// Copyright 2018 The gVisor Authors. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. // You may obtain a copy of the License at // // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and // limitations under the License. package p9 import ( "golang.org/x/sys/unix" "gvisor.dev/gvisor/pkg/fd" ) // Attacher is provided by the server. type Attacher interface { // Attach returns a new File. // // The client-side attach will be translate to a series of walks from // the file returned by this Attach call. Attach() (File, error) } // File is a set of operations corresponding to a single node. // // Note that on the server side, the server logic places constraints on // concurrent operations to make things easier. This may reduce the need for // complex, error-prone locking and logic in the backend. These are documented // for each method. // // There are three different types of guarantees provided: // // none: There is no concurrency guarantee. The method may be invoked // concurrently with any other method on any other file. // // read: The method is guaranteed to be exclusive of any write or global // operation that is mutating the state of the directory tree starting at this // node. For example, this means creating new files, symlinks, directories or // renaming a directory entry (or renaming in to this target), but the method // may be called concurrently with other read methods. // // write: The method is guaranteed to be exclusive of any read, write or global // operation that is mutating the state of the directory tree starting at this // node, as described in read above. There may however, be other write // operations executing concurrently on other components in the directory tree. // // global: The method is guaranteed to be exclusive of any read, write or // global operation. type File interface { // Walk walks to the path components given in names. // // Walk returns QIDs in the same order that the names were passed in. // // An empty list of arguments should return a copy of the current file. // // On the server, Walk has a read concurrency guarantee. Walk(names []string) ([]QID, File, error) // WalkGetAttr walks to the next file and returns its maximal set of // attributes. // // Server-side p9.Files may return unix.ENOSYS to indicate that Walk // and GetAttr should be used separately to satisfy this request. // // On the server, WalkGetAttr has a read concurrency guarantee. WalkGetAttr([]string) ([]QID, File, AttrMask, Attr, error) // StatFS returns information about the file system associated with // this file. // // On the server, StatFS has no concurrency guarantee. StatFS() (FSStat, error) // GetAttr returns attributes of this node. // // On the server, GetAttr has a read concurrency guarantee. GetAttr(req AttrMask) (QID, AttrMask, Attr, error) // SetAttr sets attributes on this node. // // On the server, SetAttr has a write concurrency guarantee. SetAttr(valid SetAttrMask, attr SetAttr) error // GetXattr returns extended attributes of this node. // // Size indicates the size of the buffer that has been allocated to hold the // attribute value. If the value is larger than size, implementations may // return ERANGE to indicate that the buffer is too small, but they are also // free to ignore the hint entirely (i.e. the value returned may be larger // than size). All size checking is done independently at the syscall layer. // // On the server, GetXattr has a read concurrency guarantee. GetXattr(name string, size uint64) (string, error) // SetXattr sets extended attributes on this node. // // On the server, SetXattr has a write concurrency guarantee. SetXattr(name, value string, flags uint32) error // ListXattr lists the names of the extended attributes on this node. // // Size indicates the size of the buffer that has been allocated to hold the // attribute list. If the list would be larger than size, implementations may // return ERANGE to indicate that the buffer is too small, but they are also // free to ignore the hint entirely (i.e. the value returned may be larger // than size). All size checking is done independently at the syscall layer. // // On the server, ListXattr has a read concurrency guarantee. ListXattr(size uint64) (map[string]struct{}, error) // RemoveXattr removes extended attributes on this node. // // On the server, RemoveXattr has a write concurrency guarantee. RemoveXattr(name string) error // Allocate allows the caller to directly manipulate the allocated disk space // for the file. See fallocate(2) for more details. Allocate(mode AllocateMode, offset, length uint64) error // Close is called when all references are dropped on the server side, // and Close should be called by the client to drop all references. // // For server-side implementations of Close, the error is ignored. // // Close must be called even when Open has not been called. // // On the server, Close has no concurrency guarantee. Close() error // SetAttrClose is the equivalent of calling SetAttr() followed by Close(). // This can be used to set file times before closing the file in a single // operation. // // On the server, SetAttr has a write concurrency guarantee. // On the server, Close has no concurrency guarantee. SetAttrClose(valid SetAttrMask, attr SetAttr) error // Open must be called prior to using Read, Write or Readdir. Once Open // is called, some operations, such as Walk, will no longer work. // // On the client, Open should be called only once. The fd return is // optional, and may be nil. // // On the server, Open has a read concurrency guarantee. If an *fd.FD // is provided, ownership now belongs