Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | /* |
| 2 | * namei.c - NTFS kernel directory inode operations. Part of the Linux-NTFS |
| 3 | * project. |
| 4 | * |
Anton Altaparmakov | 67b1dfe | 2006-03-23 14:57:43 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 5 | * Copyright (c) 2001-2006 Anton Altaparmakov |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 6 | * |
| 7 | * This program/include file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
| 8 | * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published |
| 9 | * by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or |
| 10 | * (at your option) any later version. |
| 11 | * |
| 12 | * This program/include file is distributed in the hope that it will be |
| 13 | * useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty |
| 14 | * of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
| 15 | * GNU General Public License for more details. |
| 16 | * |
| 17 | * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| 18 | * along with this program (in the main directory of the Linux-NTFS |
| 19 | * distribution in the file COPYING); if not, write to the Free Software |
| 20 | * Foundation,Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA |
| 21 | */ |
| 22 | |
| 23 | #include <linux/dcache.h> |
| 24 | #include <linux/security.h> |
| 25 | |
| 26 | #include "attrib.h" |
| 27 | #include "debug.h" |
| 28 | #include "dir.h" |
| 29 | #include "mft.h" |
| 30 | #include "ntfs.h" |
| 31 | |
| 32 | /** |
| 33 | * ntfs_lookup - find the inode represented by a dentry in a directory inode |
| 34 | * @dir_ino: directory inode in which to look for the inode |
| 35 | * @dent: dentry representing the inode to look for |
| 36 | * @nd: lookup nameidata |
| 37 | * |
| 38 | * In short, ntfs_lookup() looks for the inode represented by the dentry @dent |
| 39 | * in the directory inode @dir_ino and if found attaches the inode to the |
| 40 | * dentry @dent. |
| 41 | * |
| 42 | * In more detail, the dentry @dent specifies which inode to look for by |
| 43 | * supplying the name of the inode in @dent->d_name.name. ntfs_lookup() |
| 44 | * converts the name to Unicode and walks the contents of the directory inode |
| 45 | * @dir_ino looking for the converted Unicode name. If the name is found in the |
| 46 | * directory, the corresponding inode is loaded by calling ntfs_iget() on its |
| 47 | * inode number and the inode is associated with the dentry @dent via a call to |
| 48 | * d_splice_alias(). |
| 49 | * |
| 50 | * If the name is not found in the directory, a NULL inode is inserted into the |
| 51 | * dentry @dent via a call to d_add(). The dentry is then termed a negative |
| 52 | * dentry. |
| 53 | * |
| 54 | * Only if an actual error occurs, do we return an error via ERR_PTR(). |
| 55 | * |
| 56 | * In order to handle the case insensitivity issues of NTFS with regards to the |
| 57 | * dcache and the dcache requiring only one dentry per directory, we deal with |
| 58 | * dentry aliases that only differ in case in ->ntfs_lookup() while maintaining |
| 59 | * a case sensitive dcache. This means that we get the full benefit of dcache |
| 60 | * speed when the file/directory is looked up with the same case as returned by |
| 61 | * ->ntfs_readdir() but that a lookup for any other case (or for the short file |
| 62 | * name) will not find anything in dcache and will enter ->ntfs_lookup() |
| 63 | * instead, where we search the directory for a fully matching file name |
