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[/] [or1k/] [trunk/] [linux/] [linux-2.4/] [fs/] [umsdos/] [specs] - Rev 1779
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/* #Specification: umsdos / readdir
* umsdos_readdir() should fill a struct dirent with
* an inode number. The cheap way to get it is to
* do a lookup in the MSDOS directory for each
* entry processed by the readdir() function.
* This is not very efficient, but very simple. The
* other way around is to maintain a copy of the inode
* number in the EMD file. This is a problem because
* this has to be maintained in sync using tricks.
* Remember that MSDOS (the OS) does not update the
* modification time (mtime) of a directory. There is
* no easy way to tell that a directory was modified
* during a DOS session and synchronise the EMD file.
*/
/* #Specification: readdir / . and ..
* The msdos filesystem manages the . and .. entry properly
* so the EMD file won't hold any info about it.
*
* In readdir, we assume that for the root directory
* the read position will be 0 for ".", 1 for "..". For
* a non root directory, the read position will be 0 for "."
* and 32 for "..".
*/
/*
* This is a trick used by the msdos file system (fs/msdos/dir.c)
* to manage . and .. for the root directory of a file system.
* Since there is no such entry in the root, fs/msdos/dir.c
* use the following:
*
* if f_pos == 0, return ".".
* if f_pos == 1, return "..".
*
* So let msdos handle it
*
* Since umsdos entries are much larger, we share the same f_pos.
* if f_pos is 0 or 1 or 32, we are clearly looking at . and
* ..
*
* As soon as we get f_pos == 2 or f_pos == 64, then back to
* 0, but this time we are reading the EMD file.
*
* Well, not so true. The problem, is that UMSDOS_REC_SIZE is
* also 64, so as soon as we read the first record in the
* EMD, we are back at offset 64. So we set the offset
* to UMSDOS_SPECIAL_DIRFPOS(3) as soon as we have read the
* .. entry from msdos.
*
* Now (linux 1.3), umsdos_readdir can read more than one
* entry even if we limit (umsdos_dir_once) to only one:
* It skips over hidden file. So we switch to
* UMSDOS_SPECIAL_DIRFPOS as soon as we have read successfully
* the .. entry.
*/
/* #Specification: umsdos / lookup / inode info
* After successfully reading an inode from the MSDOS
* filesystem, we use the EMD file to complete it.
* We update the following field.
*
* uid, gid, atime, ctime, mtime, mode.
*
* We rely on MSDOS for mtime. If the file
* was modified during an MSDOS session, at least
* mtime will be meaningful. We do this only for regular
* file.
*
* We don't rely on MS-DOS for mtime for directories
* because the MS-DOS date on a directory is its
* creation time (strange MSDOS behavior) which
* corresponds to none of the three Unix time stamps.
*/
/* #Specification: umsdos / conversion mode
* The msdos filesystem can do some inline conversion
* of the data of a file. It can translate silently
* from the MS-DOS text file format to the Unix one
* (CRLF -> LF) while reading, and the reverse
* while writing. This is activated using the mount
* option conv=....
*
* This is not useful for Linux files in a promoted
* directory. It can even be harmful. For this
* reason, the binary (no conversion) mode is
* always activated.
*/
/* #Specification: umsdos / conversion mode / todo
* A flag could be added to file and directories
* forcing an automatic conversion mode (as
* done with the msdos filesystem).
*
* This flag could be setup on a directory basis
* (instead of file) and all files in it would
* logically inherit it. If the conversion mode
* is active (conv=) then the i_binary flag would
* be left untouched in those directories.
*
* It was proposed that the sticky bit be used to set
* this. A problem with that is that new files would
* be written incorrectly. The other problem is that
* the sticky bit has a meaning for directories. So
* another bit should be used (there is some space
* in the EMD file for it) and a special utility
* would be used to assign the flag to a directory).
* I don't think it is useful to assign this flag
* on a single file.
*/
* #Specification: weakness / rename
* There is a case where UMSDOS rename has a different behavior
* than a normal Unix file system. Renaming an open file across
* directory boundary does not work. Renaming an open file within
* a directory does work, however.
*
* The problem may is in Linux VFS driver for msdos.
* I believe this is not a bug but a design feature, because
* an inode number represents some sort of directory address
* in the MSDOS directory structure, so moving the file into
* another directory does not preserve the inode number.
*/
/* #Specification: rename / new name exist
* If the destination name already exists, it will
* silently be removed. EXT2 does it this way
* and this is the spec of SunOS. So does UMSDOS.
*
* If the destination is an empty directory it will
* also be removed.
*/
/* #Specification: rename / new name exist / possible flaw
* The code to handle the deletion of the target (file
* and directory) use to be in umsdos_rename_f, surrounded
* by proper directory locking. This was ensuring that only
* one process could achieve a rename (modification) operation
* in the source and destination directory. This was also
* ensuring the operation was "atomic".
*
* This has been changed because this was creating a
* stack overflow (the stack is only 4 kB) in the kernel. To avoid
* the code doing the deletion of the target (if exist) has
* been moved to a upper layer. umsdos_rename_f is tried
* once and if it fails with EEXIST, the target is removed
* and umsdos_rename_f is done again.
