- Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/6] xstat: Add a pair of system calls to make extended file stats available
- From: "J. Bruce Fields" <bfields@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 26 Apr 2012 10:28:16 -0400
- Cc: Steve French <smfrench@xxxxxxxxx>, linux-fsdevel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, linux-nfs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, linux-cifs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, samba-technical@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, linux-ext4@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, wine-devel@xxxxxxxxxx, kfm-devel@xxxxxxx, nautilus-list@xxxxxxxxx, linux-api@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, libc-alpha@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- In-reply-to: <18765.1335447954@redhat.com>
- References: <CAH2r5muMb8m9-fMc_tcfn3ku_s55q9EEbc-vzvoFjPnsDdq1gA@mail.gmail.com> <20120419140558.17272.74360.stgit@warthog.procyon.org.uk> <20120419140612.17272.57774.stgit@warthog.procyon.org.uk> <20120424212911.GA26073@fieldses.org> <18765.1335447954@redhat.com>
- User-agent: Mutt/1.5.20 (2009-06-14)
On Thu, Apr 26, 2012 at 02:45:54PM +0100, David Howells wrote:
> Steve French <smfrench@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > I also would prefer that we simply treat the time granularity as part
> > of the superblock (mounted volume) ie returned on fstat rather than on
> > every stat of the filesystem. For cifs mounts we could conceivably
> > have different time granularity (1 or 2 second) on mounts to old
> > servers rather than 100 nanoseconds.
>
> The question is whether you want to have to do a statfs in addition to a stat?
> I suppose you can potentially cache the statfs based on device number.
>
> That said, there are cases where caching filesystem-level info based on i_dev
> doesn't work. OpenAFS springs to mind as that only has one superblock and
> thus one set of device numbers, but keeps all the inodes for all the different
> volumes it may have mounted there.
>
> I don't know whether this would be a problem for CIFS too - say on a windows
> server you fabricate P:, for example, by joining together several filesystems
> (with junctions?). How does this appear on a Linux client when it steps from
> one filesystem to another within a mounted share?
In the NFS case we do try to preserve filesystem boundaries as well as
we can--the protocol has an fsid field and the client creates a new
mount each time it sees it change. And the protocol defines time_delta
as a per-filesystem attribute (though, somewhat hilariously, there's
also a per-filesystem "homogeneous" attribute that a server can clear to
indicate the per-filesystem attributes might actually vary within the
filesystem.)
--b.
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-api" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
[Home]
[Linux USB Devel]
[Video for Linux]
[Linux Audio Users]
[Photo]
[Yosemite News]
[Yosemite Photos]
[Free Online Dating]
[Linux Kernel]
[Linux SCSI]
[XFree86]