1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3========================================= 4Overview of the Linux Virtual File System 5========================================= 6 7Original author: Richard Gooch <rgooch@atnf.csiro.au> 8 9- Copyright (C) 1999 Richard Gooch 10- Copyright (C) 2005 Pekka Enberg 11 12 13Introduction 14============ 15 16The Virtual File System (also known as the Virtual Filesystem Switch) is 17the software layer in the kernel that provides the filesystem interface 18to userspace programs. It also provides an abstraction within the 19kernel which allows different filesystem implementations to coexist. 20 21VFS system calls open(2), stat(2), read(2), write(2), chmod(2) and so on 22are called from a process context. Filesystem locking is described in 23the document Documentation/filesystems/locking.rst. 24 25 26Directory Entry Cache (dcache) 27------------------------------ 28 29The VFS implements the open(2), stat(2), chmod(2), and similar system 30calls. The pathname argument that is passed to them is used by the VFS 31to search through the directory entry cache (also known as the dentry 32cache or dcache). This provides a very fast look-up mechanism to 33translate a pathname (filename) into a specific dentry. Dentries live 34in RAM and are never saved to disc: they exist only for performance. 35 36The dentry cache is meant to be a view into your entire filespace. As 37most computers cannot fit all dentries in the RAM at the same time, some 38bits of the cache are missing. In order to resolve your pathname into a 39dentry, the VFS may have to resort to creating dentries along the way, 40and then loading the inode. This is done by looking up the inode. 41 42 43The Inode Object 44---------------- 45 46An individual dentry usually has a pointer to an inode. Inodes are 47filesystem objects such as regular files, directories, FIFOs and other 48beasts. They live either on the disc (for block device filesystems) or 49in the memory (for pseudo filesystems). Inodes that live on the disc 50are copied into the memory when required and changes to the inode are 51written back to disc. A single inode can be pointed to by multiple 52dentries (hard links, for example, do this). 53 54To look up an inode requires that the VFS calls the lookup() method of 55the parent directory inode. This method is installed by the specific 56filesystem implementation that the inode lives in. Once the VFS has the 57required dentry (and hence the inode), we can do all those boring things 58like open(2) the file, or stat(2) it to peek at the inode data. The 59stat(2) operation is fairly simple: once the VFS has the dentry, it 60peeks at the inode data and passes some of it back to userspace. 61 62 63The File Object 64--------------- 65 66Opening a file requires another operation: allocation of a file 67structure (this is the kernel-side implementation of file descriptors). 68The freshly allocated file structure is initialized with a pointer to 69the dentry and a set of file operation member functions. These are 70taken from the inode data. The open() file method is then called so the 71specific filesystem implementation can do its work. You can see that 72this is another switch performed by the VFS. The file structure is 73placed into the file descriptor table for the process. 74 75Reading, writing and closing files (and other assorted VFS operations) 76is done by using the userspace file descriptor to grab the appropriate 77file structure, and then calling the required file structure method to 78do whatever is required. For as long as the file is open, it keeps the 79dentry in use, which in turn means that the VFS inode is still in use. 80 81 82Registering and Mounting a Filesystem 83===================================== 84 85To register and unregister a filesystem, use the following API 86functions: 87 88.. code-block:: c 89 90 #include <linux/fs.h> 91 92 extern int register_filesystem(struct file_system_type *); 93 extern int unregister_filesystem(struct file_system_type *); 94 95The passed struct file_system_type describes your filesystem. When a 96request is made to mount a filesystem onto a directory in your 97namespace, the VFS will call the appropriate mount() method for the 98specific filesystem. New vfsmount referring to the tree returned by 99->mount() will be attached to the mountpoint, so that when pathname 100resolution reaches the mountpoint it will jump into the root of that 101vfsmount. 102 103You can see all filesystems that are registered to the kernel in the 104file /proc/filesystems. 105 106 107struct file_system_type 108----------------------- 109 110This describes the filesystem. As of kernel 2.6.39, the following 111members are defined: 112 113.. code-block:: c 114 115 struct file_system_type { 116 const char *name; 117 int fs_flags; 118 struct dentry *(*mount) (struct file_system_type *, int, 119 const char *, void *); 120 void (*kill_sb) (struct super_block *); 121 struct module *owner; 122 struct file_system_type * next; 123 struct list_head fs_supers; 124 struct lock_class_key s_lock_key; 125 struct lock_class_key s_umount_key; 126 }; 127 128``name`` 129 the name of the filesystem type, such as "ext2", "iso9660", 130 "msdos" and so on 131 132``fs_flags`` 133 various flags (i.e. FS_REQUIRES_DEV, FS_NO_DCACHE, etc.) 134 135``mount`` 136 the method to call when a new instance of this filesystem should 137 be mounted 138 139``kill_sb`` 140 the method to call when an instance of this filesystem should be 141 shut down 142 143 144``owner`` 145 for internal VFS use: you should initialize this to THIS_MODULE 146 in most cases. 147 148``next`` 149 for internal VFS use: you should initialize this to NULL 150 151 s_lock_key, s_umount_key: lockdep-specific 152 153The mount() method has the following arguments: 154 155``struct file_system_type *fs_type`` 156 describes the filesystem, partly initialized by the specific 157 filesystem code 158 159``int flags`` 160 mount flags 161 162``const char *dev_name`` 163 the device name we are mounting. 164 165``void *data`` 166 arbitrary mount options, usually comes as an ASCII string (see 167 "Mount Options" section) 168 169The mount() method must return the root dentry of the tree requested by 170caller. An active reference to its superblock must be grabbed and the 171superblock must be locked. On failure it should return ERR_PTR(error). 172 173The arguments match those of mount(2) and their interpretation depends 174on filesystem type. E.g. for block filesystems, dev_name is interpreted 175as block device name, that device is opened and if it contains a 176suitable filesystem image the method creates and initializes struct 177super_block accordingly, returning its root dentry to caller. 178 179->mount() may choose to return a subtree of existing filesystem - it 180doesn't have to create a new one. The main result from the caller's 181point of view is a reference to dentry at the root of (sub)tree to be 182attached; creation of new superblock is a common side effect. 183 184The most interesting member of the superblock structure that the mount() 185method fills in is the "s_op" field. This is a pointer to a "struct 186super_operations" which describes the next level of the filesystem 187implementation. 188 189Usually, a filesystem uses one of the generic mount() implementations 190and provides a fill_super() callback instead. The generic variants are: 191 192``mount_bdev`` 193 mount a filesystem residing on a block device 194 195``mount_nodev`` 196 mount a filesystem that is not backed by a device 197 198``mount_single`` 199 mount a filesystem which shares the instance between all mounts 200 201A fill_super() callback implementation has the following arguments: 202 203``struct super_block *sb`` 204 the superblock structure. The callback must initialize this 205 properly. 