| 64 | * (including case) and if that is not found, we search for a file name that |
| 65 | * matches with different case and if that has non-POSIX semantics we return |
| 66 | * that. We actually do only one search (case sensitive) and keep tabs on |
| 67 | * whether we have found a case insensitive match in the process. |
| 68 | * |
| 69 | * To simplify matters for us, we do not treat the short vs long filenames as |
| 70 | * two hard links but instead if the lookup matches a short filename, we |
| 71 | * return the dentry for the corresponding long filename instead. |
| 72 | * |
| 73 | * There are three cases we need to distinguish here: |
| 74 | * |
| 75 | * 1) @dent perfectly matches (i.e. including case) a directory entry with a |
| 76 | * file name in the WIN32 or POSIX namespaces. In this case |
| 77 | * ntfs_lookup_inode_by_name() will return with name set to NULL and we |
| 78 | * just d_splice_alias() @dent. |
| 79 | * 2) @dent matches (not including case) a directory entry with a file name in |
| 80 | * the WIN32 namespace. In this case ntfs_lookup_inode_by_name() will return |
| 81 | * with name set to point to a kmalloc()ed ntfs_name structure containing |
| 82 | * the properly cased little endian Unicode name. We convert the name to the |
| 83 | * current NLS code page, search if a dentry with this name already exists |
| 84 | * and if so return that instead of @dent. At this point things are |
| 85 | * complicated by the possibility of 'disconnected' dentries due to NFS |
| 86 | * which we deal with appropriately (see the code comments). The VFS will |
| 87 | * then destroy the old @dent and use the one we returned. If a dentry is |
| 88 | * not found, we allocate a new one, d_splice_alias() it, and return it as |
| 89 | * above. |
| 90 | * 3) @dent matches either perfectly or not (i.e. we don't care about case) a |
| 91 | * directory entry with a file name in the DOS namespace. In this case |
| 92 | * ntfs_lookup_inode_by_name() will return with name set to point to a |
| 93 | * kmalloc()ed ntfs_name structure containing the mft reference (cpu endian) |
| 94 | * of the inode. We use the mft reference to read the inode and to find the |
| 95 | * file name in the WIN32 namespace corresponding to the matched short file |
| 96 | * name. We then convert the name to the current NLS code page, and proceed |
| 97 | * searching for a dentry with this name, etc, as in case 2), above. |
| 98 | * |
Jes Sorensen | 1b1dcc1 | 2006-01-09 15:59:24 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 99 | * Locking: Caller must hold i_mutex on the directory. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 100 | */ |
| 101 | static struct dentry *ntfs_lookup(struct inode *dir_ino, struct dentry *dent, |
| 102 | struct nameidata *nd) |
| 103 | { |
| 104 | ntfs_volume *vol = NTFS_SB(dir_ino->i_sb); |
| 105 | struct inode *dent_inode; |
| 106 | ntfschar *uname; |
| 107 | ntfs_name *name = NULL; |
| 108 | MFT_REF mref; |
| 109 | unsigned long dent_ino; |
| 110 | int uname_len; |
| 111 | |
| 112 | ntfs_debug("Looking up %s in directory inode 0x%lx.", |
| 113 | dent->d_name.name, dir_ino->i_ino); |
| 114 | /* Convert the name of the dentry to Unicode. */ |
| 115 | uname_len = ntfs_nlstoucs(vol, dent->d_name.name, dent->d_name.len, |
| 116 | &uname); |
| 117 | if (uname_len < 0) { |
Anton Altaparmakov | 834ba60 | 2006-03-23 16:25:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 118 | if (uname_len != -ENAMETOOLONG) |
| 119 | ntfs_error(vol->sb, "Failed to convert name to " |
