Miklos Szeredi <miklos@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > (2) It's more efficient as we can return specific binary data rather than > > making huge text dumps. Granted, sysfs and procfs could present the > > same data, though as lots of little files which have to be > > individually opened, read, closed and parsed. > > Asked this a number of times, but you haven't answered yet: what > application would require such a high efficiency? Low efficiency means more time doing this when that time could be spent doing other things - or even putting the CPU in a powersaving state. Using an open/read/close render-to-text-and-parse interface *will* be slower and less efficient as there are more things you have to do to use it. Then consider doing a walk over all the mounts in the case where there are 10000 of them - we have issues with /proc/mounts for such. fsinfo() will end up doing a lot less work. > I strongly feel that mount info belongs in the latter category I feel strongly that a lot of stuff done through /proc or /sys shouldn't be. Yes, it's nice that you can explore it with cat and poke it with echo, but it has a number of problems: security, atomiticity, efficiency and providing an round-the-back way to pin stuff if not done right. > > (3) We wouldn't have the overhead of open and close (even adding a > > self-contained readfile() syscall has to do that internally > > Busted: add f_op->readfile() and be done with all that. For example > DEFINE_SHOW_ATTRIBUTE() could be trivially moved to that interface. Look at your example. "f_op->". That's "file->f_op->" I presume. You would have to make it "i_op->" to avoid the open and the close - and for things like procfs and sysfs, that's probably entirely reasonable - but bear in mind that you still have to apply all the LSM file security controls, just in case the backing filesystem is, say, ext4 rather than procfs. > We could optimize existing proc, sys, etc. interfaces, but it's not > been an issue, apparently. You can't get rid of or change many of the existing interfaces. A lot of them are effectively indirect system calls and are, as such, part of the fixed UAPI. You'd have to add a parallel optimised set. > > (6) Don't have to create/delete a bunch of sysfs/procfs nodes each time a > > mount happens or is removed - and since systemd makes much use of > > mount namespaces and mount propagation, this will create a lot of > > nodes. > > Not true. This may not be true if you roll your own special filesystem. It *is* true if you do it in procfs or sysfs. The files don't exist if you don't create nodes or attribute tables for them. > > The argument for doing this through procfs/sysfs/somemagicfs is that > > someone using a shell can just query the magic files using ordinary text > > tools, such as cat - and that has merit - but it doesn't solve the > > query-by-pathname problem. > > > > The suggested way around the query-by-pathname problem is to open the > > target file O_PATH and then look in a magic directory under procfs > > corresponding to the fd number to see a set of attribute files[*] laid out. > > Bash, however, can't open by O_PATH or O_NOFOLLOW as things stand... > > Bash doesn't have fsinfo(2) either, so that's not really a good argument. I never claimed that fsinfo() could be accessed directly from the shell. For you proposal, you claimed "immediately usable from all programming languages, including scripts". > Implementing a utility to show mount attribute(s) by path is trivial > for the file based interface, while it would need to be updated for > each extension of fsinfo(2). Same goes for libc, language bindings, > etc. That's not precisely true. If you aren't using an extension to an fsinfo() attribute, you wouldn't need to change anything[*]. If you want to use an extension - *even* through a file based interface - you *would* have to change your code and your parser. And, no, extending an fsinfo() attribute would not require any changes to libc unless libc is using that attribute[*] and wants to access the extension. [*] I assume that in C/C++ at least, you'd use linux/fsinfo.h rather than some libc version. [*] statfs() could be emulated this way, but I'm not sure what else libc specifically is going to look at. This is more aimed at libmount amongst other things. David