On Wed, 3 Jan 2007, Frank van Maarseveen wrote:
On Tue, Jan 02, 2007 at 01:04:06AM +0100, Mikulas Patocka wrote:
I didn't hardlink directories, I just patched stat, lstat and fstat to
always return st_ino == 0 --- and I've seen those failures. These failures
are going to happen on non-POSIX filesystems in real world too, very
rarely.
I don't want to spoil your day but testing with st_ino==0 is a bad choice
because it is a special number. Anyway, one can only find breakage,
not prove that all the other programs handle this correctly so this is
kind of pointless.
On any decent filesystem st_ino should uniquely identify an object and
reliably provide hardlink information. The UNIX world has relied upon this
for decades. A filesystem with st_ino collisions without being hardlinked
(or the other way around) needs a fix.
... and that's the problem --- the UNIX world specified something that
isn't implementable in real world.
You can take a closed box and say "this is POSIX cerified" --- but how
useful such box could be, if you can't access CDs, diskettes and USB
sticks with it?
Mikulas
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [email protected]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
[Index of Archives]
[Kernel Newbies]
[Netfilter]
[Bugtraq]
[Photo]
[Stuff]
[Gimp]
[Yosemite News]
[MIPS Linux]
[ARM Linux]
[Linux Security]
[Linux RAID]
[Video 4 Linux]
[Linux for the blind]
[Linux Resources]