newly introduced "struct post_process_read" structure. I will work on this and post the results in the next version of the patchset. -- chandan