Currently the inotify interface in the kernel can only be used for local file systems (unlike the previous change notify API used years ago, and the change notify interface in Windows and other OS which is primarily of interest for network file systems). I wanted to discuss the VFS changes needed to allow inotify requests to be passed into file systems so network and cluster file systems (as an example in the SMB3 case this simply means sending a SMB3_CHANGE_NOTIFY request to the server, whether Samba or Cloud (Azure) or Mac or Windows or Network Appliance - all support the API on the server side, the problem is that the network or cluster fs client isn't told about the request to wait on the inotify event). Although user space tools can use file system specific ioctls to wait on events, it is obviously preferable to allow network and cluster file systems to wait on events using the calls which current Linux GUIs use. This would allow gnome file manager GUI for example to be automatically updated when a file is added to an open directory window from another remote client. It would also fix the embarrassing problem noted in the inotify man page: "Inotify reports only events that a user-space program triggers through the filesystem API. As a result, it does not catch remote events that occur on network filesystems." but that is precisely the types of notifications that are most useful ... users often are aware of updates to local directories from the same system, but ... automatic notifications that allow GUIs to be updated on changes from **other** clients is of more value (and this is exactly what the equivalent API allows on other OS). The changes to the Linux VFS are small. -- Thanks, Steve