On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 04:31:21AM -0700, Daniel Rosenberg wrote: > +/* > + * Determine if the name of a dentry should be casefolded. It does not make > + * sense to casefold the no-key token of an encrypted filename. > + * > + * Return: if names will need casefolding > + */ > +static bool needs_casefold(const struct inode *dir, const struct dentry *dentry) > +{ > + return IS_CASEFOLDED(dir) && dir->i_sb->s_encoding && > + !(dentry->d_flags & DCACHE_ENCRYPTED_NAME); > +} > + [...] > +/** > + * generic_ci_d_hash - generic d_hash implementation for casefolding filesystems > + * @dentry: dentry whose name we are hashing > + * @str: qstr of name whose hash we should fill in > + * > + * Return: 0 if hash was successful, or -ERRNO > + */ > +int generic_ci_d_hash(const struct dentry *dentry, struct qstr *str) > +{ > + const struct inode *inode = READ_ONCE(dentry->d_inode); > + struct super_block *sb = dentry->d_sb; > + const struct unicode_map *um = sb->s_encoding; > + int ret = 0; > + > + if (!inode || !needs_casefold(inode, dentry)) > + return 0; > + > + ret = utf8_casefold_hash(um, dentry, str); > + if (ret < 0) > + goto err; > + > + return 0; > +err: > + if (sb_has_strict_encoding(sb)) > + ret = -EINVAL; > + else > + ret = 0; > + return ret; > +} > +EXPORT_SYMBOL(generic_ci_d_hash); I thought this was discussed before, but the 'dentry' passed to ->d_hash() is the parent dentry, not the one being hashed. Therefore checking DCACHE_ENCRYPTED_NAME on 'dentry' is wrong here. Instead we need to use !fscrypt_has_encryption_key() here. (IOW, while checking DCACHE_ENCRYPTED_NAME is better *when possible*, it's not possible here.) Note that the whole point of ->d_hash() is to hash the filename so that the VFS can find the dentry. If the VFS already had the dentry, there would be no need for ->d_hash(). Also, did you consider my suggestion to not handle encrypt+casefold in this patch? I'd like to get this series in as a refactoring for 5.9. The encryption handling (which is new) might better belong in a later patch series. - Eric