206 207``void *data`` 208 arbitrary mount options, usually comes as an ASCII string (see 209 "Mount Options" section) 210 211``int silent`` 212 whether or not to be silent on error 213 214 215The Superblock Object 216===================== 217 218A superblock object represents a mounted filesystem. 219 220 221struct super_operations 222----------------------- 223 224This describes how the VFS can manipulate the superblock of your 225filesystem. As of kernel 2.6.22, the following members are defined: 226 227.. code-block:: c 228 229 struct super_operations { 230 struct inode *(*alloc_inode)(struct super_block *sb); 231 void (*destroy_inode)(struct inode *); 232 233 void (*dirty_inode) (struct inode *, int flags); 234 int (*write_inode) (struct inode *, int); 235 void (*drop_inode) (struct inode *); 236 void (*delete_inode) (struct inode *); 237 void (*put_super) (struct super_block *); 238 int (*sync_fs)(struct super_block *sb, int wait); 239 int (*freeze_fs) (struct super_block *); 240 int (*unfreeze_fs) (struct super_block *); 241 int (*statfs) (struct dentry *, struct kstatfs *); 242 int (*remount_fs) (struct super_block *, int *, char *); 243 void (*clear_inode) (struct inode *); 244 void (*umount_begin) (struct super_block *); 245 246 int (*show_options)(struct seq_file *, struct dentry *); 247 248 ssize_t (*quota_read)(struct super_block *, int, char *, size_t, loff_t); 249 ssize_t (*quota_write)(struct super_block *, int, const char *, size_t, loff_t); 250 int (*nr_cached_objects)(struct super_block *); 251 void (*free_cached_objects)(struct super_block *, int); 252 }; 253 254All methods are called without any locks being held, unless otherwise 255noted. This means that most methods can block safely. All methods are 256only called from a process context (i.e. not from an interrupt handler 257or bottom half). 258 259``alloc_inode`` 260 this method is called by alloc_inode() to allocate memory for 261 struct inode and initialize it. If this function is not 262 defined, a simple 'struct inode' is allocated. Normally 263 alloc_inode will be used to allocate a larger structure which 264 contains a 'struct inode' embedded within it. 265 266``destroy_inode`` 267 this method is called by destroy_inode() to release resources 268 allocated for struct inode. It is only required if 269 ->alloc_inode was defined and simply undoes anything done by 270 ->alloc_inode. 271 272``dirty_inode`` 273 this method is called by the VFS when an inode is marked dirty. 274 This is specifically for the inode itself being marked dirty, 275 not its data. If the update needs to be persisted by fdatasync(), 276 then I_DIRTY_DATASYNC will be set in the flags argument. 277 I_DIRTY_TIME will be set in the flags in case lazytime is enabled 278 and struct inode has times updated since the last ->dirty_inode 279 call. 280 281``write_inode`` 282 this method is called when the VFS needs to write an inode to 283 disc. The second parameter indicates whether the write should 284 be synchronous or not, not all filesystems check this flag. 285 286``drop_inode`` 287 called when the last access to the inode is dropped, with the 288 inode->i_lock spinlock held. 289 290 This method should be either NULL (normal UNIX filesystem 291 semantics) or "generic_delete_inode" (for filesystems that do 292 not want to cache inodes - causing "delete_inode" to always be 293 called regardless of the value of i_nlink) 294 295 The "generic_delete_inode()" behavior is equivalent to the old 296 practice of using "force_delete" in the put_inode() case, but 297 does not have the races that the "force_delete()" approach had. 298 299``delete_inode`` 300 called when the VFS wants to delete an inode 301 302``put_super`` 303 called when the VFS wishes to free the superblock 304 (i.e. unmount). This is called with the superblock lock held 305 306``sync_fs`` 307 called when VFS is writing out all dirty data associated with a 308 superblock. The second parameter indicates whether the method 309 should wait until the write out has been completed. Optional. 310 311``freeze_fs`` 312 called when VFS is locking a filesystem and forcing it into a 313 consistent state. This method is currently used by the Logical 314 Volume Manager (LVM). 315 316``unfreeze_fs`` 317 called when VFS is unlocking a filesystem and making it writable 318 again. 319 320``statfs`` 321 called when the VFS needs to get filesystem statistics. 322 323``remount_fs`` 324 called when the filesystem is remounted. This is called with 325 the kernel lock held 326 327``clear_inode`` 328 called then the VFS clears the inode. Optional 329 330``umount_begin`` 331 called when the VFS is unmounting a filesystem. 332 333``show_options`` 334 called by the VFS to show mount options for /proc/<pid>/mounts. 335 (see "Mount Options" section) 336 337``quota_read`` 338 called by the VFS to read from filesystem quota file. 339 340``quota_write`` 341 called by the VFS to write to filesystem quota file. 342 343``nr_cached_objects`` 344 called by the sb cache shrinking function for the filesystem to 345 return the number of freeable cached objects it contains. 346 Optional. 347 348``free_cache_objects`` 349 called by the sb cache shrinking function for the filesystem to 350 scan the number of objects indicated to try to free them. 351 Optional, but any filesystem implementing this method needs to 352 also implement ->nr_cached_objects for it to be called 353 correctly. 354 355 We can't do anything with any errors that the filesystem might 356 encountered, hence the void return type. This will never be 357 called if the VM is trying to reclaim under GFP_NOFS conditions, 358 hence this method does not need to handle that situation itself. 359 360 Implementations must include conditional reschedule calls inside 361 any scanning loop that is done. This allows the VFS to 362 determine appropriate scan batch sizes without having to worry 363 about whether implementations will cause holdoff problems due to 364 large scan batch sizes. 365 366Whoever sets up the inode is responsible for filling in the "i_op" 367field. This is a pointer to a "struct inode_operations" which describes 368the methods that can be performed on individual inodes. 369 370 371struct xattr_handlers 372--------------------- 373 374On filesystems that support extended attributes (xattrs), the s_xattr 375superblock field points to a NULL-terminated array of xattr handlers. 376Extended attributes are name:value pairs. 377 378``name`` 379 Indicates that the handler matches attributes with the specified 380 name (such as "system.posix_acl_access"); the prefix field must 381 be NULL. 382 383``prefix`` 384 Indicates that the handler matches all attributes with the 385 specified name prefix (such as "user."); the name field must be 386 NULL. 387 388``list`` 389 Determine if attributes matching this xattr handler should be 390 listed for a particular dentry. Used by some listxattr 391 implementations like generic_listxattr. 392 393``get`` 394 Called by the VFS to get the value of a particular extended 395 attribute. This method is called by the getxattr(2) system 396 call. 397 398``set`` 399 Called by the VFS to set the value of a particular extended 400 attribute. When the new value is NULL, called to remove a 401 particular extended attribute. This method is called by the 402 setxattr(2) and removexattr(2) system calls. 403 404When none of the xattr handlers of a filesystem match the specified 405attribute name or when a filesystem doesn't support extended attributes, 406the various ``*xattr(2)`` system calls return -EOPNOTSUPP. 407 408 409The Inode Object 410================ 411 412An inode object represents an object within the filesystem. 