Andreas Dilger <adilger@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > What happens when an application uses STATX_ALL from a future kernel > > that defines more flags than are initially supported, and that > > application then is run on a kernel that onyl supports the initial > > fields? > > Fields that are unknown by the current kernel/filesystem will not be set, > and this is reflected in the flags that are returned to userspace. Yep. A userspace program can stick 0xffffffff in there if it wants. No error will be incurred. It just won't necessarily get anything back for each of those bits. That said, if we, say, want to reserve bit 31 as a struct extension bit, sticking in 0xffffffff without knowing what this is going to do to you on a kernel that supports a longer struct might give you a problem. But, basically, STATX_ALL indicates what flags have fields in the copy of the struct you got from the header file. There's an extra scenario: you could compile your userspace program against the headers for a particular kernel and then run against a later kernel. In such a case, you may find bits set that are outside STATX_ALL in stx_mask. However, you don't have definitions for those bits and can only ignore them. > > Again, we have many more common and extended flags than this. > > NOATIME and SYNC are two that immediately come to mind as generic > > flags that should be in this... > > Sure, and they can be added incrementally in a later patch. I'm not > sure why NOATIME and SYNC are missing, and I'm not against adding them, > but it is equally likely that they were removed in a previous round of > bikeshedding to avoid some real or perceived issue, so that this patch > can finally land rather than being in limbo for another 5 years. Does it make sense to return them through statx? Note that NOATIME might be considered superfluous given that STATX_ATIME is cleared in such a case. > >> New flags include: > >> > >> STATX_ATTR_NONUNIX_OWNERSHIP File doesn't have Unixy ownership > >> STATX_ATTR_HAS_ACL File has an ACL > > > > So statx will require us to do ACL lookups? i.e. instead of just > > reading the inode to get the information, we'll also have to do > > extended attribute lookups? That's potentially very expensive if > > the extended attribute is not stored in the inode.... > > No, there is no requirement to return anything that the caller didn't > ask for. Only fields that are explicitly requested need to be returned, > and others can optionally be returned if it is easy for the filesystem > to do so. Actually, Dave might have a point. We don't necessarily know that the file has an ACL without doing a getxattr() to probe for it - on the other hand, I would expect the permissions check to have done precisely that. David -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html