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1Written by: Neil Brown
2Please see MAINTAINERS file for where to send questions.
3
4Overlay Filesystem
5==================
6
7This document describes a prototype for a new approach to providing
8overlay-filesystem functionality in Linux (sometimes referred to as
9union-filesystems).  An overlay-filesystem tries to present a
10filesystem which is the result over overlaying one filesystem on top
11of the other.
12
13
14Overlay objects
15---------------
16
17The overlay filesystem approach is 'hybrid', because the objects that
18appear in the filesystem do not always appear to belong to that filesystem.
19In many cases, an object accessed in the union will be indistinguishable
20from accessing the corresponding object from the original filesystem.
21This is most obvious from the 'st_dev' field returned by stat(2).
22
23While directories will report an st_dev from the overlay-filesystem,
24non-directory objects may report an st_dev from the lower filesystem or
25upper filesystem that is providing the object.  Similarly st_ino will
26only be unique when combined with st_dev, and both of these can change
27over the lifetime of a non-directory object.  Many applications and
28tools ignore these values and will not be affected.
29
30In the special case of all overlay layers on the same underlying
31filesystem, all objects will report an st_dev from the overlay
32filesystem and st_ino from the underlying filesystem.  This will
33make the overlay mount more compliant with filesystem scanners and
34overlay objects will be distinguishable from the corresponding
35objects in the original filesystem.
36
37On 64bit systems, even if all overlay layers are not on the same
38underlying filesystem, the same compliant behavior could be achieved
39with the "xino" feature.  The "xino" feature composes a unique object
40identifier from the real object st_ino and an underlying fsid index.
41If all underlying filesystems support NFS file handles and export file
42handles with 32bit inode number encoding (e.g. ext4), overlay filesystem
43will use the high inode number bits for fsid.  Even when the underlying
44filesystem uses 64bit inode numbers, users can still enable the "xino"
45feature with the "-o xino=on" overlay mount option.  That is useful for the
46case of underlying filesystems like xfs and tmpfs, which use 64bit inode
47numbers, but are very unlikely to use the high inode number bit.
48
49
50Upper and Lower
51---------------
52
53An overlay filesystem combines two filesystems - an 'upper' filesystem
54and a 'lower' filesystem.  When a name exists in both filesystems, the
55object in the 'upper' filesystem is visible while the object in the
56'lower' filesystem is either hidden or, in the case of directories,
57merged with the 'upper' object.
58
59It would be more correct to refer to an upper and lower 'directory
60tree' rather than 'filesystem' as it is quite possible for both
61directory trees to be in the same filesystem and there is no
62requirement that the root of a filesystem be given for either upper or
63lower.
64
65The lower filesystem can be any filesystem supported by Linux and does
66not need to be writable.  The lower filesystem can even be another
67overlayfs.  The upper filesystem will normally be writable and if it
68is it must support the creation of trusted.* extended attributes, and
69must provide valid d_type in readdir responses, so NFS is not suitable.
70
71A read-only overlay of two read-only filesystems may use any
72filesystem type.
73
74Directories
75-----------
76
77Overlaying mainly involves directories.  If a given name appears in both
78upper and lower filesystems and refers to a non-directory in either,
79then the lower object is hidden - the name refers only to the upper
80object.
81
82Where both upper and lower objects are directories, a merged directory
83is formed.
84
85At mount time, the two directories given as mount options "lowerdir" and
86"upperdir" are combined into a merged directory:
87
88  mount -t overlay overlay -olowerdir=/lower,upperdir=/upper,\
89  workdir=/work /merged
90
91The "workdir" needs to be an empty directory on the same filesystem
92as upperdir.
93
94Then whenever a lookup is requested in such a merged directory, the
95lookup is performed in each actual directory and the combined result
96is cached in the dentry belonging to the overlay filesystem.  If both
97actual lookups find directories, both are stored and a merged
98directory is created, otherwise only one is stored: the upper if it
99exists, else the lower.
100
101Only the lists of names from directories are merged.  Other content
102such as metadata and extended attributes are reported for the upper
103directory only.  These attributes of the lower directory are hidden.
