1Changes since 2.5.0: 2 3--- 4[recommended] 5 6New helpers: sb_bread(), sb_getblk(), sb_find_get_block(), set_bh(), 7 sb_set_blocksize() and sb_min_blocksize(). 8 9Use them. 10 11(sb_find_get_block() replaces 2.4's get_hash_table()) 12 13--- 14[recommended] 15 16New methods: ->alloc_inode() and ->destroy_inode(). 17 18Remove inode->u.foo_inode_i 19Declare 20 struct foo_inode_info { 21 /* fs-private stuff */ 22 struct inode vfs_inode; 23 }; 24 static inline struct foo_inode_info *FOO_I(struct inode *inode) 25 { 26 return list_entry(inode, struct foo_inode_info, vfs_inode); 27 } 28 29Use FOO_I(inode) instead of &inode->u.foo_inode_i; 30 31Add foo_alloc_inode() and foo_destroy_inode() - the former should allocate 32foo_inode_info and return the address of ->vfs_inode, the latter should free 33FOO_I(inode) (see in-tree filesystems for examples). 34 35Make them ->alloc_inode and ->destroy_inode in your super_operations. 36 37Keep in mind that now you need explicit initialization of private data 38typically between calling iget_locked() and unlocking the inode. 39 40At some point that will become mandatory. 41 42--- 43[mandatory] 44 45Change of file_system_type method (->read_super to ->get_sb) 46 47->read_super() is no more. Ditto for DECLARE_FSTYPE and DECLARE_FSTYPE_DEV. 48 49Turn your foo_read_super() into a function that would return 0 in case of 50success and negative number in case of error (-EINVAL unless you have more 51informative error value to report). Call it foo_fill_super(). Now declare 52 53int foo_get_sb(struct file_system_type *fs_type, 54 int flags, const char *dev_name, void *data, struct vfsmount *mnt) 55{ 56 return get_sb_bdev(fs_type, flags, dev_name, data, foo_fill_super, 57 mnt); 58} 59 60(or similar with s/bdev/nodev/ or s/bdev/single/, depending on the kind of 61filesystem). 62 63Replace DECLARE_FSTYPE... with explicit initializer and have ->get_sb set as 64foo_get_sb. 65 66--- 67[mandatory] 68 69Locking change: ->s_vfs_rename_sem is taken only by cross-directory renames. 70Most likely there is no need to change anything, but if you relied on 71global exclusion between renames for some internal purpose - you need to 72change your internal locking. Otherwise exclusion warranties remain the 73same (i.e. parents and victim are locked, etc.). 74 75--- 76[informational] 77 78Now we have the exclusion between ->lookup() and directory removal (by 79->rmdir() and ->rename()). If you used to need that exclusion and do 80it by internal locking (most of filesystems couldn't care less) - you 81can relax your locking. 82 83--- 84[mandatory] 85 86->lookup(), ->truncate(), ->create(), ->unlink(), ->mknod(), ->mkdir(), 87->rmdir(), ->link(), ->lseek(), ->symlink(), ->rename() 88and ->readdir() are called without BKL now. Grab it on entry, drop upon return 89- that will guarantee the same locking you used to have. If your method or its 90parts do not need BKL - better yet, now you can shift lock_kernel() and 91unlock_kernel() so that they would protect exactly what needs to be 92protected. 93 94--- 95[mandatory] 96 97BKL is also moved from around sb operations. BKL should have been shifted into 98individual fs sb_op functions. If you don't need it, remove it. 99 100--- 101[informational] 102 103check for ->link() target not being a directory is done by callers. Feel 104free to drop it... 105 106--- 107[informational] 108 109->link() callers hold ->i_mutex on the object we are linking to. Some of your 110problems might be over... 111 112--- 113[mandatory] 114 115new file_system_type method - kill_sb(superblock). If you are converting 116an existing filesystem, set it according to ->fs_flags: 117 FS_REQUIRES_DEV - kill_block_super 118 FS_LITTER - kill_litter_super 119 neither - kill_anon_super 120FS_LITTER is gone - just remove it from fs_flags. 121 122--- 123[mandatory] 124 125 FS_SINGLE is gone (actually, that had happened back when ->get_sb() 126went in - and hadn't been documented ;-/). Just remove it from fs_flags 127(and see ->get_sb() entry for other actions). 128 129--- 130[mandatory] 131 132->setattr() is called without BKL now. Caller _always_ holds ->i_mutex, so 133watch for ->i_mutex-grabbing code that might be used by your ->setattr(). 134Callers of notify_change() need ->i_mutex now. 135 136--- 137[recommended] 138 139New super_block field "struct export_operations *s_export_op" for 140explicit support for exporting, e.g. via NFS. The structure is fully 141documented at its declaration in include/linux/fs.h, and in 142Documentation/filesystems/nfs/Exporting. 143 144Briefly it allows for the definition of decode_fh and encode_fh operations 145to encode and decode filehandles, and allows the filesystem to use 146a standard helper function for decode_fh, and provide file-system specific 147support for this helper, particularly get_parent. 