413 414 415struct inode_operations 416----------------------- 417 418This describes how the VFS can manipulate an inode in your filesystem. 419As of kernel 2.6.22, the following members are defined: 420 421.. code-block:: c 422 423 struct inode_operations { 424 int (*create) (struct user_namespace *, struct inode *,struct dentry *, umode_t, bool); 425 struct dentry * (*lookup) (struct inode *,struct dentry *, unsigned int); 426 int (*link) (struct dentry *,struct inode *,struct dentry *); 427 int (*unlink) (struct inode *,struct dentry *); 428 int (*symlink) (struct user_namespace *, struct inode *,struct dentry *,const char *); 429 int (*mkdir) (struct user_namespace *, struct inode *,struct dentry *,umode_t); 430 int (*rmdir) (struct inode *,struct dentry *); 431 int (*mknod) (struct user_namespace *, struct inode *,struct dentry *,umode_t,dev_t); 432 int (*rename) (struct user_namespace *, struct inode *, struct dentry *, 433 struct inode *, struct dentry *, unsigned int); 434 int (*readlink) (struct dentry *, char __user *,int); 435 const char *(*get_link) (struct dentry *, struct inode *, 436 struct delayed_call *); 437 int (*permission) (struct user_namespace *, struct inode *, int); 438 struct posix_acl * (*get_acl)(struct inode *, int, bool); 439 int (*setattr) (struct user_namespace *, struct dentry *, struct iattr *); 440 int (*getattr) (struct user_namespace *, const struct path *, struct kstat *, u32, unsigned int); 441 ssize_t (*listxattr) (struct dentry *, char *, size_t); 442 void (*update_time)(struct inode *, struct timespec *, int); 443 int (*atomic_open)(struct inode *, struct dentry *, struct file *, 444 unsigned open_flag, umode_t create_mode); 445 int (*tmpfile) (struct user_namespace *, struct inode *, struct dentry *, umode_t); 446 int (*set_acl)(struct user_namespace *, struct inode *, struct posix_acl *, int); 447 int (*fileattr_set)(struct user_namespace *mnt_userns, 448 struct dentry *dentry, struct fileattr *fa); 449 int (*fileattr_get)(struct dentry *dentry, struct fileattr *fa); 450 }; 451 452Again, all methods are called without any locks being held, unless 453otherwise noted. 454 455``create`` 456 called by the open(2) and creat(2) system calls. Only required 457 if you want to support regular files. The dentry you get should 458 not have an inode (i.e. it should be a negative dentry). Here 459 you will probably call d_instantiate() with the dentry and the 460 newly created inode 461 462``lookup`` 463 called when the VFS needs to look up an inode in a parent 464 directory. The name to look for is found in the dentry. This 465 method must call d_add() to insert the found inode into the 466 dentry. The "i_count" field in the inode structure should be 467 incremented. If the named inode does not exist a NULL inode 468 should be inserted into the dentry (this is called a negative 469 dentry). Returning an error code from this routine must only be 470 done on a real error, otherwise creating inodes with system 471 calls like create(2), mknod(2), mkdir(2) and so on will fail. 472 If you wish to overload the dentry methods then you should 473 initialise the "d_dop" field in the dentry; this is a pointer to 474 a struct "dentry_operations". This method is called with the 475 directory inode semaphore held 476 477``link`` 478 called by the link(2) system call. Only required if you want to 479 support hard links. You will probably need to call 480 d_instantiate() just as you would in the create() method 481 482``unlink`` 483 called by the unlink(2) system call. Only required if you want 484 to support deleting inodes 485 486``symlink`` 487 called by the symlink(2) system call. Only required if you want 488 to support symlinks. You will probably need to call 489 d_instantiate() just as you would in the create() method 490 491``mkdir`` 492 called by the mkdir(2) system call. Only required if you want 493 to support creating subdirectories. You will probably need to 494 call d_instantiate() just as you would in the create() method 495 496``rmdir`` 497 called by the rmdir(2) system call. Only required if you want 498 to support deleting subdirectories 499 500``mknod`` 501 called by the mknod(2) system call to create a device (char, 502 block) inode or a named pipe (FIFO) or socket. Only required if 503 you want to support creating these types of inodes. You will 504 probably need to call d_instantiate() just as you would in the 505 create() method 506 507``rename`` 508 called by the rename(2) system call to rename the object to have 509 the parent and name given by the second inode and dentry. 510 511 The filesystem must return -EINVAL for any unsupported or 512 unknown flags. Currently the following flags are implemented: 513 (1) RENAME_NOREPLACE: this flag indicates that if the target of 514 the rename exists the rename should fail with -EEXIST instead of 515 replacing the target. The VFS already checks for existence, so 516 for local filesystems the RENAME_NOREPLACE implementation is 517 equivalent to plain rename. 518 (2) RENAME_EXCHANGE: exchange source and target. Both must 519 exist; this is checked by the VFS. Unlike plain rename, source 520 and target may be of different type. 521 522``get_link`` 523 called by the VFS to follow a symbolic link to the inode it 524 points to. Only required if you want to support symbolic links. 525 This method returns the symlink body to traverse (and possibly 526 resets the current position with nd_jump_link()). If the body 527 won't go away until the inode is gone, nothing else is needed; 528 if it needs to be otherwise pinned, arrange for its release by 529 having get_link(..., ..., done) do set_delayed_call(done, 530 destructor, argument). In that case destructor(argument) will 531 be called once VFS is done with the body you've returned. May 532 be called in RCU mode; that is indicated by NULL dentry 533 argument. If request can't be handled without leaving RCU mode, 534 have it return ERR_PTR(-ECHILD). 535 536 If the filesystem stores the symlink target in ->i_link, the 537 VFS may use it directly without calling ->get_link(); however, 538 ->get_link() must still be provided. ->i_link must not be 539 freed until after an RCU grace period. Writing to ->i_link 540 post-iget() time requires a 'release' memory barrier. 541 542``readlink`` 543 this is now just an override for use by readlink(2) for the 544 cases when ->get_link uses nd_jump_link() or object is not in 545 fact a symlink. Normally filesystems should only implement 546 ->get_link for symlinks and readlink(2) will automatically use 547 that. 548 549``permission`` 550 called by the VFS to check for access rights on a POSIX-like 551 filesystem. 552 553 May be called in rcu-walk mode (mask & MAY_NOT_BLOCK). If in 554 rcu-walk mode, the filesystem must check the permission without 555 blocking or storing to the inode. 556 557 If a situation is encountered that rcu-walk cannot handle, 558 return 559 -ECHILD and it will be called again in ref-walk mode. 560 561``setattr`` 562 called by the VFS to set attributes for a file. This method is 563 called by chmod(2) and related system calls. 564 565``getattr`` 566 called by the VFS to get attributes of a file. This method is 567 called by stat(2) and related system calls. 568 569``listxattr`` 570 called by the VFS to list all extended attributes for a given 571 file. This method is called by the listxattr(2) system call. 572 573``update_time`` 574 called by the VFS to update a specific time or the i_version of 575 an inode. If this is not defined the VFS will update the inode 576 itself and call mark_inode_dirty_sync. 577 578``atomic_open`` 579 called on the last component of an open. Using this optional 580 method the filesystem can look up, possibly create and open the 581 file in one atomic operation. If it wants to leave actual 582 opening to the caller (e.g. if the file turned out to be a 583 symlink, device, or just something filesystem won't do atomic 584 open for), it may signal this by returning finish_no_open(file, 585 dentry). This method is only called if the last component is 586 negative or needs lookup. Cached positive dentries are still 587 handled by f_op->open(). If the file was created, FMODE_CREATED 588 flag should be set in file->f_mode. In case of O_EXCL the 589 method must only succeed if the file didn't exist and hence 590 FMODE_CREATED shall always be set on success. 