freebsd-nq/sys/isofs
Bruce Evans fba2e6106f Quick fix for non-unique inode numbers for hard links. We use the
byte offset of the directory entry for the inode number for all types
of files except directories, although this breaks hard links for
non-directories even if it doesn't cause overflow.  Just ignore this
broken inode number for stat() and readdir() and return a less broken
one (the block offset of the file), so that applications normally can't
see the brokenness.

This leaves at least the following brokenness:
- extra inodes, vnodes and caching for hard links.
- various overflow bugs.  cd9660 supports 64-bit block numbers, but we
  silently ignore the top 32 bits in isonum_733() and then drop another
  10 bits for our broken inode numbers.  We may also have sign extension
  bugs from storing 32-bit extents in ints and longs even if ints are
  32-bits.  These bugs affect DVDs.  mkisofs apparently limits them
  by writing directory entries first.

Inode numbers were broken mainly in 4.4BSD-Lite2.  FreeBSD-1.1.5 seems
to have a correct implementation modulo the overflow bugs.  We need
to look up directory entries from inodes for symlinks only.  FreeBSD-1.1.5
use separate fields (iso_parent_extent, iso_parent) to point to the
directory entry.  4.4BSD-Lite doesn't have these, and abuses i_ino to
point to the directory entry.  Correct pointers are impossible for
hard links, but symlinks can't be hard links.
2002-05-22 08:50:18 +00:00
..
cd9660 Quick fix for non-unique inode numbers for hard links. We use the 2002-05-22 08:50:18 +00:00