Hans Reiser wrote:
> David Masover wrote:
>
>
>>Hans Reiser wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>>Hubert Chan wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>On Fri, 01 Jul 2005 03:06:19 -0500, David Masover <[email protected]> said:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>Hubert Chan wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>>The main thing blocking file-as-dir is that there are some
>>>>>>locking(IIRC?) issues. And, of course, some people wouldn't want it
>>>>>>to be merged into the mainline kernel. (Of course, the latter
>>>>>>doesn't prevent Namesys from maintaining their own patches for people
>>>>>>to play around with.)
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>What's the locking issue? I think that was more about transactions...
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>It was whatever was Al Viro's (technical) complaint about file-as-dir.
>>>>I don't remember exactly what it was. The technical people know what it
>>>>is (and the Namesys guys are probably working on it), and the exact
>>>>issue doesn't concern us non-technical people that much, so I don't feel
>>>>like looking it up. But if you want to, just look for Al Viro's message
>>>>in this thread.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>Cycle detection when hard links to directories are allowed. There is a
>>>debate over whether cycle detection is feasible that can only be
>>>resolved by working code or a formal proof that it is not
>>>computationally feasible.
>>>
>>>
>>
>>Ah. But then, one solution was to avoid the issue at all, and have the
>>directory inside a file act as a mountpoint. After all, mount --bind
>>doesn't cause problems...
>>
>>
>
> Can you explain this idea at greater length?
Just don't allow user-created hardlinks inside either metafs (/meta) or
the magical meta directory inside files.
In order to do that, one way would be to have "file/..." appear as a
mountpoint. I don't know if this is feasable, performance-wise, but I
think it would work.
>>Hey! This sounds like metafs (/meta) already! I wonder if we can do
>>file-as-dir in /meta, and just not support user-created hardlinks there?
>>(other than creating brand-new files, of course...)
This is still my preferred solution, because it's not any harder or less
efficient to develop new apps based on metafs than on file-as-dir, but
it means that old apps will see something *entirely* POSIX-compliant,
and the strangeness will be confined to /meta.
Basically, you have to allow hardlinks in /meta, in case some plugin
wants to do that, but if you have files that are also directories, you
also have to make sure that users can't create hardlinks. I don't think
this would be particularly hard, though. Pretend it's a read-only
filesystem unless the user is doing something safe, like creating a
brand-new file, deleting an old one, or modifying the contents of an
existing one, all assuming that the plugin responsible for the
file/directory you're doing this in allows it.
But then, if we're doing metafs, I don't think you need
file-as-directory, and certain existing tools that we'd like to be able
to point at metafs might not like file-as-directory anyway.
Now, can anyone think of a situation where we want user-created
hardlinks inside metadata? More importantly, what do we do about it?
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