to the caller. Open is guaranteed // to be called only once. // // N.B. The server must resolve any lazy paths when open is called. // After this point, read and write may be called on files with no // deletion check, so resolving in the data path is not viable. Open(flags OpenFlags) (*fd.FD, QID, uint32, error) // Read reads from this file. Open must be called first. // // This may return io.EOF in addition to unix.Errno values. // // On the server, ReadAt has a read concurrency guarantee. See Open for // additional requirements regarding lazy path resolution. ReadAt(p []byte, offset uint64) (int, error) // Write writes to this file. Open must be called first. // // This may return io.EOF in addition to unix.Errno values. // // On the server, WriteAt has a read concurrency guarantee. See Open // for additional requirements regarding lazy path resolution. WriteAt(p []byte, offset uint64) (int, error) // FSync syncs this node. Open must be called first. // // On the server, FSync has a read concurrency guarantee. FSync() error // Create creates a new regular file and opens it according to the // flags given. This file is already Open. // // N.B. On the client, the returned file is a reference to the current // file, which now represents the created file. This is not the case on // the server. These semantics are very subtle and can easily lead to // bugs, but are a consequence of the 9P create operation. // // See p9.File.Open for a description of *fd.FD. // // On the server, Create has a write concurrency guarantee. Create(name string, flags OpenFlags, permissions FileMode, uid UID, gid GID) (*fd.FD, File, QID, uint32, error) // Mkdir creates a subdirectory. // // On the server, Mkdir has a write concurrency guarantee. Mkdir(name string, permissions FileMode, uid UID, gid GID) (QID, error) // Symlink makes a new symbolic link. // // On the server, Symlink has a write concurrency guarantee. Symlink(oldName string, newName string, uid UID, gid GID) (QID, error) // Link makes a new hard link. // // On the server, Link has a write concurrency guarantee. Link(target File, newName string) error // Mknod makes a new device node. // // On the server, Mknod has a write concurrency guarantee. Mknod(name string, mode FileMode, major uint32, minor uint32, uid UID, gid GID) (QID, error) // Rename renames the file. // // Rename will never be called on the server, and RenameAt will always // be used instead. Rename(newDir File, newName string) error // RenameAt renames a given file to a new name in a potentially new // directory. // // oldName must be a name relative to this file, which must be a // directory. newName is a name relative to newDir. // // On the server, RenameAt has a global concurrency guarantee. RenameAt(oldName string, newDir File, newName string) error // UnlinkAt the given named file. // // name must be a file relative to this directory. // // Flags are implementation-specific (e.g. O_DIRECTORY), but are // generally Linux unlinkat(2) flags. // // On the server, UnlinkAt has a write concurrency guarantee. UnlinkAt(name string, flags uint32) error // Readdir reads directory entries. // // This may return io.EOF in addition to unix.Errno values. // // On the server, Readdir has a read concurrency guarantee. Readdir(offset uint64, count uint32) ([]Dirent, error) // Readlink reads the link target. // // On the server, Readlink has a read concurrency guarantee. Readlink() (string, error) // Flush is called prior to Close. // // Whereas Close drops all references to the file, Flush cleans up the // file state. Behavior is implementation-specific. // // Flush is not related to flush(9p). Flush is an extension to 9P2000.L, // see version.go. // // On the server, Flush has a read concurrency guarantee. Flush() error // Connect establishes a new host-socket backed connection with a // socket. A File does not need to be opened before it can be connected // and it can be connected to multiple times resulting in a unique // *fd.FD each time. In addition, the lifetime of the *fd.FD is // independent from the lifetime of the p9.File and must be managed by // the caller. // // The returned FD must be non-blocking. // // Flags indicates the requested type of socket. // // On the server, Connect has a read concurrency guarantee. Connect(flags ConnectFlags) (*fd.FD, error) // Renamed is called when this node is renamed. // // This may not fail. The file will hold a reference to its parent // within the p9 package, and is therefore safe to use for the lifetime // of this File (until Close is called). // // This method should not be called by clients, who should use the // relevant Rename methods. (Although the method will be a no-op.) // // On the server, Renamed has a global concurrency guarantee. Renamed(newDir File, newName string) } // DefaultWalkGetAttr implements File.WalkGetAttr to return ENOSYS for server-side Files. type DefaultWalkGetAttr struct{} // WalkGetAttr implements File.WalkGetAttr. func (DefaultWalkGetAttr) WalkGetAttr([]string) ([]QID, File, AttrMask, Attr, error) { return nil, nil, AttrMask{}, Attr{}, unix.ENOSYS } // DisallowClientCalls panics if a client-only function is called. type DisallowClientCalls struct{} // SetAttrClose implements File.SetAttrClose. func (DisallowClientCalls) SetAttrClose(SetAttrMask, SetAttr) error { panic("SetAttrClose should not be called on the server") } // DisallowServerCalls panics if a server-only function is called. type DisallowServerCalls struct{} // Renamed implements File.Renamed. func (*clientFile) Renamed(File, string) { panic("Renamed should not be called on the client") }