| 120 | "Unicode."); |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 121 | return ERR_PTR(uname_len); |
| 122 | } |
| 123 | mref = ntfs_lookup_inode_by_name(NTFS_I(dir_ino), uname, uname_len, |
| 124 | &name); |
| 125 | kmem_cache_free(ntfs_name_cache, uname); |
| 126 | if (!IS_ERR_MREF(mref)) { |
| 127 | dent_ino = MREF(mref); |
| 128 | ntfs_debug("Found inode 0x%lx. Calling ntfs_iget.", dent_ino); |
| 129 | dent_inode = ntfs_iget(vol->sb, dent_ino); |
| 130 | if (likely(!IS_ERR(dent_inode))) { |
| 131 | /* Consistency check. */ |
| 132 | if (is_bad_inode(dent_inode) || MSEQNO(mref) == |
| 133 | NTFS_I(dent_inode)->seq_no || |
| 134 | dent_ino == FILE_MFT) { |
| 135 | /* Perfect WIN32/POSIX match. -- Case 1. */ |
| 136 | if (!name) { |
| 137 | ntfs_debug("Done. (Case 1.)"); |
| 138 | return d_splice_alias(dent_inode, dent); |
| 139 | } |
| 140 | /* |
| 141 | * We are too indented. Handle imperfect |
| 142 | * matches and short file names further below. |
| 143 | */ |
| 144 | goto handle_name; |
| 145 | } |
| 146 | ntfs_error(vol->sb, "Found stale reference to inode " |
| 147 | "0x%lx (reference sequence number = " |
| 148 | "0x%x, inode sequence number = 0x%x), " |
| 149 | "returning -EIO. Run chkdsk.", |
| 150 | dent_ino, MSEQNO(mref), |
| 151 | NTFS_I(dent_inode)->seq_no); |
| 152 | iput(dent_inode); |
| 153 | dent_inode = ERR_PTR(-EIO); |
| 154 | } else |
| 155 | ntfs_error(vol->sb, "ntfs_iget(0x%lx) failed with " |
| 156 | "error code %li.", dent_ino, |
| 157 | PTR_ERR(dent_inode)); |
Jesper Juhl | 251c842 | 2005-04-04 14:59:56 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 158 | kfree(name); |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 159 | /* Return the error code. */ |
| 160 | return (struct dentry *)dent_inode; |
| 161 | } |
Anton Altaparmakov | 834ba60 | 2006-03-23 16:25:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 162 | /* It is guaranteed that @name is no longer allocated at this point. */ |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 163 | if (MREF_ERR(mref) == -ENOENT) { |
| 164 | ntfs_debug("Entry was not found, adding negative dentry."); |
| 165 | /* The dcache will handle negative entries. */ |
| 166 | d_add(dent, NULL); |
| 167 | ntfs_debug("Done."); |
| 168 | return NULL; |
| 169 | } |
| 170 | ntfs_error(vol->sb, "ntfs_lookup_ino_by_name() failed with error " |
| 171 | "code %i.", -MREF_ERR(mref)); |
| 172 | return ERR_PTR(MREF_ERR(mref)); |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 173 | // TODO: Consider moving this lot to a separate function! (AIA) |
| 174 | handle_name: |
| 175 | { |
| 176 | struct dentry *real_dent, *new_dent; |
| 177 | MFT_RECORD *m; |
| 178 | ntfs_attr_search_ctx *ctx; |
| 179 | ntfs_inode *ni = NTFS_I(dent_inode); |
| 180 | int err; |
| 181 | struct qstr nls_name; |
| 182 | |
| 183 | nls_name.name = NULL; |
| 184 | if (name->type != FILE_NAME_DOS) { /* Case 2. */ |
| 185 | ntfs_debug("Case 2."); |
| 186 | nls_name.len = (unsigned)ntfs_ucstonls(vol, |
| 187 | (ntfschar*)&name->name, name->len, |
| 188 | (unsigned char**)&nls_name.name, 0); |
| 189 | kfree(name); |
| 190 | } else /* if (name->type == FILE_NAME_DOS) */ { /* Case 3. */ |
| 191 | FILE_NAME_ATTR *fn; |
| 192 | |
| 193 | ntfs_debug("Case 3."); |
| 194 | kfree(name); |
| 195 | |
| 196 | /* Find the WIN32 name corresponding to the matched DOS name. */ |
| 197 | ni = NTFS_I(dent_inode); |
| 198 | m = map_mft_record(ni); |
| 199 | if (IS_ERR(m)) { |
| 200 | err = PTR_ERR(m); |
