On Fri, Jul 27, 2018 at 06:35:10PM +0100, David Howells wrote: > params->request indicates the attribute/attributes to be queried. This can > be one of: > > fsinfo_attr_statfs - statfs-style info > fsinfo_attr_fsinfo - Information about fsinfo() > fsinfo_attr_ids - Filesystem IDs > fsinfo_attr_limits - Filesystem limits > fsinfo_attr_supports - What's supported in statx(), IOC flags > fsinfo_attr_capabilities - Filesystem capabilities > fsinfo_attr_timestamp_info - Inode timestamp info > fsinfo_attr_volume_id - Volume ID (string) > fsinfo_attr_volume_uuid - Volume UUID > fsinfo_attr_volume_name - Volume name (string) > fsinfo_attr_cell_name - Cell name (string) > fsinfo_attr_domain_name - Domain name (string) > fsinfo_attr_realm_name - Realm name (string) > fsinfo_attr_server_name - Name of the Nth server (string) > fsinfo_attr_server_address - Mth address of the Nth server > fsinfo_attr_parameter - Nth mount parameter (string) > fsinfo_attr_source - Nth mount source name (string) > fsinfo_attr_name_encoding - Filename encoding (string) > fsinfo_attr_name_codepage - Filename codepage (string) > fsinfo_attr_io_size - I/O size hints Umm... What's so special about cell/volume/domain/realm? And what do we do when a random filesystem gets added - should its parameters go into catch-all pile (attr_parameter), or should they get classes of their own? For Cthulhu sake, who's going to maintain that enum in face of random out-of-tree filesystems, each wanting a class or two its own? We'd tried that with device numbers; ask hpa how well has that worked and how much did he love the whole experience...