148 149It is planned that this will be required for exporting once the code 150settles down a bit. 151 152[mandatory] 153 154s_export_op is now required for exporting a filesystem. 155isofs, ext2, ext3, resierfs, fat 156can be used as examples of very different filesystems. 157 158--- 159[mandatory] 160 161iget4() and the read_inode2 callback have been superseded by iget5_locked() 162which has the following prototype, 163 164 struct inode *iget5_locked(struct super_block *sb, unsigned long ino, 165 int (*test)(struct inode *, void *), 166 int (*set)(struct inode *, void *), 167 void *data); 168 169'test' is an additional function that can be used when the inode 170number is not sufficient to identify the actual file object. 'set' 171should be a non-blocking function that initializes those parts of a 172newly created inode to allow the test function to succeed. 'data' is 173passed as an opaque value to both test and set functions. 174 175When the inode has been created by iget5_locked(), it will be returned with the 176I_NEW flag set and will still be locked. The filesystem then needs to finalize 177the initialization. Once the inode is initialized it must be unlocked by 178calling unlock_new_inode(). 179 180The filesystem is responsible for setting (and possibly testing) i_ino 181when appropriate. There is also a simpler iget_locked function that 182just takes the superblock and inode number as arguments and does the 183test and set for you. 184 185e.g. 186 inode = iget_locked(sb, ino); 187 if (inode->i_state & I_NEW) { 188 err = read_inode_from_disk(inode); 189 if (err < 0) { 190 iget_failed(inode); 191 return err; 192 } 193 unlock_new_inode(inode); 194 } 195 196Note that if the process of setting up a new inode fails, then iget_failed() 197should be called on the inode to render it dead, and an appropriate error 198should be passed back to the caller. 199 200--- 201[recommended] 202 203->getattr() finally getting used. See instances in nfs, minix, etc. 204 205--- 206[mandatory] 207 208->revalidate() is gone. If your filesystem had it - provide ->getattr() 209and let it call whatever you had as ->revlidate() + (for symlinks that 210had ->revalidate()) add calls in ->follow_link()/->readlink(). 211 212--- 213[mandatory] 214 215->d_parent changes are not protected by BKL anymore. Read access is safe 216if at least one of the following is true: 217 * filesystem has no cross-directory rename() 218 * we know that parent had been locked (e.g. we are looking at 219->d_parent of ->lookup() argument). 220 * we are called from ->rename(). 221 * the child's ->d_lock is held 222Audit your code and add locking if needed. Notice that any place that is 223not protected by the conditions above is risky even in the old tree - you 224had been relying on BKL and that's prone to screwups. Old tree had quite 225a few holes of that kind - unprotected access to ->d_parent leading to 226anything from oops to silent memory corruption. 227 228--- 229[mandatory] 230 231 FS_NOMOUNT is gone. If you use it - just set MS_NOUSER in flags 232(see rootfs for one kind of solution and bdev/socket/pipe for another). 233 234--- 235[recommended] 236 237 Use bdev_read_only(bdev) instead of is_read_only(kdev). The latter 238is still alive, but only because of the mess in drivers/s390/block/dasd.c. 239As soon as it gets fixed is_read_only() will die. 240 241--- 242[mandatory] 243 244->permission() is called without BKL now. Grab it on entry, drop upon 245return - that will guarantee the same locking you used to have. If 246your method or its parts do not need BKL - better yet, now you can 247shift lock_kernel() and unlock_kernel() so that they would protect 248exactly what needs to be protected. 249 250--- 251[mandatory] 252 253->statfs() is now called without BKL held. BKL should have been 254shifted into individual fs sb_op functions where it's not clear that 255it's safe to remove it. If you don't need it, remove it. 256 257--- 258[mandatory] 259 260 is_read_only() is gone; use bdev_read_only() instead. 261 262--- 263[mandatory] 264 265 destroy_buffers() is gone; use invalidate_bdev(). 266 267--- 268[mandatory] 269 270 fsync_dev() is gone; use fsync_bdev(). NOTE: lvm breakage is 271deliberate; as soon as struct block_device * is propagated in a reasonable 272way by that code fixing will become trivial; until then nothing can be 273done. 274 275[mandatory] 276 277 block truncatation on error exit from ->write_begin, and ->direct_IO 278moved from generic methods (block_write_begin, cont_write_begin, 279nobh_write_begin, blockdev_direct_IO*) to callers. Take a look at 280ext2_write_failed and callers for an example. 