| inotify |
| a powerful yet simple file change notification system |
| |
| |
| |
| Document started 15 Mar 2005 by Robert Love <rml@novell.com> |
| Document updated 4 Jan 2015 by Zhang Zhen <zhenzhang.zhang@huawei.com> |
| --Deleted obsoleted interface, just refer to manpages for user interface. |
| |
| (i) Rationale |
| |
| Q: What is the design decision behind not tying the watch to the open fd of |
| the watched object? |
| |
| A: Watches are associated with an open inotify device, not an open file. |
| This solves the primary problem with dnotify: keeping the file open pins |
| the file and thus, worse, pins the mount. Dnotify is therefore infeasible |
| for use on a desktop system with removable media as the media cannot be |
| unmounted. Watching a file should not require that it be open. |
| |
| Q: What is the design decision behind using an-fd-per-instance as opposed to |
| an fd-per-watch? |
| |
| A: An fd-per-watch quickly consumes more file descriptors than are allowed, |
| more fd's than are feasible to manage, and more fd's than are optimally |
| select()-able. Yes, root can bump the per-process fd limit and yes, users |
| can use epoll, but requiring both is a silly and extraneous requirement. |
| A watch consumes less memory than an open file, separating the number |
| spaces is thus sensible. The current design is what user-space developers |
| want: Users initialize inotify, once, and add n watches, requiring but one |
| fd and no twiddling with fd limits. Initializing an inotify instance two |
| thousand times is silly. If we can implement user-space's preferences |
| cleanly--and we can, the idr layer makes stuff like this trivial--then we |
| should. |
| |
| There are other good arguments. With a single fd, there is a single |
| item to block on, which is mapped to a single queue of events. The single |
| fd returns all watch events and also any potential out-of-band data. If |
| every fd was a separate watch, |
| |
| - There would be no way to get event ordering. Events on file foo and |
| file bar would pop poll() on both fd's, but there would be no way to tell |
| which happened first. A single queue trivially gives you ordering. Such |
| ordering is crucial to existing applications such as Beagle. Imagine |
| "mv a b ; mv b a" events without ordering. |
| |
| - We'd have to maintain n fd's and n internal queues with state, |
| versus just one. It is a lot messier in the kernel. A single, linear |
| queue is the data structure that makes sense. |
| |
| - User-space developers prefer the current API. The Beagle guys, for |
| example, love it. Trust me, I asked. It is not a surprise: Who'd want |
| to manage and block on 1000 fd's via select? |
| |
| - No way to get out of band data. |
| |
| - 1024 is still too low. ;-) |
| |
| When you talk about designing a file change notification system that |
| scales to 1000s of directories, juggling 1000s of fd's just does not seem |
| the right interface. It is too heavy. |
| |
| Additionally, it _is_ possible to more than one instance and |
| juggle more than one queue and thus more than one associated fd. There |
| need not be a one-fd-per-process mapping; it is one-fd-per-queue and a |
| process can easily want more than one queue. |
| |
| Q: Why the system call approach? |
| |
| A: The poor user-space interface is the second biggest problem with dnotify. |
| Signals are a terrible, terrible interface for file notification. Or for |
| anything, for that matter. The ideal solution, from all perspectives, is a |
| file descriptor-based one that allows basic file I/O and poll/select. |
| Obtaining the fd and managing the watches could have been done either via a |
| device file or a family of new system calls. We decided to implement a |
| family of system calls because that is the preferred approach for new kernel |
| interfaces. The only real difference was whether we wanted to use open(2) |
| and ioctl(2) or a couple of new system calls. System calls beat ioctls. |
| |