On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 22:59:51 -0700, Arjan van de Ven wrote:
> first of all I'm happy to see that people are still working on unionfs;
> I'd love to have functionality like this show up in Linux.
This has nothing to do with unionfs. This is about doing a VFS based
approach to union mounts. Unification is a name-based construct so it
belongs into VFS and not into a separate file system.
> I'll not claim to have any VFS knowledge whatsoever, but I was just
> wondering what happens in the following scenario:
>
> FS A is mounted twice, in /mnt/A and /mnt/union
>
> FS B is mounted twice, in /mnt/B and as topmost union mount
> on /mnt/union
>
> lets for simplicity say both filesystems are entirely empty
>
> user does on FS A:
> mkdir /mnt/A/somedir
> touch /mnt/A/somedir/somefile
>
> and then 2 things happen in parallel
> 1) touch /mnt/B/somefile
> 2) mv /mnt/union/somedir /mnt/union/somefile
>
> since the underlying FS for 2) is FS A... how will this work out locking
> wise? Will the VS lock the union directory only? Or will this operate
> only on the underlying FS? How is dcache consistency guaranteed for
> scenarios like this?
Mounting a file system twice is bad in the first place. This should be
done by using bind mounts and bind a mounted file system into a union.
After that the normal locking rules apply (and hopefully work ;).
Jan
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