| 201 | m = NULL; |
| 202 | ctx = NULL; |
| 203 | goto err_out; |
| 204 | } |
| 205 | ctx = ntfs_attr_get_search_ctx(ni, m); |
| 206 | if (unlikely(!ctx)) { |
| 207 | err = -ENOMEM; |
| 208 | goto err_out; |
| 209 | } |
| 210 | do { |
| 211 | ATTR_RECORD *a; |
| 212 | u32 val_len; |
| 213 | |
| 214 | err = ntfs_attr_lookup(AT_FILE_NAME, NULL, 0, 0, 0, |
| 215 | NULL, 0, ctx); |
| 216 | if (unlikely(err)) { |
| 217 | ntfs_error(vol->sb, "Inode corrupt: No WIN32 " |
| 218 | "namespace counterpart to DOS " |
| 219 | "file name. Run chkdsk."); |
| 220 | if (err == -ENOENT) |
| 221 | err = -EIO; |
| 222 | goto err_out; |
| 223 | } |
| 224 | /* Consistency checks. */ |
| 225 | a = ctx->attr; |
| 226 | if (a->non_resident || a->flags) |
| 227 | goto eio_err_out; |
| 228 | val_len = le32_to_cpu(a->data.resident.value_length); |
| 229 | if (le16_to_cpu(a->data.resident.value_offset) + |
| 230 | val_len > le32_to_cpu(a->length)) |
| 231 | goto eio_err_out; |
| 232 | fn = (FILE_NAME_ATTR*)((u8*)ctx->attr + le16_to_cpu( |
| 233 | ctx->attr->data.resident.value_offset)); |
| 234 | if ((u32)(fn->file_name_length * sizeof(ntfschar) + |
| 235 | sizeof(FILE_NAME_ATTR)) > val_len) |
| 236 | goto eio_err_out; |
| 237 | } while (fn->file_name_type != FILE_NAME_WIN32); |
| 238 | |
| 239 | /* Convert the found WIN32 name to current NLS code page. */ |
| 240 | nls_name.len = (unsigned)ntfs_ucstonls(vol, |
| 241 | (ntfschar*)&fn->file_name, fn->file_name_length, |
| 242 | (unsigned char**)&nls_name.name, 0); |
| 243 | |
| 244 | ntfs_attr_put_search_ctx(ctx); |
| 245 | unmap_mft_record(ni); |
| 246 | } |
| 247 | m = NULL; |
| 248 | ctx = NULL; |
| 249 | |
| 250 | /* Check if a conversion error occurred. */ |
| 251 | if ((signed)nls_name.len < 0) { |
| 252 | err = (signed)nls_name.len; |
| 253 | goto err_out; |
| 254 | } |
| 255 | nls_name.hash = full_name_hash(nls_name.name, nls_name.len); |
| 256 | |
| 257 | /* |
Jes Sorensen | 1b1dcc1 | 2006-01-09 15:59:24 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 258 | * Note: No need for dent->d_lock lock as i_mutex is held on the |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 259 | * parent inode. |
| 260 | */ |
| 261 | |
| 262 | /* Does a dentry matching the nls_name exist already? */ |
| 263 | real_dent = d_lookup(dent->d_parent, &nls_name); |
| 264 | /* If not, create it now. */ |
| 265 | if (!real_dent) { |
| 266 | real_dent = d_alloc(dent->d_parent, &nls_name); |
| 267 | kfree(nls_name.name); |
| 268 | if (!real_dent) { |
| 269 | err = -ENOMEM; |
| 270 | goto err_out; |
| 271 | } |
| 272 | new_dent = d_splice_alias(dent_inode, real_dent); |
| 273 | if (new_dent) |
| 274 | dput(real_dent); |
| 275 | else |
| 276 | new_dent = real_dent; |
| 277 | ntfs_debug("Done. (Created new dentry.)"); |
| 278 | return new_dent; |
| 279 | } |
| 280 | kfree(nls_name.name); |
| 281 | /* Matching dentry exists, check if it is negative. */ |
| 282 | if (real_dent->d_inode) { |
| 283 | if (unlikely(real_dent->d_inode != dent_inode)) { |
| 284 | /* This can happen because bad inodes are unhashed. */ |
| 285 | BUG_ON(!is_bad_inode(dent_inode)); |
| 286 | BUG_ON(!is_bad_inode(real_dent->d_inode)); |
| 287 | } |
| 288 | /* |
| 289 | * Already have the inode and the dentry attached, decrement |
| 290 | * the reference count to balance the ntfs_iget() we did |
| 291 | * earlier on. We found the dentry using d_lookup() so it |
| 292 | * cannot be disconnected and thus we do not need to worry |
| 293 | * about any NFS/disconnectedness issues here. |