281 282[mandatory] 283 284 ->truncate is gone. The whole truncate sequence needs to be 285implemented in ->setattr, which is now mandatory for filesystems 286implementing on-disk size changes. Start with a copy of the old inode_setattr 287and vmtruncate, and the reorder the vmtruncate + foofs_vmtruncate sequence to 288be in order of zeroing blocks using block_truncate_page or similar helpers, 289size update and on finally on-disk truncation which should not fail. 290inode_change_ok now includes the size checks for ATTR_SIZE and must be called 291in the beginning of ->setattr unconditionally. 292 293[mandatory] 294 295 ->clear_inode() and ->delete_inode() are gone; ->evict_inode() should 296be used instead. It gets called whenever the inode is evicted, whether it has 297remaining links or not. Caller does *not* evict the pagecache or inode-associated 298metadata buffers; the method has to use truncate_inode_pages_final() to get rid 299of those. Caller makes sure async writeback cannot be running for the inode while 300(or after) ->evict_inode() is called. 301 302 ->drop_inode() returns int now; it's called on final iput() with 303inode->i_lock held and it returns true if filesystems wants the inode to be 304dropped. As before, generic_drop_inode() is still the default and it's been 305updated appropriately. generic_delete_inode() is also alive and it consists 306simply of return 1. Note that all actual eviction work is done by caller after 307->drop_inode() returns. 308 309 As before, clear_inode() must be called exactly once on each call of 310->evict_inode() (as it used to be for each call of ->delete_inode()). Unlike 311before, if you are using inode-associated metadata buffers (i.e. 312mark_buffer_dirty_inode()), it's your responsibility to call 313invalidate_inode_buffers() before clear_inode(). 314 315 NOTE: checking i_nlink in the beginning of ->write_inode() and bailing out 316if it's zero is not *and* *never* *had* *been* enough. Final unlink() and iput() 317may happen while the inode is in the middle of ->write_inode(); e.g. if you blindly 318free the on-disk inode, you may end up doing that while ->write_inode() is writing 319to it. 320 321--- 322[mandatory] 323 324 .d_delete() now only advises the dcache as to whether or not to cache 325unreferenced dentries, and is now only called when the dentry refcount goes to 3260. Even on 0 refcount transition, it must be able to tolerate being called 0, 3271, or more times (eg. constant, idempotent). 328 329--- 330[mandatory] 331 332 .d_compare() calling convention and locking rules are significantly 333changed. Read updated documentation in Documentation/filesystems/vfs.txt (and 334look at examples of other filesystems) for guidance. 335 336--- 337[mandatory] 338 339 .d_hash() calling convention and locking rules are significantly 340changed. Read updated documentation in Documentation/filesystems/vfs.txt (and 341look at examples of other filesystems) for guidance. 342 343--- 344[mandatory] 345 dcache_lock is gone, replaced by fine grained locks. See fs/dcache.c 346for details of what locks to replace dcache_lock with in order to protect 347particular things. Most of the time, a filesystem only needs ->d_lock, which 348protects *all* the dcache state of a given dentry. 349 350-- 351[mandatory] 352 353 Filesystems must RCU-free their inodes, if they can have been accessed 354via rcu-walk path walk (basically, if the file can have had a path name in the 355vfs namespace). 356 357 Even though i_dentry and i_rcu share storage in a union, we will 358initialize the former in inode_init_always(), so just leave it alone in 359the callback. It used to be necessary to clean it there, but not anymore 360(starting at 3.2). 361 362-- 363[recommended] 364 vfs now tries to do path walking in "rcu-walk mode", which avoids 365atomic operations and scalability hazards on dentries and inodes (see 366Documentation/filesystems/path-lookup.txt). d_hash and d_compare changes 367(above) are examples of the changes required to support this. For more complex 368filesystem callbacks, the vfs drops out of rcu-walk mode before the fs call, so 369no changes are required to the filesystem. However, this is costly and loses 370the benefits of rcu-walk mode. We will begin to add filesystem callbacks that 371are rcu-walk aware, shown below. Filesystems should take advantage of this 372where possible. 373 374-- 375[mandatory] 376 d_revalidate is a callback that is made on every path element (if 377the filesystem provides it), which requires dropping out of rcu-walk mode. This 378may now be called in rcu-walk mode (nd->flags & LOOKUP_RCU). -ECHILD should be 379returned if the filesystem cannot handle rcu-walk. See 380Documentation/filesystems/vfs.txt for more details. 