Re: Finding hardlinks
From: Frank van Maarseveen
Date: Wed Jan 03 2007 - 15:27:03 EST
On Wed, Jan 03, 2007 at 08:31:32PM +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.
> >
> >Sure it is. Numerous popular POSIX filesystems do that. There is a lot of
> >inode number space in 64 bit (of course it is a matter of time for it to
> >jump to 128 bit and more)
>
> If the filesystem was designed by someone not from Unix world (FAT, SMB,
> ...), then not. And users still want to access these filesystems.
They can. Hey, it's not perfect but who expects FAT/SMB to be "perfect" anyway?
>
> 64-bit inode numbers space is not yet implemented on Linux --- the problem
> is that if you return ino >= 2^32, programs compiled without
> -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 will fail with stat() returning -EOVERFLOW --- this
> failure is specified in POSIX, but not very useful.
hmm, checking iunique(), ino_t, __kernel_ino_t... I see. Pity. So at
some point in time we may need a sort of "ino64" mount option to be
able to switch to a 64 bit number space on mount basis. Or (conversely)
refuse to mount without that option if we know there are >32 bit st_ino
out there. And invent iunique64() and use that when "ino64" specified
for FAT/SMB/... when those filesystems haven't been replaced by a
successor by that time.
At that time probably all programs are either compiled with
-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 (most already are because of files bigger than 2G)
or completely 64 bit.
--
Frank
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