591 592``tmpfile`` 593 called in the end of O_TMPFILE open(). Optional, equivalent to 594 atomically creating, opening and unlinking a file in given 595 directory. 596 597``fileattr_get`` 598 called on ioctl(FS_IOC_GETFLAGS) and ioctl(FS_IOC_FSGETXATTR) to 599 retrieve miscellaneous file flags and attributes. Also called 600 before the relevant SET operation to check what is being changed 601 (in this case with i_rwsem locked exclusive). If unset, then 602 fall back to f_op->ioctl(). 603 604``fileattr_set`` 605 called on ioctl(FS_IOC_SETFLAGS) and ioctl(FS_IOC_FSSETXATTR) to 606 change miscellaneous file flags and attributes. Callers hold 607 i_rwsem exclusive. If unset, then fall back to f_op->ioctl(). 608 609 610The Address Space Object 611======================== 612 613The address space object is used to group and manage pages in the page 614cache. It can be used to keep track of the pages in a file (or anything 615else) and also track the mapping of sections of the file into process 616address spaces. 617 618There are a number of distinct yet related services that an 619address-space can provide. These include communicating memory pressure, 620page lookup by address, and keeping track of pages tagged as Dirty or 621Writeback. 622 623The first can be used independently to the others. The VM can try to 624either write dirty pages in order to clean them, or release clean pages 625in order to reuse them. To do this it can call the ->writepage method 626on dirty pages, and ->releasepage on clean pages with PagePrivate set. 627Clean pages without PagePrivate and with no external references will be 628released without notice being given to the address_space. 629 630To achieve this functionality, pages need to be placed on an LRU with 631lru_cache_add and mark_page_active needs to be called whenever the page 632is used. 633 634Pages are normally kept in a radix tree index by ->index. This tree 635maintains information about the PG_Dirty and PG_Writeback status of each 636page, so that pages with either of these flags can be found quickly. 637 638The Dirty tag is primarily used by mpage_writepages - the default 639->writepages method. It uses the tag to find dirty pages to call 640->writepage on. If mpage_writepages is not used (i.e. the address 641provides its own ->writepages) , the PAGECACHE_TAG_DIRTY tag is almost 642unused. write_inode_now and sync_inode do use it (through 643__sync_single_inode) to check if ->writepages has been successful in 644writing out the whole address_space. 645 646The Writeback tag is used by filemap*wait* and sync_page* functions, via 647filemap_fdatawait_range, to wait for all writeback to complete. 648 649An address_space handler may attach extra information to a page, 650typically using the 'private' field in the 'struct page'. If such 651information is attached, the PG_Private flag should be set. This will 652cause various VM routines to make extra calls into the address_space 653handler to deal with that data. 654 655An address space acts as an intermediate between storage and 656application. Data is read into the address space a whole page at a 657time, and provided to the application either by copying of the page, or 658by memory-mapping the page. Data is written into the address space by 659the application, and then written-back to storage typically in whole 660pages, however the address_space has finer control of write sizes. 661 662The read process essentially only requires 'readpage'. The write 663process is more complicated and uses write_begin/write_end or 664set_page_dirty to write data into the address_space, and writepage and 665writepages to writeback data to storage. 666 667Adding and removing pages to/from an address_space is protected by the 668inode's i_mutex. 669 670When data is written to a page, the PG_Dirty flag should be set. It 671typically remains set until writepage asks for it to be written. This 672should clear PG_Dirty and set PG_Writeback. It can be actually written 673at any point after PG_Dirty is clear. Once it is known to be safe, 674PG_Writeback is cleared. 675 676Writeback makes use of a writeback_control structure to direct the 677operations. This gives the writepage and writepages operations some 678information about the nature of and reason for the writeback request, 679and the constraints under which it is being done. It is also used to 680return information back to the caller about the result of a writepage or 681writepages request. 682 683 684Handling errors during writeback 685-------------------------------- 686 687Most applications that do buffered I/O will periodically call a file 688synchronization call (fsync, fdatasync, msync or sync_file_range) to 689ensure that data written has made it to the backing store. When there 690is an error during writeback, they expect that error to be reported when 691a file sync request is made. After an error has been reported on one 692request, subsequent requests on the same file descriptor should return 6930, unless further writeback errors have occurred since the previous file 694syncronization. 695 696Ideally, the kernel would report errors only on file descriptions on 697which writes were done that subsequently failed to be written back. The 698generic pagecache infrastructure does not track the file descriptions 699that have dirtied each individual page however, so determining which 700file descriptors should get back an error is not possible. 701 702Instead, the generic writeback error tracking infrastructure in the 703kernel settles for reporting errors to fsync on all file descriptions 704that were open at the time that the error occurred. In a situation with 705multiple writers, all of them will get back an error on a subsequent 706fsync, even if all of the writes done through that particular file 707descriptor succeeded (or even if there were no writes on that file 708descriptor at all). 709 710Filesystems that wish to use this infrastructure should call 711mapping_set_error to record the error in the address_space when it 712occurs. Then, after writing back data from the pagecache in their 713file->fsync operation, they should call file_check_and_advance_wb_err to 714ensure that the struct file's error cursor has advanced to the correct 715point in the stream of errors emitted by the backing device(s). 