| 294 | */ |
| 295 | iput(dent_inode); |
| 296 | ntfs_debug("Done. (Already had inode and dentry.)"); |
| 297 | return real_dent; |
| 298 | } |
| 299 | /* |
| 300 | * Negative dentry: instantiate it unless the inode is a directory and |
| 301 | * has a 'disconnected' dentry (i.e. IS_ROOT and DCACHE_DISCONNECTED), |
| 302 | * in which case d_move() that in place of the found dentry. |
| 303 | */ |
| 304 | if (!S_ISDIR(dent_inode->i_mode)) { |
| 305 | /* Not a directory; everything is easy. */ |
| 306 | d_instantiate(real_dent, dent_inode); |
| 307 | ntfs_debug("Done. (Already had negative file dentry.)"); |
| 308 | return real_dent; |
| 309 | } |
| 310 | spin_lock(&dcache_lock); |
| 311 | if (list_empty(&dent_inode->i_dentry)) { |
| 312 | /* |
| 313 | * Directory without a 'disconnected' dentry; we need to do |
| 314 | * d_instantiate() by hand because it takes dcache_lock which |
| 315 | * we already hold. |
| 316 | */ |
| 317 | list_add(&real_dent->d_alias, &dent_inode->i_dentry); |
| 318 | real_dent->d_inode = dent_inode; |
| 319 | spin_unlock(&dcache_lock); |
| 320 | security_d_instantiate(real_dent, dent_inode); |
| 321 | ntfs_debug("Done. (Already had negative directory dentry.)"); |
| 322 | return real_dent; |
| 323 | } |
| 324 | /* |
| 325 | * Directory with a 'disconnected' dentry; get a reference to the |
| 326 | * 'disconnected' dentry. |
| 327 | */ |
| 328 | new_dent = list_entry(dent_inode->i_dentry.next, struct dentry, |
| 329 | d_alias); |
| 330 | dget_locked(new_dent); |
| 331 | spin_unlock(&dcache_lock); |
| 332 | /* Do security vodoo. */ |
| 333 | security_d_instantiate(real_dent, dent_inode); |
| 334 | /* Move new_dent in place of real_dent. */ |
| 335 | d_move(new_dent, real_dent); |
| 336 | /* Balance the ntfs_iget() we did above. */ |
| 337 | iput(dent_inode); |
| 338 | /* Throw away real_dent. */ |
| 339 | dput(real_dent); |
| 340 | /* Use new_dent as the actual dentry. */ |
| 341 | ntfs_debug("Done. (Already had negative, disconnected directory " |
| 342 | "dentry.)"); |
| 343 | return new_dent; |
| 344 | |
| 345 | eio_err_out: |
| 346 | ntfs_error(vol->sb, "Illegal file name attribute. Run chkdsk."); |
| 347 | err = -EIO; |
| 348 | err_out: |
| 349 | if (ctx) |
| 350 | ntfs_attr_put_search_ctx(ctx); |
| 351 | if (m) |
| 352 | unmap_mft_record(ni); |
| 353 | iput(dent_inode); |
| 354 | ntfs_error(vol->sb, "Failed, returning error code %i.", err); |
| 355 | return ERR_PTR(err); |
| 356 | } |
| 357 | } |
| 358 | |
| 359 | /** |
| 360 | * Inode operations for directories. |
| 361 | */ |
| 362 | struct inode_operations ntfs_dir_inode_ops = { |
| 363 | .lookup = ntfs_lookup, /* VFS: Lookup directory. */ |
| 364 | }; |
| 365 | |
| 366 | /** |
| 367 | * ntfs_get_parent - find the dentry of the parent of a given directory dentry |
| 368 | * @child_dent: dentry of the directory whose parent directory to find |
| 369 | * |
| 370 | * Find the dentry for the parent directory of the directory specified by the |
| 371 | * dentry @child_dent. This function is called from |
| 372 | * fs/exportfs/expfs.c::find_exported_dentry() which in turn is called from the |
| 373 | * default ->decode_fh() which is export_decode_fh() in the same file. |
| 374 | * |
| 375 | * The code is based on the ext3 ->get_parent() implementation found in |
| 376 | * fs/ext3/namei.c::ext3_get_parent(). |
| 377 | * |
Jes Sorensen | 1b1dcc1 | 2006-01-09 15:59:24 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 378 | * Note: ntfs_get_parent() is called with @child_dent->d_inode->i_mutex down. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 379 | * |