104
105credentials
106-----------
107
108By default, all access to the upper, lower and work directories is the
109recorded mounter's MAC and DAC credentials.  The incoming accesses are
110checked against the caller's credentials.
111
112In the case where caller MAC or DAC credentials do not overlap, a
113use case available in older versions of the driver, the
114override_creds mount flag can be turned off and help when the use
115pattern has caller with legitimate credentials where the mounter
116does not.  Several unintended side effects will occur though.  The
117caller without certain key capabilities or lower privilege will not
118always be able to delete files or directories, create nodes, or
119search some restricted directories.  The ability to search and read
120a directory entry is spotty as a result of the cache mechanism not
121retesting the credentials because of the assumption, a privileged
122caller can fill cache, then a lower privilege can read the directory
123cache.  The uneven security model where cache, upperdir and workdir
124are opened at privilege, but accessed without creating a form of
125privilege escalation, should only be used with strict understanding
126of the side effects and of the security policies.
127
128whiteouts and opaque directories
129--------------------------------
130
131In order to support rm and rmdir without changing the lower
132filesystem, an overlay filesystem needs to record in the upper filesystem
133that files have been removed.  This is done using whiteouts and opaque
134directories (non-directories are always opaque).
135
136A whiteout is created as a character device with 0/0 device number.
137When a whiteout is found in the upper level of a merged directory, any
138matching name in the lower level is ignored, and the whiteout itself
139is also hidden.
140
141A directory is made opaque by setting the xattr "trusted.overlay.opaque"
142to "y".  Where the upper filesystem contains an opaque directory, any
143directory in the lower filesystem with the same name is ignored.
144
145readdir
146-------
147
148When a 'readdir' request is made on a merged directory, the upper and
149lower directories are each read and the name lists merged in the
150obvious way (upper is read first, then lower - entries that already
151exist are not re-added).  This merged name list is cached in the
152'struct file' and so remains as long as the file is kept open.  If the
153directory is opened and read by two processes at the same time, they
154will each have separate caches.  A seekdir to the start of the
155directory (offset 0) followed by a readdir will cause the cache to be
156discarded and rebuilt.
157
158This means that changes to the merged directory do not appear while a
159directory is being read.  This is unlikely to be noticed by many
160programs.
161
162seek offsets are assigned sequentially when the directories are read.
163Thus if
164
165  - read part of a directory
166  - remember an offset, and close the directory
167  - re-open the directory some time later
168  - seek to the remembered offset
169
170there may be little correlation between the old and new locations in
171the list of filenames, particularly if anything has changed in the
172directory.
173
174Readdir on directories that are not merged is simply handled by the
175underlying directory (upper or lower).
176
177renaming directories
178--------------------
179
180When renaming a directory that is on the lower layer or merged (i.e. the
181directory was not created on the upper layer to start with) overlayfs can
182handle it in two different ways:
183
1841. return EXDEV error: this error is returned by rename(2) when trying to
185   move a file or directory across filesystem boundaries.  Hence
186   applications are usually prepared to hande this error (mv(1) for example
187   recursively copies the directory tree).  This is the default behavior.
188
1892. If the "redirect_dir" feature is enabled, then the directory will be
190   copied up (but not the contents).  Then the "trusted.overlay.redirect"
191   extended attribute is set to the path of the original location from the
192   root of the overlay.  Finally the directory is moved to the new
193   location.
194
195There are several ways to tune the "redirect_dir" feature.
196
197Kernel config options:
198
199- OVERLAY_FS_REDIRECT_DIR:
200    If this is enabled, then redirect_dir is turned on by  default.
201- OVERLAY_FS_REDIRECT_ALWAYS_FOLLOW:
202    If this is enabled, then redirects are always followed by default. Enabling
203    this results in a less secure configuration.  Enable this option only when
204    worried about backward compatibility with kernels that have the redirect_dir
205    feature and follow redirects even if turned off.
