On Mon, 23 Aug 2010 09:06:04 +1000, Neil Brown <neilb@xxxxxxx> wrote: > On Sat, 21 Aug 2010 01:13:52 -0600 > Andreas Dilger <andreas.dilger@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On 2010-08-20, at 18:09, Neil Brown <neilb@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > How about a new AT flag: AT_FILE_HANDLE > > > > > > Meaning is that the 'dirfd' is used only to identify a filesystem (vfsmnt) and > > > the 'name' pointer actually points to a filehandle fragment interpreted in > > > that filesystem. > > > > > > One problem is that there is no way to pass the length... > > > Options: > > > fragment is at most 64 bytes nul padded at the end > > > fragment is hex encoded and nul terminated > > > ?? > > > > > > I think I prefer the hex encoding, but I'm hoping someone else has a better > > > idea. > > > > That makes it ugly for the kernel to stringify and parse the file handles. > > We already parse filenames into components separated by '/'. Is HEX decoding > that much more ugly. > > Filehandles are currently passed between the kernel and mountd as HEX > strings, so at least there is some precedent. > > > > > How about for AT_FILE_HANDLE THE FIRST __u32 (maybe with an extra __u32 for alignment) is the length and the rest of the binary file handle follows this? In fact, doesn't the handle itself already encode the length in the header? > > That part of a filehandle that nfsd gives to the filesystem is one byte out > of a 4-byte header, plus the tail of the filehandle after the part that > identifies the filesystem. > This 'one byte' does imply the length, but it doesn't necessarily encode it. > Rather it is a 'type'. So it cannot really be used to determine the length > at the point when the filehandle would need to be copied from userspace into > the kernel. > > > I don't think there is any precedent for passing a 4-byte length followed by > a binary string, while there is plenty of precedent for passing a > nul-terminated ASCII string. > > [[ Following this approach I would like to avoid any filehandle-specific > syscalls altogether. > Just use a *at syscall with AT_FILE_HANDLE for filehandle lookup, and use > getxattr('system:linux.file_handle') to get the filehandle for a given path. > > Ofcourse we would need to at *at versions of the *xattr syscalls, but that is > probably a good idea anyway. > ]] There are at* syscalls that doesn't take the additional flags as the argument, like openat, readlinkat. How will handle based open and readlink work with the above interface ? -aneesh -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html