On Mon 27-05-24 04:47:56, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > On Sun, May 26, 2024 at 12:01:08PM -0700, Aleksa Sarai wrote: > > The existing interface already provides a mount ID which is not even > > safe without rebooting. > > And that seems to be a big part of the problem where the Linux by handle > syscall API deviated from all know precedence for no good reason. NFS > file handles which were the start of this do (and have to) encode a > persistent file system identifier. As do the xfs handles (although they > do the decoding in the userspace library on Linux for historic reasons), > as do the FreeBSD equivalents to these syscalls. So I was wondering how this is actually working in practice. Checking the code, NFS server is (based on configuration in /etc/exports) either using device number as the filesystem identifier or fsid / uuid as specified in /etc/exports. > > An alternative would be to return something unique to the filesystem > > superblock, but as far as I can tell there is no guarantee that every > > Linux filesystem's fsid is sufficiently unique to act as a globally > > unique identifier. At least with a 64-bit mount ID and statmount(2), > > userspace can decide what information is needed to get sufficiently > > unique information about the source filesystem. > > Well, every file system that supports export ops already needs a > globally unique ID for NFS to work properly. We might not have good > enough interfaces for that, but that shouldn't be too hard. So as my research above shows, this ID is either manually configured in /etc/exports or NFS server uses device number which is not guaranteed to be persistent. Filesystems, at least currently, have no obligation to provide anything (and some of them indeed don't provide any uuid or persistent fsid). I guess that's the reason why mount ID is reported with name_to_handle_at(). Don't get me wrong, I agree with your reservations towards mount ID (per mount instead of per-sb, non-persistent) and I agree the properties you describe are the golden standard we should strive for but I mainly wanted to point out this is not reality today and in particular providing the "persistency" guarantee of the filesystem ID may require on disk format changes for some filesystems. So returning the 64-bit mount ID from name_to_handle_at() weasels out of these "how to identify arbitrary superblock" problems by giving userspace a reasonably reliable way to generate this superblock identifier itself. I'm fully open to less errorprone API for this but at this point I don't see it so changing the mount ID returned from name_to_handle_at() to 64-bit unique one seems like a sane practical choice to me... Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR