Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
Also refactor HandleDeletion().
Updates #1479.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 317989000
|
|
Because there is no inode structure stored in the sandbox, inotify watches
must be held on the dentry. This would be an issue in the presence of hard
links, where multiple dentries would need to share the same set of watches,
but in VFS2, we do not support the internal creation of hard links on gofer
fs. As a result, we make the assumption that every dentry corresponds to a
unique inode.
Furthermore, dentries can be cached and then evicted, even if the underlying
file has not be deleted. We must prevent this from occurring if there are any
watches that would be lost. Note that if the dentry was deleted or invalidated
(d.vfsd.IsDead()), we should still destroy it along with its watches.
Additionally, when a dentry’s last watch is removed, we cache it if it also
has zero references. This way, the dentry can eventually be evicted from
memory if it is no longer needed. This is accomplished with a new dentry
method, OnZeroWatches(), which is called by Inotify.RmWatch and
Inotify.Release. Note that it must be called after all inotify locks are
released to avoid violating lock order. Stress tests are added to make sure
that inotify operations don't deadlock with gofer.OnZeroWatches.
Updates #1479.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 317958034
|
|
Limited to tmpfs. Inotify support in other filesystem implementations to
follow.
Updates #1479
PiperOrigin-RevId: 313828648
|
|
Support in other filesystem impls is still needed. Unlike in Linux and vfs1, we
need to plumb inotify down to each filesystem implementation in order to keep
track of links/inode structures properly.
IN_EXCL_UNLINK still needs to be implemented, as well as a few inotify hooks
that are not present in either vfs1 or vfs2. Those will be addressed in
subsequent changes.
Updates #1479.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 313781995
|
|
Updates #1197, #1198, #1672
PiperOrigin-RevId: 310432006
|
|
Fixes #1965.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 310380433
|
|
Enforce write permission checks in BoundEndpointAt, which corresponds to the
permission checks in Linux (net/unix/af_unix.c:unix_find_other).
Also, create bound socket files with the correct permissions in VFS2.
Fixes #2324.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 308949084
|
|
Named pipes and sockets can be represented in two ways in gofer fs:
1. As a file on the remote filesystem. In this case, all file operations are
passed through 9p.
2. As a synthetic file that is internal to the sandbox. In this case, the
dentry stores an endpoint or VFSPipe for sockets and pipes respectively,
which replaces interactions with the remote fs through the gofer.
In gofer.filesystem.MknodAt, we attempt to call mknod(2) through 9p,
and if it fails, fall back to the synthetic version.
Updates #1200.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 308828161
|
|
As in VFS1, we only support the user.* namespace. Plumbing is added to tmpfs
and goferfs.
Note that because of the slightly different order of checks between VFS2 and
Linux, one of the xattr tests needs to be relaxed slightly.
Fixes #2363.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 305985121
|
|
Both have analogues in Linux:
* struct file_system_type has a char *name field.
* struct super_block keeps a pointer to the file_system_type.
These fields are necessary to support the `filesystem type` field in
/proc/[pid]/mountinfo.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 303434063
|
|
BoundEndpointAt() is needed to support Unix sockets bound at a
file path, corresponding to BoundEndpoint() in VFS1.
Updates #1476.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 303258251
|
|
Updates #1035
PiperOrigin-RevId: 303021328
|
|
Note that the raw faccessat system call does not actually take a flags argument;
according to faccessat(2), the glibc wrapper implements the flags by using
fstatat(2). Remove the flag argument that we try to extract from vfs1, which
would just be a garbage value.
Updates #1965
Fixes #2101
PiperOrigin-RevId: 300796067
|
|
PiperOrigin-RevId: 291986033
|