716 717 718struct address_space_operations 719------------------------------- 720 721This describes how the VFS can manipulate mapping of a file to page 722cache in your filesystem. The following members are defined: 723 724.. code-block:: c 725 726 struct address_space_operations { 727 int (*writepage)(struct page *page, struct writeback_control *wbc); 728 int (*readpage)(struct file *, struct page *); 729 int (*writepages)(struct address_space *, struct writeback_control *); 730 int (*set_page_dirty)(struct page *page); 731 void (*readahead)(struct readahead_control *); 732 int (*readpages)(struct file *filp, struct address_space *mapping, 733 struct list_head *pages, unsigned nr_pages); 734 int (*write_begin)(struct file *, struct address_space *mapping, 735 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned flags, 736 struct page **pagep, void **fsdata); 737 int (*write_end)(struct file *, struct address_space *mapping, 738 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned copied, 739 struct page *page, void *fsdata); 740 sector_t (*bmap)(struct address_space *, sector_t); 741 void (*invalidatepage) (struct page *, unsigned int, unsigned int); 742 int (*releasepage) (struct page *, int); 743 void (*freepage)(struct page *); 744 ssize_t (*direct_IO)(struct kiocb *, struct iov_iter *iter); 745 /* isolate a page for migration */ 746 bool (*isolate_page) (struct page *, isolate_mode_t); 747 /* migrate the contents of a page to the specified target */ 748 int (*migratepage) (struct page *, struct page *); 749 /* put migration-failed page back to right list */ 750 void (*putback_page) (struct page *); 751 int (*launder_page) (struct page *); 752 753 int (*is_partially_uptodate) (struct page *, unsigned long, 754 unsigned long); 755 void (*is_dirty_writeback) (struct page *, bool *, bool *); 756 int (*error_remove_page) (struct mapping *mapping, struct page *page); 757 int (*swap_activate)(struct file *); 758 int (*swap_deactivate)(struct file *); 759 }; 760 761``writepage`` 762 called by the VM to write a dirty page to backing store. This 763 may happen for data integrity reasons (i.e. 'sync'), or to free 764 up memory (flush). The difference can be seen in 765 wbc->sync_mode. The PG_Dirty flag has been cleared and 766 PageLocked is true. writepage should start writeout, should set 767 PG_Writeback, and should make sure the page is unlocked, either 768 synchronously or asynchronously when the write operation 769 completes. 770 771 If wbc->sync_mode is WB_SYNC_NONE, ->writepage doesn't have to 772 try too hard if there are problems, and may choose to write out 773 other pages from the mapping if that is easier (e.g. due to 774 internal dependencies). If it chooses not to start writeout, it 775 should return AOP_WRITEPAGE_ACTIVATE so that the VM will not 776 keep calling ->writepage on that page. 777 778 See the file "Locking" for more details. 779 780``readpage`` 781 called by the VM to read a page from backing store. The page 782 will be Locked when readpage is called, and should be unlocked 783 and marked uptodate once the read completes. If ->readpage 784 discovers that it needs to unlock the page for some reason, it 785 can do so, and then return AOP_TRUNCATED_PAGE. In this case, 786 the page will be relocated, relocked and if that all succeeds, 787 ->readpage will be called again. 788 789``writepages`` 790 called by the VM to write out pages associated with the 791 address_space object. If wbc->sync_mode is WB_SYNC_ALL, then 792 the writeback_control will specify a range of pages that must be 793 written out. If it is WB_SYNC_NONE, then a nr_to_write is 794 given and that many pages should be written if possible. If no 795 ->writepages is given, then mpage_writepages is used instead. 796 This will choose pages from the address space that are tagged as 797 DIRTY and will pass them to ->writepage. 798 799``set_page_dirty`` 800 called by the VM to set a page dirty. This is particularly 801 needed if an address space attaches private data to a page, and 802 that data needs to be updated when a page is dirtied. This is 803 called, for example, when a memory mapped page gets modified. 804 If defined, it should set the PageDirty flag, and the 805 PAGECACHE_TAG_DIRTY tag in the radix tree. 806 807``readahead`` 808 Called by the VM to read pages associated with the address_space 809 object. The pages are consecutive in the page cache and are 810 locked. The implementation should decrement the page refcount 811 after starting I/O on each page. Usually the page will be 812 unlocked by the I/O completion handler. If the filesystem decides 813 to stop attempting I/O before reaching the end of the readahead 814 window, it can simply return. The caller will decrement the page 815 refcount and unlock the remaining pages for you. Set PageUptodate 816 if the I/O completes successfully. Setting PageError on any page 817 will be ignored; simply unlock the page if an I/O error occurs. 818 819``readpages`` 820 called by the VM to read pages associated with the address_space 821 object. This is essentially just a vector version of readpage. 822 Instead of just one page, several pages are requested. 823 readpages is only used for read-ahead, so read errors are 824 ignored. If anything goes wrong, feel free to give up. 825 This interface is deprecated and will be removed by the end of 826 2020; implement readahead instead. 827 828``write_begin`` 829 Called by the generic buffered write code to ask the filesystem 830 to prepare to write len bytes at the given offset in the file. 831 The address_space should check that the write will be able to 832 complete, by allocating space if necessary and doing any other 833 internal housekeeping. If the write will update parts of any 834 basic-blocks on storage, then those blocks should be pre-read 835 (if they haven't been read already) so that the updated blocks 836 can be written out properly. 837 838 The filesystem must return the locked pagecache page for the 839 specified offset, in ``*pagep``, for the caller to write into. 840 841 It must be able to cope with short writes (where the length 842 passed to write_begin is greater than the number of bytes copied 843 into the page). 844 845 flags is a field for AOP_FLAG_xxx flags, described in 846 include/linux/fs.h. 847 848 A void * may be returned in fsdata, which then gets passed into 849 write_end. 850 851 Returns 0 on success; < 0 on failure (which is the error code), 852 in which case write_end is not called. 853 854``write_end`` 855 After a successful write_begin, and data copy, write_end must be 856 called. len is the original len passed to write_begin, and 857 copied is the amount that was able to be copied. 858 859 The filesystem must take care of unlocking the page and 860 releasing it refcount, and updating i_size. 861 862 Returns < 0 on failure, otherwise the number of bytes (<= 863 'copied') that were able to be copied into pagecache. 864 865``bmap`` 866 called by the VFS to map a logical block offset within object to 867 physical block number. This method is used by the FIBMAP ioctl 868 and for working with swap-files. To be able to swap to a file, 869 the file must have a stable mapping to a block device. The swap 870 system does not go through the filesystem but instead uses bmap 871 to find out where the blocks in the file are and uses those 872 addresses directly. 873 874``invalidatepage`` 875 If a page has PagePrivate set, then invalidatepage will be 876 called when part or all of the page is to be removed from the 877 address space. This generally corresponds to either a 878 truncation, punch hole or a complete invalidation of the address 879 space (in the latter case 'offset' will always be 0 and 'length' 880 will be PAGE_SIZE). Any private data associated with the page 881 should be updated to reflect this truncation. If offset is 0 882 and length is PAGE_SIZE, then the private data should be 883 released, because the page must be able to be completely 884 discarded. This may be done by calling the ->releasepage 885 function, but in this case the release MUST succeed. 