On Mon, 22 Aug 2011 13:22:39 -0400 "J. Bruce Fields" <bfields@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, Aug 22, 2011 at 09:07:51AM +1000, NeilBrown wrote: > > One is to use bind mounts. i.e. I effectively do > > mount --bind $HOME/.config $HOME/.config > > and ask for events from the newly created vfsmnt. > > This will not catch changes made through file descriptors that were opened > > before I did the mount, or through hard links from some other directory > > tree. But for a particular use-case that might not be a problem. > > I'm missing what the extra vfsmount gets you here. The problems seem > just the same as if you don't have one. > > Oh, wait, I see, it's that the file descriptors are associated with > vfsmounts, not just dentries. Hm. "Hm" might be right. writes have a 'struct file', but mkdir and rename etc just get an inode. So to be able to notify based on vfsmnt, mkdirat - for examine - would need to pass the path to vfs_mkdir rather than path.dentry->d_inode, and vfs_mkdir would have to pass that path to fsnotify_mkdir. So more intrusive that I imagined, but still quite do-able.... if it were thought to be useful. NeilBrown -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-nfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html