LCASE_BASE or LCASE_EXT or both are set. But dos2unixfn uses
dos2unixchr separately for the basename and the extension. So if
either LCASE_BASE or LCASE_EXT is set, dos2unixfn will convert both
the basename and extension to lowercase because it is blindly
passing in the state of both flags to dos2unixchr. The bit masks I
used ensure that only the state of LCASE_BASE gets passed to
dos2unixchr when the basename is converted, and only the state of
LCASE_EXT is passed in when the extension is converted.
PR: kern/86655
Submitted by: Micah Lieske
MFC after: 3 weeks
specific privilege names to a broad range of privileges. These may
require some future tweaking.
Sponsored by: nCircle Network Security, Inc.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Discussed on: arch@
Reviewed (at least in part) by: mlaier, jmg, pjd, bde, ceri,
Alex Lyashkov <umka at sevcity dot net>,
Skip Ford <skip dot ford at verizon dot net>,
Antoine Brodin <antoine dot brodin at laposte dot net>
- remove call to getmntopts(), and just pass -o options to
nmount(). This removes some confusion as to what options
msdosfs can parse, by pushing the responsibility of option parsing
to the VFS and FS specific code in the kernel.
msdosfs_vfsops.c:
- add "force" and "sync" to msdosfs_opts. They used to be specified
in mount_msdosfs.c, so move them here. It's not clear whethere these
options should be placed into global_opts in vfs_mount.c or not.
Motivated by: marcus
directory. vrele() may lock the passed vnode, which in these cases would
give an invalid lock order of child -> parent. These situations are
deadlock prone although do not typically deadlock because the vrele
is typically not releasing the last reference to the vnode. Users of
vrele must consider it as a call to vn_lock() and order it appropriately.
MFC After: 1 week
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems, Inc.
Tested by: kkenn
last few days. I tracked it down to the fact that nfs_reclaim()
is setting vp->v_data to NULL _before_ calling vnode_destroy_object().
After silence from the mailing list I checked further and discovered
that ufs_reclaim() is unique among FreeBSD filesystems for calling
vnode_destroy_object() early, long before tossing v_data or much
of anything else, for that matter. The rest, including NFS, appear
to be identical, as if they were just clones of one original routine.
The enclosed patch fixes all file systems in essentially the same
way, by moving the call to vnode_destroy_object() to early in the
routine (before the call to vfs_hash_remove(), if any). I have
only tested NFS, but I've now run for over eighteen hours with the
patch where I wouldn't get past four or five without it.
Submitted by: Frank Mayhar
Requested by: Mohan Srinivasan
MFC After: 1 week
synonyms for "shortname" and "longname" mount options. The old
(before nmount()) mount_msdosfs program accepted "shortnames" and "longnames",
but the kernel nmount() checked for "shortname" and "longname".
So, make the kernel accept "shortnames", "longnames", "shortname", "longname"
for forwards and backwarsd compatibility.
Discovered by: Rainer Hurling <rhurlin at gwdg dot de>
- Prefer '_' to ' ', as it results in more easily parsed results in
memory monitoring tools such as vmstat.
- Remove punctuation that is incompatible with using memory type names
as file names, such as '/' characters.
- Disambiguate some collisions by adding subsystem prefixes to some
memory types.
- Generally prefer lower case to upper case.
- If the same type is defined in multiple architecture directories,
attempt to use the same name in additional cases.
Not all instances were caught in this change, so more work is required to
finish this conversion. Similar changes are required for UMA zone names.
There seems to be very little documentary evidence outside this
implementation to suggest a these checks are neccessary, and more
than one camera-formatted flash disk fails the check, but mounts
successfully on most other systems.
Reviewed By: bde@
If a character cannot be converted to DOS code page,
unix2doschr() returned `0'. As a result, unix2dosfn()
was forced to return `0', so we saw a file which was
composed of these characters as `Invalid argument'.
To correct this, if a character can be converted to
Unicode, unix2doschr() now returns `1' which is a magic
number to make unix2dosfn() know that the character
must be converted to `_'.
[2] unix2dosfn()
The above-mentioned solution only works if a file
has both of Unicode name and DOS code page name.
Unicode name would not be recorded if file name
can be settled within 11 bytes (DOS short name)
and if no conversion from Unix charset to DOS code
page has occurred. Thus, FreeBSD can create a file
which has only short name, but there is no guarantee
that the short name contains allways valid characters
because we leave it to people by using mount_msdosfs(8)
to select which conversion is used between DOS code
page and unix charset.
To avoid this, Unicode file name should be recorded
unless a character is an ascii character. This is
the way Windows XP do.
PR: 77074 [1]
MFC after: 1 week
Since the name cache is case-sensitive and msdosfs isn't,
creating a file 'foo' won't invalidate a negative entry for 'FOO'.
There are similar problems related to 8.3 filenames.
A better solution is to override VOP_LOOKUP with a method that
canonicalizes the name, then calls vfs_cache_lookup(). Unfortunately,
it's not quite that simple because vfs_cache_lookup() will call
msdosfs_lookup() on a cache miss, and msdosfs_lookup() needs a way to
get at the original component name.
than WIN_CHARS bytes, we shift the suffix (previous substrings) upwards
by the amount this substring exceeds its WIN_CHARS slot. Profiling shows
this change is indistinguishable from the previous code at 95% confidence.
This bug would result in attempts to access or create files or directories
with multi-byte characters returning an error but no data loss.
Reported and tested by: avatar
MFC after: 3 days
these filesystems will support shared locks until they are explicitly
modified to do so. Careful review must be done to ensure that this
is safe for each individual filesystem.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems, Inc.
the filesystem. Check that rather than VI_XLOCK.
- VOP_INACTIVE should no longer drop the vnode lock.
- The vnode lock is required around calls to vrecycle() and vgone().
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems, Inc.
long filename. Each substring is indexed by the windows ID, a
sequential one-based value. The previous code was extremely slow,
doing a malloc/strcpy/free for each substring.
This code optimizes these routines with this in mind, using the ID
to index into a single array and concatenating each WIN_CHARS chunk
at once. (The last chunk is variable-length.)
This code has been tested as working on an FS with difficult filename
sizes (255, 13, 26, etc.) It gives a 77.1% decrease in profiled
time (total across all functions) and a 73.7% decrease in wall time.
Test was "ls -laR > /dev/null".
Per-function time savings:
mbnambuf_init: -90.7%
mbnambuf_write: -18.7%
mbnambuf_flush: -67.1%
MFC after: 1 month
on my P3, microbenchmarks show the unrolled version is 78x faster. In
actual use (recursive ls), this gives an average of 9% improvement in
system time and 2% improvement in wall time.
called in "open", causing mmap() to fail.
Where possible, pass size of file to vnode_create_vobject() rather
than having it find it out the hard way via VOP_LOOKUP
Reviewed by: phk
with NFS.
We are moving responsibility for creating the vnode_pager object into
the filesystems which own the vnode, and this is one of the places
we have to cover.
We call vnode_create_vobject() directly because we own the vnode.
If we can get the size easily, pass it as an argument to save the
call to VOP_GETATTR() in vnode_create_vobject()
I'm not sure why a credential was added to these in the first place, it is
not used anywhere and it doesn't make much sense:
The credentials for syncing a file (ability to write to the
file) should be checked at the system call level.
Credentials for syncing one or more filesystems ("none")
should be checked at the system call level as well.
If the filesystem implementation needs a particular credential
to carry out the syncing it would logically have to the
cached mount credential, or a credential cached along with
any delayed write data.
Discussed with: rwatson