886 887``releasepage`` 888 releasepage is called on PagePrivate pages to indicate that the 889 page should be freed if possible. ->releasepage should remove 890 any private data from the page and clear the PagePrivate flag. 891 If releasepage() fails for some reason, it must indicate failure 892 with a 0 return value. releasepage() is used in two distinct 893 though related cases. The first is when the VM finds a clean 894 page with no active users and wants to make it a free page. If 895 ->releasepage succeeds, the page will be removed from the 896 address_space and become free. 897 898 The second case is when a request has been made to invalidate 899 some or all pages in an address_space. This can happen through 900 the fadvise(POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED) system call or by the 901 filesystem explicitly requesting it as nfs and 9fs do (when they 902 believe the cache may be out of date with storage) by calling 903 invalidate_inode_pages2(). If the filesystem makes such a call, 904 and needs to be certain that all pages are invalidated, then its 905 releasepage will need to ensure this. Possibly it can clear the 906 PageUptodate bit if it cannot free private data yet. 907 908``freepage`` 909 freepage is called once the page is no longer visible in the 910 page cache in order to allow the cleanup of any private data. 911 Since it may be called by the memory reclaimer, it should not 912 assume that the original address_space mapping still exists, and 913 it should not block. 914 915``direct_IO`` 916 called by the generic read/write routines to perform direct_IO - 917 that is IO requests which bypass the page cache and transfer 918 data directly between the storage and the application's address 919 space. 920 921``isolate_page`` 922 Called by the VM when isolating a movable non-lru page. If page 923 is successfully isolated, VM marks the page as PG_isolated via 924 __SetPageIsolated. 925 926``migrate_page`` 927 This is used to compact the physical memory usage. If the VM 928 wants to relocate a page (maybe off a memory card that is 929 signalling imminent failure) it will pass a new page and an old 930 page to this function. migrate_page should transfer any private 931 data across and update any references that it has to the page. 932 933``putback_page`` 934 Called by the VM when isolated page's migration fails. 935 936``launder_page`` 937 Called before freeing a page - it writes back the dirty page. 938 To prevent redirtying the page, it is kept locked during the 939 whole operation. 940 941``is_partially_uptodate`` 942 Called by the VM when reading a file through the pagecache when 943 the underlying blocksize != pagesize. If the required block is 944 up to date then the read can complete without needing the IO to 945 bring the whole page up to date. 946 947``is_dirty_writeback`` 948 Called by the VM when attempting to reclaim a page. The VM uses 949 dirty and writeback information to determine if it needs to 950 stall to allow flushers a chance to complete some IO. 951 Ordinarily it can use PageDirty and PageWriteback but some 952 filesystems have more complex state (unstable pages in NFS 953 prevent reclaim) or do not set those flags due to locking 954 problems. This callback allows a filesystem to indicate to the 955 VM if a page should be treated as dirty or writeback for the 956 purposes of stalling. 957 958``error_remove_page`` 959 normally set to generic_error_remove_page if truncation is ok 960 for this address space. Used for memory failure handling. 961 Setting this implies you deal with pages going away under you, 962 unless you have them locked or reference counts increased. 963 964``swap_activate`` 965 Called when swapon is used on a file to allocate space if 966 necessary and pin the block lookup information in memory. A 967 return value of zero indicates success, in which case this file 968 can be used to back swapspace. 969 970``swap_deactivate`` 971 Called during swapoff on files where swap_activate was 972 successful. 973 974 975The File Object 976=============== 977 978A file object represents a file opened by a process. This is also known 979as an "open file description" in POSIX parlance. 980 981 982struct file_operations 983---------------------- 984 985This describes how the VFS can manipulate an open file. As of kernel 9864.18, the following members are defined: 987 988.. code-block:: c 989 990 struct file_operations { 991 struct module *owner; 992 loff_t (*llseek) (struct file *, loff_t, int); 993 ssize_t (*read) (struct file *, char __user *, size_t, loff_t *); 994 ssize_t (*write) (struct file *, const char __user *, size_t, loff_t *); 995 ssize_t (*read_iter) (struct kiocb *, struct iov_iter *); 996 ssize_t (*write_iter) (struct kiocb *, struct iov_iter *); 997 int (*iopoll)(struct kiocb *kiocb, bool spin); 998 int (*iterate) (struct file *, struct dir_context *); 999 int (*iterate_shared) (struct file *, struct dir_context *); 1000 __poll_t (*poll) (struct file *, struct poll_table_struct *); 1001 long (*unlocked_ioctl) (struct file *, unsigned int, unsigned long); 1002 long (*compat_ioctl) (struct file *, unsigned int, unsigned long); 1003 int (*mmap) (struct file *, struct vm_area_struct *); 1004 int (*open) (struct inode *, struct file *); 1005 int (*flush) (struct file *, fl_owner_t id); 1006 int (*release) (struct inode *, struct file *); 1007 int (*fsync) (struct file *, loff_t, loff_t, int datasync); 1008 int (*fasync) (int, struct file *, int); 1009 int (*lock) (struct file *, int, struct file_lock *); 1010 ssize_t (*sendpage) (struct file *, struct page *, int, size_t, loff_t *, int); 1011 unsigned long (*get_unmapped_area)(struct file *, unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned long); 1012 int (*check_flags)(int); 1013 int (*flock) (struct file *, int, struct file_lock *); 1014 ssize_t (*splice_write)(struct pipe_inode_info *, struct file *, loff_t *, size_t, unsigned int); 1015 ssize_t (*splice_read)(struct file *, loff_t *, struct pipe_inode_info *, size_t, unsigned int); 1016 int (*setlease)(struct file *, long, struct file_lock **, void **); 1017 long (*fallocate)(struct file *file, int mode, loff_t offset, 1018 loff_t len); 1019 void (*show_fdinfo)(struct seq_file *m, struct file *f); 1020 #ifndef CONFIG_MMU 1021 unsigned (*mmap_capabilities)(struct file *); 1022 #endif 1023 ssize_t (*copy_file_range)(struct file *, loff_t, struct file *, loff_t, size_t, unsigned int); 1024 loff_t (*remap_file_range)(struct file *file_in, loff_t pos_in, 1025 struct file *file_out, loff_t pos_out, 1026 loff_t len, unsigned int remap_flags); 1027 int (*fadvise)(struct file *, loff_t, loff_t, int); 1028 }; 1029 1030Again, all methods are called without any locks being held, unless 1031otherwise noted. 1032 1033``llseek`` 1034 called when the VFS needs to move the file position index 1035 1036``read`` 1037 called by read(2) and related system calls 1038 1039``read_iter`` 1040 possibly asynchronous read with iov_iter as destination 1041 1042``write`` 1043 called by write(2) and related system calls 1044 1045``write_iter`` 1046 possibly asynchronous write with iov_iter as source 1047 1048``iopoll`` 1049 called when aio wants to poll for completions on HIPRI iocbs 1050 1051``iterate`` 1052 called when the VFS needs to read the directory contents 1053 1054``iterate_shared`` 1055 called when the VFS needs to read the directory contents when 1056 filesystem supports concurrent dir iterators 1057 1058``poll`` 1059 called by the VFS when a process wants to check if there is 1060 activity on this file and (optionally) go to sleep until there 1061 is activity. Called by the select(2) and poll(2) system calls 1062 1063``unlocked_ioctl`` 1064 called by the ioctl(2) system call. 1065 1066``compat_ioctl`` 1067 called by the ioctl(2) system call when 32 bit system calls are 1068 used on 64 bit kernels. 1069 1070``mmap`` 1071 called by the mmap(2) system call 1072 1073``open`` 1074 called by the VFS when an inode should be opened. When the VFS 1075 opens a file, it creates a new "struct file". It then calls the 1076 open method for the newly allocated file structure. You might 1077 think that the open method really belongs in "struct 1078 inode_operations", and you may be right. I think it's done the 1079 way it is because it makes filesystems simpler to implement. 