| 380 | * Return the dentry of the parent directory on success or the error code on |
| 381 | * error (IS_ERR() is true). |
| 382 | */ |
Anton Altaparmakov | 4138268 | 2005-03-03 13:44:15 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 383 | static struct dentry *ntfs_get_parent(struct dentry *child_dent) |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 384 | { |
| 385 | struct inode *vi = child_dent->d_inode; |
| 386 | ntfs_inode *ni = NTFS_I(vi); |
| 387 | MFT_RECORD *mrec; |
| 388 | ntfs_attr_search_ctx *ctx; |
| 389 | ATTR_RECORD *attr; |
| 390 | FILE_NAME_ATTR *fn; |
| 391 | struct inode *parent_vi; |
| 392 | struct dentry *parent_dent; |
| 393 | unsigned long parent_ino; |
| 394 | int err; |
| 395 | |
| 396 | ntfs_debug("Entering for inode 0x%lx.", vi->i_ino); |
| 397 | /* Get the mft record of the inode belonging to the child dentry. */ |
| 398 | mrec = map_mft_record(ni); |
| 399 | if (IS_ERR(mrec)) |
| 400 | return (struct dentry *)mrec; |
| 401 | /* Find the first file name attribute in the mft record. */ |
| 402 | ctx = ntfs_attr_get_search_ctx(ni, mrec); |
| 403 | if (unlikely(!ctx)) { |
| 404 | unmap_mft_record(ni); |
| 405 | return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM); |
| 406 | } |
| 407 | try_next: |
| 408 | err = ntfs_attr_lookup(AT_FILE_NAME, NULL, 0, CASE_SENSITIVE, 0, NULL, |
| 409 | 0, ctx); |
| 410 | if (unlikely(err)) { |
| 411 | ntfs_attr_put_search_ctx(ctx); |
| 412 | unmap_mft_record(ni); |
| 413 | if (err == -ENOENT) |
| 414 | ntfs_error(vi->i_sb, "Inode 0x%lx does not have a " |
| 415 | "file name attribute. Run chkdsk.", |
| 416 | vi->i_ino); |
| 417 | return ERR_PTR(err); |
| 418 | } |
| 419 | attr = ctx->attr; |
| 420 | if (unlikely(attr->non_resident)) |
| 421 | goto try_next; |
| 422 | fn = (FILE_NAME_ATTR *)((u8 *)attr + |
| 423 | le16_to_cpu(attr->data.resident.value_offset)); |
| 424 | if (unlikely((u8 *)fn + le32_to_cpu(attr->data.resident.value_length) > |
| 425 | (u8*)attr + le32_to_cpu(attr->length))) |
| 426 | goto try_next; |
| 427 | /* Get the inode number of the parent directory. */ |
| 428 | parent_ino = MREF_LE(fn->parent_directory); |
| 429 | /* Release the search context and the mft record of the child. */ |
| 430 | ntfs_attr_put_search_ctx(ctx); |
| 431 | unmap_mft_record(ni); |
| 432 | /* Get the inode of the parent directory. */ |
| 433 | parent_vi = ntfs_iget(vi->i_sb, parent_ino); |
| 434 | if (IS_ERR(parent_vi) || unlikely(is_bad_inode(parent_vi))) { |
| 435 | if (!IS_ERR(parent_vi)) |
| 436 | iput(parent_vi); |
| 437 | ntfs_error(vi->i_sb, "Failed to get parent directory inode " |
| 438 | "0x%lx of child inode 0x%lx.", parent_ino, |
| 439 | vi->i_ino); |
| 440 | return ERR_PTR(-EACCES); |
| 441 | } |
| 442 | /* Finally get a dentry for the parent directory and return it. */ |
| 443 | parent_dent = d_alloc_anon(parent_vi); |
| 444 | if (unlikely(!parent_dent)) { |
| 445 | iput(parent_vi); |
| 446 | return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM); |
| 447 | } |
| 448 | ntfs_debug("Done for inode 0x%lx.", vi->i_ino); |
| 449 | return parent_dent; |
| 450 | } |
| 451 | |
| 452 | /** |
| 453 | * ntfs_get_dentry - find a dentry for the inode from a file handle sub-fragment |
| 454 | * @sb: super block identifying the mounted ntfs volume |
| 455 | * @fh: the file handle sub-fragment |
| 456 | * |
| 457 | * Find a dentry for the inode given a file handle sub-fragment. This function |