381 382 permission and check_acl are inode permission checks that are called 383on many or all directory inodes on the way down a path walk (to check for 384exec permission). These must now be rcu-walk aware (flags & IPERM_FLAG_RCU). 385See Documentation/filesystems/vfs.txt for more details. 386 387-- 388[mandatory] 389 In ->fallocate() you must check the mode option passed in. If your 390filesystem does not support hole punching (deallocating space in the middle of a 391file) you must return -EOPNOTSUPP if FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE is set in mode. 392Currently you can only have FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE with FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE set, 393so the i_size should not change when hole punching, even when puching the end of 394a file off. 395 396-- 397[mandatory] 398 ->get_sb() is gone. Switch to use of ->mount(). Typically it's just 399a matter of switching from calling get_sb_... to mount_... and changing the 400function type. If you were doing it manually, just switch from setting ->mnt_root 401to some pointer to returning that pointer. On errors return ERR_PTR(...). 402 403-- 404[mandatory] 405 ->permission() and generic_permission()have lost flags 406argument; instead of passing IPERM_FLAG_RCU we add MAY_NOT_BLOCK into mask. 407 generic_permission() has also lost the check_acl argument; ACL checking 408has been taken to VFS and filesystems need to provide a non-NULL ->i_op->get_acl 409to read an ACL from disk. 410 411-- 412[mandatory] 413 If you implement your own ->llseek() you must handle SEEK_HOLE and 414SEEK_DATA. You can hanle this by returning -EINVAL, but it would be nicer to 415support it in some way. The generic handler assumes that the entire file is 416data and there is a virtual hole at the end of the file. So if the provided 417offset is less than i_size and SEEK_DATA is specified, return the same offset. 418If the above is true for the offset and you are given SEEK_HOLE, return the end 419of the file. If the offset is i_size or greater return -ENXIO in either case. 420 421[mandatory] 422 If you have your own ->fsync() you must make sure to call 423filemap_write_and_wait_range() so that all dirty pages are synced out properly. 424You must also keep in mind that ->fsync() is not called with i_mutex held 425anymore, so if you require i_mutex locking you must make sure to take it and 426release it yourself. 427 428-- 429[mandatory] 430 d_alloc_root() is gone, along with a lot of bugs caused by code 431misusing it. Replacement: d_make_root(inode). The difference is, 432d_make_root() drops the reference to inode if dentry allocation fails. 433 434-- 435[mandatory] 436 The witch is dead! Well, 2/3 of it, anyway. ->d_revalidate() and 437->lookup() do *not* take struct nameidata anymore; just the flags. 438-- 439[mandatory] 440 ->create() doesn't take struct nameidata *; unlike the previous 441two, it gets "is it an O_EXCL or equivalent?" boolean argument. Note that 442local filesystems can ignore tha argument - they are guaranteed that the 443object doesn't exist. It's remote/distributed ones that might care... 444-- 445[mandatory] 446 FS_REVAL_DOT is gone; if you used to have it, add ->d_weak_revalidate() 447in your dentry operations instead. 448-- 449[mandatory] 450 vfs_readdir() is gone; switch to iterate_dir() instead 451-- 452[mandatory] 453 ->readdir() is gone now; switch to ->iterate() 454[mandatory] 455 vfs_follow_link has been removed. Filesystems must use nd_set_link 456 from ->follow_link for normal symlinks, or nd_jump_link for magic 457 /proc/<pid> style links. 458-- 459[mandatory] 460 iget5_locked()/ilookup5()/ilookup5_nowait() test() callback used to be 461 called with both ->i_lock and inode_hash_lock held; the former is *not* 462 taken anymore, so verify that your callbacks do not rely on it (none 463 of the in-tree instances did). inode_hash_lock is still held, 464 of course, so they are still serialized wrt removal from inode hash, 465 as well as wrt set() callback of iget5_locked(). 466-- 467[mandatory] 468 d_materialise_unique() is gone; d_splice_alias() does everything you 469 need now. Remember that they have opposite orders of arguments ;-/ 470-- 471[mandatory] 472 f_dentry is gone; use f_path.dentry, or, better yet, see if you can avoid 473 it entirely. 474-- 475[mandatory] 476 never call ->read() and ->write() directly; use __vfs_{read,write} or 477 wrappers; instead of checking for ->write or ->read being NULL, look for 478 FMODE_CAN_{WRITE,READ} in file->f_mode. 479-- 480[mandatory] 481 do _not_ use new_sync_{read,write} for ->read/->write; leave it NULL 482 instead. 483-- 484[mandatory] 485 ->aio_read/->aio_write are gone. Use ->read_iter/->write_iter. 486