1080 The open() method is a good place to initialize the 1081 "private_data" member in the file structure if you want to point 1082 to a device structure 1083 1084``flush`` 1085 called by the close(2) system call to flush a file 1086 1087``release`` 1088 called when the last reference to an open file is closed 1089 1090``fsync`` 1091 called by the fsync(2) system call. Also see the section above 1092 entitled "Handling errors during writeback". 1093 1094``fasync`` 1095 called by the fcntl(2) system call when asynchronous 1096 (non-blocking) mode is enabled for a file 1097 1098``lock`` 1099 called by the fcntl(2) system call for F_GETLK, F_SETLK, and 1100 F_SETLKW commands 1101 1102``get_unmapped_area`` 1103 called by the mmap(2) system call 1104 1105``check_flags`` 1106 called by the fcntl(2) system call for F_SETFL command 1107 1108``flock`` 1109 called by the flock(2) system call 1110 1111``splice_write`` 1112 called by the VFS to splice data from a pipe to a file. This 1113 method is used by the splice(2) system call 1114 1115``splice_read`` 1116 called by the VFS to splice data from file to a pipe. This 1117 method is used by the splice(2) system call 1118 1119``setlease`` 1120 called by the VFS to set or release a file lock lease. setlease 1121 implementations should call generic_setlease to record or remove 1122 the lease in the inode after setting it. 1123 1124``fallocate`` 1125 called by the VFS to preallocate blocks or punch a hole. 1126 1127``copy_file_range`` 1128 called by the copy_file_range(2) system call. 1129 1130``remap_file_range`` 1131 called by the ioctl(2) system call for FICLONERANGE and FICLONE 1132 and FIDEDUPERANGE commands to remap file ranges. An 1133 implementation should remap len bytes at pos_in of the source 1134 file into the dest file at pos_out. Implementations must handle 1135 callers passing in len == 0; this means "remap to the end of the 1136 source file". The return value should the number of bytes 1137 remapped, or the usual negative error code if errors occurred 1138 before any bytes were remapped. The remap_flags parameter 1139 accepts REMAP_FILE_* flags. If REMAP_FILE_DEDUP is set then the 1140 implementation must only remap if the requested file ranges have 1141 identical contents. If REMAP_FILE_CAN_SHORTEN is set, the caller is 1142 ok with the implementation shortening the request length to 1143 satisfy alignment or EOF requirements (or any other reason). 1144 1145``fadvise`` 1146 possibly called by the fadvise64() system call. 1147 1148Note that the file operations are implemented by the specific 1149filesystem in which the inode resides. When opening a device node 1150(character or block special) most filesystems will call special 1151support routines in the VFS which will locate the required device 1152driver information. These support routines replace the filesystem file 1153operations with those for the device driver, and then proceed to call 1154the new open() method for the file. This is how opening a device file 1155in the filesystem eventually ends up calling the device driver open() 1156method. 1157 1158 1159Directory Entry Cache (dcache) 1160============================== 1161 1162 1163struct dentry_operations 1164------------------------ 1165 1166This describes how a filesystem can overload the standard dentry 1167operations. Dentries and the dcache are the domain of the VFS and the 1168individual filesystem implementations. Device drivers have no business 1169here. These methods may be set to NULL, as they are either optional or 1170the VFS uses a default. As of kernel 2.6.22, the following members are 1171defined: 1172 1173.. code-block:: c 1174 1175 struct dentry_operations { 1176 int (*d_revalidate)(struct dentry *, unsigned int); 1177 int (*d_weak_revalidate)(struct dentry *, unsigned int); 1178 int (*d_hash)(const struct dentry *, struct qstr *); 1179 int (*d_compare)(const struct dentry *, 1180 unsigned int, const char *, const struct qstr *); 1181 int (*d_delete)(const struct dentry *); 1182 int (*d_init)(struct dentry *); 1183 void (*d_release)(struct dentry *); 1184 void (*d_iput)(struct dentry *, struct inode *); 1185 char *(*d_dname)(struct dentry *, char *, int); 1186 struct vfsmount *(*d_automount)(struct path *); 1187 int (*d_manage)(const struct path *, bool); 1188 struct dentry *(*d_real)(struct dentry *, const struct inode *); 1189 }; 1190 1191``d_revalidate`` 1192 called when the VFS needs to revalidate a dentry. This is 1193 called whenever a name look-up finds a dentry in the dcache. 1194 Most local filesystems leave this as NULL, because all their 1195 dentries in the dcache are valid. Network filesystems are 1196 different since things can change on the server without the 1197 client necessarily being aware of it. 1198 1199 This function should return a positive value if the dentry is 1200 still valid, and zero or a negative error code if it isn't. 1201 1202 d_revalidate may be called in rcu-walk mode (flags & 1203 LOOKUP_RCU). If in rcu-walk mode, the filesystem must 1204 revalidate the dentry without blocking or storing to the dentry, 1205 d_parent and d_inode should not be used without care (because 1206 they can change and, in d_inode case, even become NULL under 1207 us). 1208 1209 If a situation is encountered that rcu-walk cannot handle, 1210 return 1211 -ECHILD and it will be called again in ref-walk mode. 1212 1213``d_weak_revalidate`` 1214 called when the VFS needs to revalidate a "jumped" dentry. This 1215 is called when a path-walk ends at dentry that was not acquired 1216 by doing a lookup in the parent directory. This includes "/", 1217 "." and "..", as well as procfs-style symlinks and mountpoint 1218 traversal. 1219 1220 In this case, we are less concerned with whether the dentry is 1221 still fully correct, but rather that the inode is still valid. 1222 As with d_revalidate, most local filesystems will set this to 1223 NULL since their dcache entries are always valid. 1224 1225 This function has the same return code semantics as 1226 d_revalidate. 1227 1228 d_weak_revalidate is only called after leaving rcu-walk mode. 1229 1230``d_hash`` 1231 called when the VFS adds a dentry to the hash table. The first 1232 dentry passed to d_hash is the parent directory that the name is 1233 to be hashed into. 1234 1235 Same locking and synchronisation rules as d_compare regarding 1236 what is safe to dereference etc. 1237 1238``d_compare`` 1239 called to compare a dentry name with a given name. The first 1240 dentry is the parent of the dentry to be compared, the second is 1241 the child dentry. len and name string are properties of the 1242 dentry to be compared. qstr is the name to compare it with. 1243 1244 Must be constant and idempotent, and should not take locks if 1245 possible, and should not or store into the dentry. Should not 1246 dereference pointers outside the dentry without lots of care 1247 (eg. d_parent, d_inode, d_name should not be used). 1248 1249 However, our vfsmount is pinned, and RCU held, so the dentries 1250 and inodes won't disappear, neither will our sb or filesystem 1251 module. ->d_sb may be used. 1252 1253 It is a tricky calling convention because it needs to be called 1254 under "rcu-walk", ie. without any locks or references on things. 1255 1256``d_delete`` 1257 called when the last reference to a dentry is dropped and the 1258 dcache is deciding whether or not to cache it. Return 1 to 1259 delete immediately, or 0 to cache the dentry. Default is NULL 1260 which means to always cache a reachable dentry. d_delete must 1261 be constant and idempotent. 1262 1263``d_init`` 1264 called when a dentry is allocated 1265 1266``d_release`` 1267 called when a dentry is really deallocated 1268 1269``d_iput`` 1270 called when a dentry loses its inode (just prior to its being 1271 deallocated). The default when this is NULL is that the VFS 1272 calls iput(). If you define this method, you must call iput() 1273 yourself 1274 1275``d_dname`` 1276 called when the pathname of a dentry should be generated. 