On Thu, Nov 28, 2013 at 09:32:32AM -0600, Eric Sandeen wrote: > On 11/28/13, 4:01 AM, Dave Chinner wrote: > > On Wed, Nov 27, 2013 at 11:34:35PM -0600, Eric Sandeen wrote: > > <snip> > > >> Or maybe just stat() it, and DTRT? > > > > Well, we need to stat it to make sure that it's a file if "-d file" > > is specified, and a block device if it's not. That will prevent this > > problem. Every other xfsprogs utility has to be told that it is > > being pointed at an image file rather than a block device, so why > > should mkfs be any different? > > The option is there but again I never really knew why. They work > fine without -f, at least in general: Just like mkfs works fine, *in general*. That doesn't mean they will always work, though: $ sudo xfs_repair -n /storage/broken.img Phase 1 - find and verify superblock... xfs_repair: read failed: Invalid argument Repair fails on the file which has a smaller sector size than the host filesystem, unless you tell it is working on a file, not a block device: $ sudo xfs_repair -n -f /storage/broken.img Phase 1 - find and verify superblock... Phase 2 - using internal log - scan filesystem freespace and inode maps... - found root inode chunk Phase 3 - for each AG... - scan (but don't clear) agi unlinked lists... - process known inodes and perform inode discovery... - agno = 0 would have corrected attribute entry count in inode 649642 from 40 to 0 local inode 649790 attr too small (size = 1, min size = 4) bad attribute fork in inode 649790, would clear attr fork would have cleared inode 649790 .... And so behaviour is identical to mkfs... > - scan filesystem freespace and inode maps... > ... > > $ xfs_metadump fsfile fsfile.meta > > $ file fsfile.meta > fsfile.meta: XFS filesystem metadump image > > etc > > > Indeed, if we don't require users to tell mkfs that it's a file, > > what do we do with non-existent device names when they are provided > > by the user? Just create the file rather than returning ENOENT? So > > suddenly /dev/ fills up with fileystem images because of typos? > > That won't happen because it doesn't create a new file unless -d file > is specified, so I guess that's one difference. i.e. with -d file > it'll create a file of the requested size; without it, it will mkfs > it to whatever size the file already is, or if it doesn't exist, > return -ENOENT. > > > Principle of Least Surprise says that ENOENT is the correct > > behaviour, hence it follows that "-d file" is needed and should be > > properly checked and enforced. I'll add this to the start of the > > patch set I'm currently working on that fixes all of the mkfs input > > parameter validation problems I've found over the past couple of > > weeks... > > Well, I hope it doesn't stop mkfs.xfs from mkfs'ing an existing > file image, which has always worked before... that's what stat() is for. Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ xfs mailing list xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx http://oss.sgi.com/mailman/listinfo/xfs