206
207Module options (can also be changed through /sys/module/overlay/parameters/*):
208
209- "redirect_dir=BOOL":
210    See OVERLAY_FS_REDIRECT_DIR kernel config option above.
211- "redirect_always_follow=BOOL":
212    See OVERLAY_FS_REDIRECT_ALWAYS_FOLLOW kernel config option above.
213- "redirect_max=NUM":
214    The maximum number of bytes in an absolute redirect (default is 256).
215
216Mount options:
217
218- "redirect_dir=on":
219    Redirects are enabled.
220- "redirect_dir=follow":
221    Redirects are not created, but followed.
222- "redirect_dir=off":
223    Redirects are not created and only followed if "redirect_always_follow"
224    feature is enabled in the kernel/module config.
225- "redirect_dir=nofollow":
226    Redirects are not created and not followed (equivalent to "redirect_dir=off"
227    if "redirect_always_follow" feature is not enabled).
228
229When the NFS export feature is enabled, every copied up directory is
230indexed by the file handle of the lower inode and a file handle of the
231upper directory is stored in a "trusted.overlay.upper" extended attribute
232on the index entry.  On lookup of a merged directory, if the upper
233directory does not match the file handle stores in the index, that is an
234indication that multiple upper directories may be redirected to the same
235lower directory.  In that case, lookup returns an error and warns about
236a possible inconsistency.
237
238Because lower layer redirects cannot be verified with the index, enabling
239NFS export support on an overlay filesystem with no upper layer requires
240turning off redirect follow (e.g. "redirect_dir=nofollow").
241
242
243Non-directories
244---------------
245
246Objects that are not directories (files, symlinks, device-special
247files etc.) are presented either from the upper or lower filesystem as
248appropriate.  When a file in the lower filesystem is accessed in a way
249the requires write-access, such as opening for write access, changing
250some metadata etc., the file is first copied from the lower filesystem
251to the upper filesystem (copy_up).  Note that creating a hard-link
252also requires copy_up, though of course creation of a symlink does
253not.
254
255The copy_up may turn out to be unnecessary, for example if the file is
256opened for read-write but the data is not modified.
257
258The copy_up process first makes sure that the containing directory
259exists in the upper filesystem - creating it and any parents as
260necessary.  It then creates the object with the same metadata (owner,
261mode, mtime, symlink-target etc.) and then if the object is a file, the
262data is copied from the lower to the upper filesystem.  Finally any
263extended attributes are copied up.
264
265Once the copy_up is complete, the overlay filesystem simply
266provides direct access to the newly created file in the upper
267filesystem - future operations on the file are barely noticed by the
268overlay filesystem (though an operation on the name of the file such as
269rename or unlink will of course be noticed and handled).
270
271
272Multiple lower layers
273---------------------
274
275Multiple lower layers can now be given using the the colon (":") as a
276separator character between the directory names.  For example:
277
278  mount -t overlay overlay -olowerdir=/lower1:/lower2:/lower3 /merged
279
280As the example shows, "upperdir=" and "workdir=" may be omitted.  In
281that case the overlay will be read-only.
282
283The specified lower directories will be stacked beginning from the
284rightmost one and going left.  In the above example lower1 will be the
285top, lower2 the middle and lower3 the bottom layer.
286
287
288Metadata only copy up
289--------------------
290
291When metadata only copy up feature is enabled, overlayfs will only copy
292up metadata (as opposed to whole file), when a metadata specific operation
293like chown/chmod is performed. Full file will be copied up later when
294file is opened for WRITE operation.
295
296In other words, this is delayed data copy up operation and data is copied
297up when there is a need to actually modify data.
298
299There are multiple ways to enable/disable this feature. A config option
300CONFIG_OVERLAY_FS_METACOPY can be set/unset to enable/disable this feature
301by default. Or one can enable/disable it at module load time with module
302parameter metacopy=on/off. Lastly, there is also a per mount option
303metacopy=on/off to enable/disable this feature per mount.
304
305Do not use metacopy=on with untrusted upper/lower directories. Otherwise
306it is possible that an attacker can create a handcrafted file with
307appropriate REDIRECT and METACOPY xattrs, and gain access to file on lower
308pointed by REDIRECT. This should not be possible on local system as setting
309"trusted." xattrs will require CAP_SYS_ADMIN. But it should be possible
310for untrusted layers like from a pen drive.
311
312Note: redirect_dir={off|nofollow|follow(*)} conflicts with metacopy=on, and
313results in an error.
314
315(*) redirect_dir=follow only conflicts with metacopy=on if upperdir=... is
316given.