*
* This makes the code cleaner and may solve a
* deadlock problem one tester was experiencing.
*
* The point is to mention that possibly, the semantic of
* "rename" may be wrong. Anyone dare to check that :-)
* Be aware that IF it is wrong, to produce the problem you
* will need two process trying to rename a file to the
* same target at the same time. Again, I am not sure it
* is a problem at all.
*/
/* #Specification: hard link / strategy
* Hard links are difficult to implement on top of an MS-DOS FAT file
* system. Unlike Unix file systems, there are no inodes. A directory
* entry holds the functionality of the inode and the entry.
*
* We will used the same strategy as a normal Unix file system
* (with inodes) except we will do it symbolically (using paths).
*
* Because anything can happen during a DOS session (defragment,
* directory sorting, etc.), we can't rely on an MS-DOS pseudo
* inode number to record the link. For this reason, the link
* will be done using hidden symbolic links. The following
* scenario illustrates how it works.
*
* Given a file /foo/file
*
* #
* ln /foo/file /tmp/file2
*
* become internally
*
* mv /foo/file /foo/-LINK1
* ln -s /foo/-LINK1 /foo/file
* ln -s /foo/-LINK1 /tmp/file2
* #
*
* Using this strategy, we can operate on /foo/file or /foo/file2.
* We can remove one and keep the other, like a normal Unix hard link.
* We can rename /foo/file or /tmp/file2 independently.
*
* The entry -LINK1 will be hidden. It will hold a link count.
* When all link are erased, the hidden file is erased too.
*/
/* #Specification: weakness / hard link
* The strategy for hard link introduces a side effect that
* may or may not be acceptable. Here is the sequence
*
* #
* mkdir subdir1
* touch subdir1/file
* mkdir subdir2
* ln subdir1/file subdir2/file
* rm subdir1/file
* rmdir subdir1
* rmdir: subdir1: Directory not empty
* #
*
* This happen because there is an invisible file (--link) in
* subdir1 which is referenced by subdir2/file.
*
* Any idea ?
*/
/* #Specification: weakness / hard link / rename directory
* Another weakness of hard link come from the fact that
* it is based on hidden symbolic links. Here is an example.
*
* #
* mkdir /subdir1
* touch /subdir1/file
* mkdir /subdir2
* ln /subdir1/file subdir2/file
* mv /subdir1 subdir3
* ls -l /subdir2/file
* #
*
* Since /subdir2/file is a hidden symbolic link
* to /subdir1/..hlinkNNN, accessing it will fail since
* /subdir1 does not exist anymore (has been renamed).
*/
/* #Specification: hard link / directory
* A hard link can't be made on a directory. EPERM is returned
* in this case.
*/
/* #Specification: hard link / first hard link
* The first time a hard link is done on a file, this
* file must be renamed and hidden. Then an internal
* symbolic link must be done on the hidden file.
*
* The second link is done after on this hidden file.
*
* It is expected that the Linux MSDOS file system
* keeps the same pseudo inode when a rename operation
* is done on a file in the same directory.
*/
/* #Specification: function name / convention
* A simple convention for function names has been used in
* the UMSDOS filesystem. First, all functions use the prefix
* umsdos_ to avoid name clashes with other parts of the kernel.
*
* Standard VFS entry points use the prefix UMSDOS (upper case)
* so it's easier to tell them apart.
* N.B. (FIXME) PTW, the order and contents of this struct changed.
*/
/* #Specification: mount / options
* Umsdos run on top of msdos. Currently, it supports no
* mount option, but happily pass all option received to
* the msdos driver. I am not sure if all msdos mount option
* make sense with Umsdos. Here are at least those who
* are useful.
* uid=
* gid=
*
* These options affect the operation of umsdos in directories
* which do not have an EMD file. They behave like normal
* msdos directory, with all limitation of msdos.
*/
/* #Specification: pseudo root / mount
* When a umsdos fs is mounted, a special handling is done
* if it is the root partition. We check for the presence
* of the file /linux/etc/init or /linux/etc/rc or
* /linux/sbin/init. If one is there, we do a chroot("/linux").
*
* We check both because (see init/main.c) the kernel
* try to exec init at different place and if it fails
* it tries /bin/sh /etc/rc. To be consistent with
* init/main.c, many more test would have to be done
* to locate init. Any complain ?
*
* The chroot is done manually in init/main.c but the
* info (the inode) is located at mount time and store
* in a global variable (pseudo_root) which is used at
* different place in the umsdos driver. There is no
* need to store this variable elsewhere because it
* will always be one, not one per mount.
*
* This feature allows the installation
* of a linux system within a DOS system in a subdirectory.
*
* A user may install its linux stuff in c:\linux
* avoiding any clash with existing DOS file and subdirectory.
* When linux boots, it hides this fact, showing a normal
* root directory with /etc /bin /tmp ...
*
* The word "linux" is hardcoded in /usr/include/linux/umsdos_fs.h
* in the macro UMSDOS_PSDROOT_NAME.
*/
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