| 458 | * is called from fs/exportfs/expfs.c::find_exported_dentry() which in turn is |
| 459 | * called from the default ->decode_fh() which is export_decode_fh() in the |
| 460 | * same file. The code is closely based on the default ->get_dentry() helper |
| 461 | * fs/exportfs/expfs.c::get_object(). |
| 462 | * |
| 463 | * The @fh contains two 32-bit unsigned values, the first one is the inode |
| 464 | * number and the second one is the inode generation. |
| 465 | * |
| 466 | * Return the dentry on success or the error code on error (IS_ERR() is true). |
| 467 | */ |
Anton Altaparmakov | 4138268 | 2005-03-03 13:44:15 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 468 | static struct dentry *ntfs_get_dentry(struct super_block *sb, void *fh) |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 469 | { |
| 470 | struct inode *vi; |
| 471 | struct dentry *dent; |
| 472 | unsigned long ino = ((u32 *)fh)[0]; |
| 473 | u32 gen = ((u32 *)fh)[1]; |
| 474 | |
| 475 | ntfs_debug("Entering for inode 0x%lx, generation 0x%x.", ino, gen); |
| 476 | vi = ntfs_iget(sb, ino); |
| 477 | if (IS_ERR(vi)) { |
| 478 | ntfs_error(sb, "Failed to get inode 0x%lx.", ino); |
| 479 | return (struct dentry *)vi; |
| 480 | } |
| 481 | if (unlikely(is_bad_inode(vi) || vi->i_generation != gen)) { |
| 482 | /* We didn't find the right inode. */ |
| 483 | ntfs_error(sb, "Inode 0x%lx, bad count: %d %d or version 0x%x " |
| 484 | "0x%x.", vi->i_ino, vi->i_nlink, |
| 485 | atomic_read(&vi->i_count), vi->i_generation, |
| 486 | gen); |
| 487 | iput(vi); |
| 488 | return ERR_PTR(-ESTALE); |
| 489 | } |
| 490 | /* Now find a dentry. If possible, get a well-connected one. */ |
| 491 | dent = d_alloc_anon(vi); |
| 492 | if (unlikely(!dent)) { |
| 493 | iput(vi); |
| 494 | return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM); |
| 495 | } |
| 496 | ntfs_debug("Done for inode 0x%lx, generation 0x%x.", ino, gen); |
| 497 | return dent; |
| 498 | } |
Anton Altaparmakov | 4138268 | 2005-03-03 13:44:15 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 499 | |
| 500 | /** |
| 501 | * Export operations allowing NFS exporting of mounted NTFS partitions. |
| 502 | * |
| 503 | * We use the default ->decode_fh() and ->encode_fh() for now. Note that they |
| 504 | * use 32 bits to store the inode number which is an unsigned long so on 64-bit |
| 505 | * architectures is usually 64 bits so it would all fail horribly on huge |
| 506 | * volumes. I guess we need to define our own encode and decode fh functions |
| 507 | * that store 64-bit inode numbers at some point but for now we will ignore the |
| 508 | * problem... |
| 509 | * |
| 510 | * We also use the default ->get_name() helper (used by ->decode_fh() via |
| 511 | * fs/exportfs/expfs.c::find_exported_dentry()) as that is completely fs |
| 512 | * independent. |
| 513 | * |
| 514 | * The default ->get_parent() just returns -EACCES so we have to provide our |
| 515 | * own and the default ->get_dentry() is incompatible with NTFS due to not |
| 516 | * allowing the inode number 0 which is used in NTFS for the system file $MFT |
| 517 | * and due to using iget() whereas NTFS needs ntfs_iget(). |
| 518 | */ |
| 519 | struct export_operations ntfs_export_ops = { |
| 520 | .get_parent = ntfs_get_parent, /* Find the parent of a given |
| 521 | directory. */ |
| 522 | .get_dentry = ntfs_get_dentry, /* Find a dentry for the inode |
| 523 | given a file handle |
| 524 | sub-fragment. */ |
| 525 | }; |