317
318Sharing and copying layers
319--------------------------
320
321Lower layers may be shared among several overlay mounts and that is indeed
322a very common practice.  An overlay mount may use the same lower layer
323path as another overlay mount and it may use a lower layer path that is
324beneath or above the path of another overlay lower layer path.
325
326Using an upper layer path and/or a workdir path that are already used by
327another overlay mount is not allowed and may fail with EBUSY.  Using
328partially overlapping paths is not allowed and may fail with EBUSY.
329If files are accessed from two overlayfs mounts which share or overlap the
330upper layer and/or workdir path the behavior of the overlay is undefined,
331though it will not result in a crash or deadlock.
332
333Mounting an overlay using an upper layer path, where the upper layer path
334was previously used by another mounted overlay in combination with a
335different lower layer path, is allowed, unless the "inodes index" feature
336or "metadata only copy up" feature is enabled.
337
338With the "inodes index" feature, on the first time mount, an NFS file
339handle of the lower layer root directory, along with the UUID of the lower
340filesystem, are encoded and stored in the "trusted.overlay.origin" extended
341attribute on the upper layer root directory.  On subsequent mount attempts,
342the lower root directory file handle and lower filesystem UUID are compared
343to the stored origin in upper root directory.  On failure to verify the
344lower root origin, mount will fail with ESTALE.  An overlayfs mount with
345"inodes index" enabled will fail with EOPNOTSUPP if the lower filesystem
346does not support NFS export, lower filesystem does not have a valid UUID or
347if the upper filesystem does not support extended attributes.
348
349For "metadata only copy up" feature there is no verification mechanism at
350mount time. So if same upper is mounted with different set of lower, mount
351probably will succeed but expect the unexpected later on. So don't do it.
352
353It is quite a common practice to copy overlay layers to a different
354directory tree on the same or different underlying filesystem, and even
355to a different machine.  With the "inodes index" feature, trying to mount
356the copied layers will fail the verification of the lower root file handle.
357
358
359Non-standard behavior
360---------------------
361
362Current version of overlayfs can act as a mostly POSIX compliant
363filesystem.
364
365This is the list of cases that overlayfs doesn't currently handle:
366
367a) POSIX mandates updating st_atime for reads.  This is currently not
368done in the case when the file resides on a lower layer.
369
370b) If a file residing on a lower layer is opened for read-only and then
371memory mapped with MAP_SHARED, then subsequent changes to the file are not
372reflected in the memory mapping.
373
374The following options allow overlayfs to act more like a standards
375compliant filesystem:
376
3771) "redirect_dir"
378
379Enabled with the mount option or module option: "redirect_dir=on" or with
380the kernel config option CONFIG_OVERLAY_FS_REDIRECT_DIR=y.
381
382If this feature is disabled, then rename(2) on a lower or merged directory
383will fail with EXDEV ("Invalid cross-device link").
384
3852) "inode index"
386
387Enabled with the mount option or module option "index=on" or with the
388kernel config option CONFIG_OVERLAY_FS_INDEX=y.
389
390If this feature is disabled and a file with multiple hard links is copied
391up, then this will "break" the link.  Changes will not be propagated to
392other names referring to the same inode.
393
3943) "xino"
395
396Enabled with the mount option "xino=auto" or "xino=on", with the module
397option "xino_auto=on" or with the kernel config option
398CONFIG_OVERLAY_FS_XINO_AUTO=y.  Also implicitly enabled by using the same
399underlying filesystem for all layers making up the overlay.
400
401If this feature is disabled or the underlying filesystem doesn't have
402enough free bits in the inode number, then overlayfs will not be able to
403guarantee that the values of st_ino and st_dev returned by stat(2) and the
404value of d_ino returned by readdir(3) will act like on a normal filesystem.
405E.g. the value of st_dev may be different for two objects in the same
406overlay filesystem and the value of st_ino for directory objects may not be
407persistent and could change even while the overlay filesystem is mounted.
408
409
410Changes to underlying filesystems
411---------------------------------
412
413Offline changes, when the overlay is not mounted, are allowed to either
414the upper or the lower trees.
