Right now, opening block devices in a race-free way is incredibly hard. The only reasonable approach I know of is sd_device_new_from_path() + sd_device_open(), and is only available in systemd git main. It also requires waiting on systemd-udev to have processed udev rules, which can be a bottleneck. There are better approaches in various special cases, such as using device-mapper ioctls to check that the device one has opened still has the name and/or UUID one expects. However, none of them works for a plain call to open(2). A much better approach would be for udev to point its symlinks at "/dev/disk/by-diskseq/$DISKSEQ" for non-partition disk devices, or at "/dev/disk/by-diskseq/${DISKSEQ}p${PARTITION}" for partitions. A filesystem would then be mounted at "/dev/disk/by-diskseq" that provides for race-free opening of these paths. This could be implemented in userspace using FUSE, either with difficulty using the current kernel API, or easily and efficiently using a new kernel API for opening a block device by diskseq + partition. However, I think this should be handled by the Linux kernel itself. What would be necessary to get this into the kernel? I would like to implement this, but I don’t have the time to do so anytime soon. Is anyone else interested in taking this on? I suspect the kernel code needed to implement this would be quite a bit smaller than the FUSE implementation. -- Sincerely, Demi Marie Obenour (she/her/hers) Invisible Things Lab
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