Re: [PATCH v2 2/4] fs: add FS_IOC_FSSETXATTRAT and FS_IOC_FSGETXATTRAT

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On Thu, Jun 06, 2024 at 12:27:38PM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 05, 2024 at 08:13:15AM +0300, Amir Goldstein wrote:
> > On Wed, Jun 5, 2024 at 3:38 AM Darrick J. Wong <djwong@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > On Tue, Jun 04, 2024 at 10:58:43AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> > > > On Mon 03-06-24 10:42:59, Darrick J. Wong wrote:
> > > > > I do -- allowing unpriviledged users to create symlinks that consume
> > > > > icount (and possibly bcount) in the root project breaks the entire
> > > > > enforcement mechanism.  That's not the way that project quota has worked
> > > > > on xfs and it would be quite rude to nullify the PROJINHERIT flag bit
> > > > > only for these special cases.
> > > >
> > > > OK, fair enough. I though someone will hate this. I'd just like to
> > > > understand one thing: Owner of the inode can change the project ID to 0
> > > > anyway so project quotas are more like a cooperative space tracking scheme
> > > > anyway. If you want to escape it, you can. So what are you exactly worried
> > > > about? Is it the container usecase where from within the user namespace you
> > > > cannot change project IDs?
> > >
> > > Yep.
> > >
> > > > Anyway I just wanted to have an explicit decision that the simple solution
> > > > is not good enough before we go the more complex route ;).
> > >
> > > Also, every now and then someone comes along and half-proposes making it
> > > so that non-root cannot change project ids anymore.  Maybe some day that
> > > will succeed.
> > >
> > 
> > I'd just like to point out that the purpose of the project quotas feature
> > as I understand it, is to apply quotas to subtrees, where container storage
> > is a very common private case of project subtree.
> 
> That is the most modern use case, yes.
> 
> [ And for a walk down history lane.... ]

Could you take all your institutional knowledge and paste it into a
Documentation/ file that we can use as a starting point for what exactly
does the project quota design do, please?  I'm betting the other two
filesystems that implement it (ext4/f2fs) don't quite implement the same
behaviors.

--D

> > The purpose is NOT to create a "project" of random files in random
> > paths.
> 
> This is *exactly* the original use case that project quotas were
> designed for back on Irix in the early 1990s and is the original
> behaviour project quotas brought to Linux.
> 
> Project quota inheritance didn't come along until 2005:
> 
> commit 65f1866a3a8e512d43795c116bfef262e703b789
> Author: Nathan Scott <nathans@xxxxxxx>
> Date:   Fri Jun 3 06:04:22 2005 +0000
> 
>     Add support for project quota inheritance, a merge of Glens changes.
>     Merge of xfs-linux-melb:xfs-kern:22806a by kenmcd.
> 
> And full support for directory tree quotas using project IDs wasn't
> fully introduced until a year later in 2006:
> 
> commit 4aef4de4d04bcc36a1461c100eb940c162fd5ee6
> Author: Nathan Scott <nathans@xxxxxxx>
> Date:   Tue May 30 15:54:53 2006 +0000
> 
>     statvfs component of directory/project quota support, code originally by Glen.
>     Merge of xfs-linux-melb:xfs-kern:26105a by kenmcd.
> 
> These changes were largely done for an SGI NAS product that allowed
> us to create one great big XFS filesystem and then create
> arbitrarily sized, thin provisoned  "NFS volumes"  as directory
> quota controlled subdirs instantenously. The directory tree quota
> defined the size of the volume, and so we could also grow and shrink
> them instantenously, too. And we could remove them instantenously
> via background garbage collection after the export was removed and
> the user had been told it had been destroyed.
> 
> So that was the original use case for directory tree quotas on XFS -
> providing scalable, fast management of "thin" storage for a NAS
> product. Projects quotas had been used for accounting random
> colections of files for over a decade before this directory quota
> construct was created, and the "modern" container use cases for
> directory quotas didn't come along until almost a decade after this
> capability was added.
> 
> > My point is that changing the project id of a non-dir child to be different
> > from the project id of its parent is a pretty rare use case (I think?).
> 
> Not if you are using project quotas as they were originally intended
> to be used.
> 
> > If changing the projid of non-dir is needed for moving it to a
> > different subtree,
> > we could allow renameat2(2) of non-dir with no hardlinks to implicitly
> > change its
> > inherited project id or explicitly with a flag for a hardlink, e.g.:
> > renameat2(olddirfd, name, newdirfd, name, RENAME_NEW_PROJID).
> 
> Why?
> 
> The only reason XFS returns -EXDEV to rename across project IDs is
> because nobody wanted to spend the time to work out how to do the
> quota accounting of the metadata changed in the rename operation
> accurately. So for that rare case (not something that would happen
> on the NAS product) we returned -EXDEV to trigger the mv command to
> copy the file to the destination and then unlink the source instead,
> thereby handling all the quota accounting correctly.
> 
> IOWs, this whole "-EXDEV on rename across parent project quota
> boundaries" is an implementation detail and nothing more.
> Filesystems that implement project quotas and the directory tree
> sub-variant don't need to behave like this if they can accurately
> account for the quota ID changes during an atomic rename operation.
> If that's too hard, then the fallback is to return -EXDEV and let
> userspace do it the slow way which will always acocunt the resource
> usage correctly to the individual projects.
> 
> Hence I think we should just fix the XFS kernel behaviour to do the
> right thing in this special file case rather than return -EXDEV and
> then forget about the rest of it. Sure, update xfs_repair to fix the
> special file project id issue if it trips over it, but other than
> that I don't think we need anything more. If fixing it requires new
> syscalls and tools, then that's much harder to backport to old
> kernels and distros than just backporting a couple of small XFS
> kernel patches...
> 
> -Dave.
> -- 
> Dave Chinner
> david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> 




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