On 21/11/14 21:29, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 1:18 PM, Eric Blake <eblake@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 11/21/2014 01:48 PM, Pádraig Brady wrote: >>> On 21/11/14 19:55, Andy Lutomirski wrote: >>>> On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 10:39 AM, Pádraig Brady <P@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> On 21/11/14 18:09, Andy Lutomirski wrote: >>>>>> On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 6:17 AM, Pádraig Brady <P@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>>> If 'a' and 'b' are hardlinks, then the command `mv a b & mv b a` >>>>>>> can result in both being removed as mv needs to emulate the >>>>>>> move with an unlink of the source file. This can only be done >>>>>>> without races in the kernel and so mv was recently changed >>>>>>> to not allow this operation at all. mv could safely reintroduce >>>>>>> this feature by leveraging a new flag for renameat() for which >>>>>>> an illustrative/untested patch is attached. >>>>>> >>>>>> ISTM the issue is that rename(2) does nothing if the source and dest >>>>>> are hardlinks to each other. Is that intentional? I don't see that >>>>>> behavior as required in the POSIX rename docs. >> >> Yes, POSIX unfortunately requires that behavior: >> >> http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/rename.html >> >> "If the old argument and the new argument resolve to either the same >> existing directory entry or different directory entries for the same >> existing file, rename() shall return successfully and perform no other >> action." >> >>>>> >>>>> It's surprising and annoying that existing systems do this, >>>>> but they're conforming to the wording of POSIX I thinkg as >>>>> it says that rename() does nothing when the source and dest >>>>> _file_ is the same. What POSIX really meant I suppose was _file name_. >>>>> Eric, perhaps an adjustment could be proposed to POSIX, as I can't >>>>> see anything relying on the current behavior? >> >> The POSIX wording describes existing practice of all implementations, >> and as annoying as it is, requiring all implementations to change would >> be too invasive, and going against that wording without the use of an >> extension to renameat would catch software off-guard that is expecting >> the baked-in POSIX semantics. >> >> That said, would you still like me to take a stab at a proposal to the >> POSIX folks that would relax the requirements to allow >> implementation-defined behavior when the two arguments to rename >> describe the same file but via different directory entries? I guess there is no point discussing in POSIX and adding extra implementation options if no implementations do/will act accordingly. Linux can decide to do that independently, if appropriate. This is one of those borderline cases where we balance accretion of cruft vs incompatibility. On consideration, I'm OK with keeping the existing rename() behavior for compat and adding the new flag. That said I still can't think of anything depending rename() doing nothing with hardlinked source and dest. >> Note that I >> am NOT proposing a change to rename("a", "a") which must always succeed >> (true even when two spellings are different but still resolve to the >> same directory entry, as in rename("a", "./a")). Rather, this is only a >> question about the behavior of rename("a", "b") when they are two >> different hardlinks resolving to the same file. >> >> At any rate, regardless of what POSIX says, I'm totally in favor of a >> renameat flag that gives us fine-tune control over the behavior; we can >> implement it now as an extension, and once it hits mainline kernel, I >> would have no problems proposing that flag for POSIX standardization >> (the POSIX folks have a thing for preferring existing implementations, >> after all) +1 > renameat has no flags -- this would be renameat2. Standardizing that > might be quite nice (at least the RENAME_NOREPLACE part). > > My two cents: the new flag could be RENAME_HARDLINKS. +1 thanks guys! Pádraig. -- 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