On Fri, 2007-10-26 at 22:24 +0200, Andreas Gruenbacher wrote:
> On Friday 26 October 2007 13:30, Miklos Szeredi wrote:
> > There's a slight problem (other than HCH not liking it) with this
> > approach of passing the open file in iattr: for special files, the
> > struct file pointer makes no sense to the filesystem, since it is always
> > opened by the generic functions.
>
> So what do you think where the inodes come from for syscalls like fchmod? Out
> of struct file, of course. But your f_op->getattr and f_op->setattr patches
> are meant for passing struct file down to filesystems anyway, so that
> completely contradicts what you are saying above.
For special files, f_op->fsetattr will be NULL, since
init_special_inode() will set up i_fop that way.
So the filesystem's fsetattr() will only be called for regular files
and/or directories, depending on how it sets up i_fop.
With the ia_file thing, the filesystem would receive the struct file
pointer in all cases. So the posted patch would break AFS and FUSE,
because they unconditionally use ia_file if available and don't check
the file type. They could check the file type, but still the interface
would be ugly.
> > So I think the correct solution (which was suggested by Trond and
> > others) is to define an f_op->fsetattr() method, which interested
> > filesystems can define.
>
> That's nothing but a replacement for ATTR_FILE and iattr->ia_file. Except by
> removing the ATTR_FILE flag, LSMs will no longer get that information for
> distinguishing file descriptor operations from other operations.
>
> AppArmor needs to know when notify_change is called on a file descriptor, but
> it doesn't care about the file descriptor itself. So any way of passing along
> that information will be fine.
Ah, so if we kept ATTR_FILE and got rid of iattr_file, would that be OK
for AppArmor?
Thanks,
Miklos
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