No filesystems depend on it anymore, and it is generally a bad idea. Since all dentries should have the same set of dentry operations in case-insensitive filesystems, it should be configured through ->s_d_op. Signed-off-by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@xxxxxxx> --- fs/libfs.c | 15 --------------- 1 file changed, 15 deletions(-) diff --git a/fs/libfs.c b/fs/libfs.c index b8ecada3a5b2..41c02c003265 100644 --- a/fs/libfs.c +++ b/fs/libfs.c @@ -1784,27 +1784,12 @@ static const struct dentry_operations generic_encrypted_dentry_ops = { * generic_set_encrypted_ci_d_ops - helper for setting d_ops for given dentry * @dentry: dentry to set ops on * - * Casefolded directories need d_hash and d_compare set, so that the dentries - * contained in them are handled case-insensitively. Note that these operations - * are needed on the parent directory rather than on the dentries in it, and - * while the casefolding flag can be toggled on and off on an empty directory, - * dentry_operations can't be changed later. As a result, if the filesystem has - * casefolding support enabled at all, we have to give all dentries the - * casefolding operations even if their inode doesn't have the casefolding flag - * currently (and thus the casefolding ops would be no-ops for now). - * * Encryption works differently in that the only dentry operation it needs is * d_revalidate, which it only needs on dentries that have the no-key name flag. * The no-key flag can't be set "later", so we don't have to worry about that. */ void generic_set_encrypted_ci_d_ops(struct dentry *dentry) { -#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_UNICODE) - if (dentry->d_sb->s_encoding) { - d_set_d_op(dentry, &generic_ci_dentry_ops); - return; - } -#endif #ifdef CONFIG_FS_ENCRYPTION if (dentry->d_flags & DCACHE_NOKEY_NAME) { d_set_d_op(dentry, &generic_encrypted_dentry_ops); -- 2.43.0