1277 Useful for some pseudo filesystems (sockfs, pipefs, ...) to 1278 delay pathname generation. (Instead of doing it when dentry is 1279 created, it's done only when the path is needed.). Real 1280 filesystems probably dont want to use it, because their dentries 1281 are present in global dcache hash, so their hash should be an 1282 invariant. As no lock is held, d_dname() should not try to 1283 modify the dentry itself, unless appropriate SMP safety is used. 1284 CAUTION : d_path() logic is quite tricky. The correct way to 1285 return for example "Hello" is to put it at the end of the 1286 buffer, and returns a pointer to the first char. 1287 dynamic_dname() helper function is provided to take care of 1288 this. 1289 1290 Example : 1291 1292.. code-block:: c 1293 1294 static char *pipefs_dname(struct dentry *dent, char *buffer, int buflen) 1295 { 1296 return dynamic_dname(dentry, buffer, buflen, "pipe:[%lu]", 1297 dentry->d_inode->i_ino); 1298 } 1299 1300``d_automount`` 1301 called when an automount dentry is to be traversed (optional). 1302 This should create a new VFS mount record and return the record 1303 to the caller. The caller is supplied with a path parameter 1304 giving the automount directory to describe the automount target 1305 and the parent VFS mount record to provide inheritable mount 1306 parameters. NULL should be returned if someone else managed to 1307 make the automount first. If the vfsmount creation failed, then 1308 an error code should be returned. If -EISDIR is returned, then 1309 the directory will be treated as an ordinary directory and 1310 returned to pathwalk to continue walking. 1311 1312 If a vfsmount is returned, the caller will attempt to mount it 1313 on the mountpoint and will remove the vfsmount from its 1314 expiration list in the case of failure. The vfsmount should be 1315 returned with 2 refs on it to prevent automatic expiration - the 1316 caller will clean up the additional ref. 1317 1318 This function is only used if DCACHE_NEED_AUTOMOUNT is set on 1319 the dentry. This is set by __d_instantiate() if S_AUTOMOUNT is 1320 set on the inode being added. 1321 1322``d_manage`` 1323 called to allow the filesystem to manage the transition from a 1324 dentry (optional). This allows autofs, for example, to hold up 1325 clients waiting to explore behind a 'mountpoint' while letting 1326 the daemon go past and construct the subtree there. 0 should be 1327 returned to let the calling process continue. -EISDIR can be 1328 returned to tell pathwalk to use this directory as an ordinary 1329 directory and to ignore anything mounted on it and not to check 1330 the automount flag. Any other error code will abort pathwalk 1331 completely. 1332 1333 If the 'rcu_walk' parameter is true, then the caller is doing a 1334 pathwalk in RCU-walk mode. Sleeping is not permitted in this 1335 mode, and the caller can be asked to leave it and call again by 1336 returning -ECHILD. -EISDIR may also be returned to tell 1337 pathwalk to ignore d_automount or any mounts. 1338 1339 This function is only used if DCACHE_MANAGE_TRANSIT is set on 1340 the dentry being transited from. 1341 1342``d_real`` 1343 overlay/union type filesystems implement this method to return 1344 one of the underlying dentries hidden by the overlay. It is 1345 used in two different modes: 1346 1347 Called from file_dentry() it returns the real dentry matching 1348 the inode argument. The real dentry may be from a lower layer 1349 already copied up, but still referenced from the file. This 1350 mode is selected with a non-NULL inode argument. 1351 1352 With NULL inode the topmost real underlying dentry is returned. 1353 1354Each dentry has a pointer to its parent dentry, as well as a hash list 1355of child dentries. Child dentries are basically like files in a 1356directory. 1357 1358 1359Directory Entry Cache API 1360-------------------------- 1361 1362There are a number of functions defined which permit a filesystem to 1363manipulate dentries: 1364 1365``dget`` 1366 open a new handle for an existing dentry (this just increments 1367 the usage count) 1368 1369``dput`` 1370 close a handle for a dentry (decrements the usage count). If 1371 the usage count drops to 0, and the dentry is still in its 1372 parent's hash, the "d_delete" method is called to check whether 1373 it should be cached. If it should not be cached, or if the 1374 dentry is not hashed, it is deleted. Otherwise cached dentries 1375 are put into an LRU list to be reclaimed on memory shortage. 1376 1377``d_drop`` 1378 this unhashes a dentry from its parents hash list. A subsequent 1379 call to dput() will deallocate the dentry if its usage count 1380 drops to 0 1381 1382``d_delete`` 1383 delete a dentry. If there are no other open references to the 1384 dentry then the dentry is turned into a negative dentry (the 1385 d_iput() method is called). If there are other references, then 1386 d_drop() is called instead 1387 1388``d_add`` 1389 add a dentry to its parents hash list and then calls 1390 d_instantiate() 1391 1392``d_instantiate`` 1393 add a dentry to the alias hash list for the inode and updates 1394 the "d_inode" member. The "i_count" member in the inode 1395 structure should be set/incremented. If the inode pointer is 1396 NULL, the dentry is called a "negative dentry". This function 1397 is commonly called when an inode is created for an existing 1398 negative dentry 1399 1400``d_lookup`` 1401 look up a dentry given its parent and path name component It 1402 looks up the child of that given name from the dcache hash 1403 table. If it is found, the reference count is incremented and 1404 the dentry is returned. The caller must use dput() to free the 1405 dentry when it finishes using it. 1406 1407 1408Mount Options 1409============= 1410 1411 1412Parsing options 1413--------------- 1414 1415On mount and remount the filesystem is passed a string containing a 1416comma separated list of mount options. The options can have either of 1417these forms: 1418 1419 option 1420 option=value 1421 1422The <linux/parser.h> header defines an API that helps parse these 1423options. There are plenty of examples on how to use it in existing 1424filesystems. 1425 1426 1427Showing options 1428--------------- 1429 1430If a filesystem accepts mount options, it must define show_options() to 1431show all the currently active options. The rules are: 1432 1433 - options MUST be shown which are not default or their values differ 1434 from the default 1435 1436 - options MAY be shown which are enabled by default or have their 1437 default value 1438 1439Options used only internally between a mount helper and the kernel (such 1440as file descriptors), or which only have an effect during the mounting 1441(such as ones controlling the creation of a journal) are exempt from the 1442above rules. 1443 1444The underlying reason for the above rules is to make sure, that a mount 1445can be accurately replicated (e.g. umounting and mounting again) based 1446on the information found in /proc/mounts. 1447 1448 1449Resources 1450========= 1451 1452(Note some of these resources are not up-to-date with the latest kernel 1453 version.) 1454 1455Creating Linux virtual filesystems. 2002 1456 <https://lwn.net/Articles/13325/> 1457 1458The Linux Virtual File-system Layer by Neil Brown. 1999 1459 <http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~neilb/oss/linux-commentary/vfs.html> 1460 1461A tour of the Linux VFS by Michael K. Johnson. 1996 1462 <https://www.tldp.org/LDP/khg/HyperNews/get/fs/vfstour.html> 1463 1464A small trail through the Linux kernel by Andries Brouwer. 2001 1465 <https://www.win.tue.nl/~aeb/linux/vfs/trail.html> 1466