On Mon, Mar 25, 2024 at 11:26:59AM -0500, Steve French wrote: > A loosely related question. Do I need to change cifs.ko to return the > pointer to inode on mknod now? dentry->inode is NULL in the case of mknod > from cifs.ko (and presumably some other fs as Al noted), unlike mkdir and > create where it is filled in. Is there a perf advantage in filling in the > dentry->inode in the mknod path in the fs or better to leave it as is? Is > there a good example to borrow from on this? AFAICS, that case in in CIFS is the only instance of ->mknod() that does this "skip lookups, just unhash and return 0" at the moment. What's more, it really had been broken all along for one important case - AF_UNIX bind(2) with address (== socket pathname) being on the filesystem in question. Options: 1) make vfs_mknod() callers aware of the possibility, have the ones that care do lookup in case when return value is 0 and dentry is unhashed. That's similar to what we do for vfs_mkdir(). No changes needed for CIFS or fs/namei.c (i.e. do_mknodat()), unix_bind() definitely needs a change, ecryptfs can stay as-is, overlayfs just needs to stop complaining when it sees that situation, nfsd might or might not need a change - hadn't checked yet. In that case we document ->mknod() as "may unhash and return 0 if it wants to save a lookup". 2) make vfs_mknod() check for that case and have it call ->lookup() if it sees that. I don't see any benefits to that, TBH - no performance benefits anywhere and no real simplification for ->mknod() instances. It does avoid the need to change anything in CIFS, though. 3) require ->mknod() instances to make dentry positive on success. CIFS needs a fix, documentation gets updated to explicitly require that. AFAICS, nothing else would need to be touched, except possibly adding a warning in vfs_mknod() to catch violation of that rule. Note that cifs_sfu_make_node() is the only case in CIFS where that happens - other codepaths (both in cifs_make_node() and in smb2_make_node()) will instantiate. How painful would it be for cifs_sfu_make_node()? AFAICS, you do open/sync_write/close there; would it be hard to do an eqiuvalent of fstat and set the inode up? No need to reread the file contents (as cifs_sfu_type() does), and you do have full path anyway, so it's less work than for full ->lookup() even if you need a path-based protocol operations... Does that thing have an equivalent of fstat() that would return the metadata of opened file?