415
416Changes to the underlying filesystems while part of a mounted overlay
417filesystem are not allowed.  If the underlying filesystem is changed,
418the behavior of the overlay is undefined, though it will not result in
419a crash or deadlock.
420
421When the overlay NFS export feature is enabled, overlay filesystems
422behavior on offline changes of the underlying lower layer is different
423than the behavior when NFS export is disabled.
424
425On every copy_up, an NFS file handle of the lower inode, along with the
426UUID of the lower filesystem, are encoded and stored in an extended
427attribute "trusted.overlay.origin" on the upper inode.
428
429When the NFS export feature is enabled, a lookup of a merged directory,
430that found a lower directory at the lookup path or at the path pointed
431to by the "trusted.overlay.redirect" extended attribute, will verify
432that the found lower directory file handle and lower filesystem UUID
433match the origin file handle that was stored at copy_up time.  If a
434found lower directory does not match the stored origin, that directory
435will not be merged with the upper directory.
436
437
438
439NFS export
440----------
441
442When the underlying filesystems supports NFS export and the "nfs_export"
443feature is enabled, an overlay filesystem may be exported to NFS.
444
445With the "nfs_export" feature, on copy_up of any lower object, an index
446entry is created under the index directory.  The index entry name is the
447hexadecimal representation of the copy up origin file handle.  For a
448non-directory object, the index entry is a hard link to the upper inode.
449For a directory object, the index entry has an extended attribute
450"trusted.overlay.upper" with an encoded file handle of the upper
451directory inode.
452
453When encoding a file handle from an overlay filesystem object, the
454following rules apply:
455
4561. For a non-upper object, encode a lower file handle from lower inode
4572. For an indexed object, encode a lower file handle from copy_up origin
4583. For a pure-upper object and for an existing non-indexed upper object,
459   encode an upper file handle from upper inode
460
461The encoded overlay file handle includes:
462 - Header including path type information (e.g. lower/upper)
463 - UUID of the underlying filesystem
464 - Underlying filesystem encoding of underlying inode
465
466This encoding format is identical to the encoding format file handles that
467are stored in extended attribute "trusted.overlay.origin".
468
469When decoding an overlay file handle, the following steps are followed:
470
4711. Find underlying layer by UUID and path type information.
4722. Decode the underlying filesystem file handle to underlying dentry.
4733. For a lower file handle, lookup the handle in index directory by name.
4744. If a whiteout is found in index, return ESTALE. This represents an
475   overlay object that was deleted after its file handle was encoded.
4765. For a non-directory, instantiate a disconnected overlay dentry from the
477   decoded underlying dentry, the path type and index inode, if found.
4786. For a directory, use the connected underlying decoded dentry, path type
479   and index, to lookup a connected overlay dentry.
480
481Decoding a non-directory file handle may return a disconnected dentry.
482copy_up of that disconnected dentry will create an upper index entry with
483no upper alias.
484
485When overlay filesystem has multiple lower layers, a middle layer
486directory may have a "redirect" to lower directory.  Because middle layer
487"redirects" are not indexed, a lower file handle that was encoded from the
488"redirect" origin directory, cannot be used to find the middle or upper
489layer directory.  Similarly, a lower file handle that was encoded from a
490descendant of the "redirect" origin directory, cannot be used to
491reconstruct a connected overlay path.  To mitigate the cases of
492directories that cannot be decoded from a lower file handle, these
493directories are copied up on encode and encoded as an upper file handle.
494On an overlay filesystem with no upper layer this mitigation cannot be
495used NFS export in this setup requires turning off redirect follow (e.g.
496"redirect_dir=nofollow").
497
498The overlay filesystem does not support non-directory connectable file
499handles, so exporting with the 'subtree_check' exportfs configuration will
500cause failures to lookup files over NFS.
501
502When the NFS export feature is enabled, all directory index entries are
503verified on mount time to check that upper file handles are not stale.
504This verification may cause significant overhead in some cases.
505
506
507Testsuite
508---------
509
510There's a testsuite originally developed by David Howells and currently
511maintained by Amir Goldstein at:
512
513  https://github.com/amir73il/unionmount-testsuite.git
514
515Run as root:
516
517  # cd unionmount-testsuite
518  # ./run --ov --verify
519