diff options
author | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@g5.osdl.org> | 2006-01-05 20:43:11 -0800 |
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committer | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@g5.osdl.org> | 2006-01-05 20:43:11 -0800 |
commit | 29552b1462799afbe02af035b243e97579d63350 (patch) | |
tree | 42ad1639678a1bc8064f690494f62497bc48d318 | |
parent | 6c59f9d9fb95934bf3d7d64249b338ce79953b5b (diff) | |
parent | 51e7a5987058c6b4d0c1337587f2ec0c34ffa708 (diff) |
Merge http://oss.oracle.com/git/ocfs2
119 files changed, 46657 insertions, 56 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/00-INDEX b/Documentation/filesystems/00-INDEX index 7e17712f322..74052d22d86 100644 --- a/Documentation/filesystems/00-INDEX +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/00-INDEX @@ -12,10 +12,14 @@ cifs.txt - description of the CIFS filesystem coda.txt - description of the CODA filesystem. +configfs/ + - directory containing configfs documentation and example code. cramfs.txt - info on the cram filesystem for small storage (ROMs etc) devfs/ - directory containing devfs documentation. +dlmfs.txt + - info on the userspace interface to the OCFS2 DLM. ext2.txt - info, mount options and specifications for the Ext2 filesystem. hpfs.txt @@ -30,6 +34,8 @@ ntfs.txt - info and mount options for the NTFS filesystem (Windows NT). proc.txt - info on Linux's /proc filesystem. +ocfs2.txt + - info and mount options for the OCFS2 clustered filesystem. romfs.txt - Description of the ROMFS filesystem. smbfs.txt diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/configfs/configfs.txt b/Documentation/filesystems/configfs/configfs.txt new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..c4ff96b7c4e --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/configfs/configfs.txt @@ -0,0 +1,434 @@ + +configfs - Userspace-driven kernel object configuation. + +Joel Becker <joel.becker@oracle.com> + +Updated: 31 March 2005 + +Copyright (c) 2005 Oracle Corporation, + Joel Becker <joel.becker@oracle.com> + + +[What is configfs?] + +configfs is a ram-based filesystem that provides the converse of +sysfs's functionality. Where sysfs is a filesystem-based view of +kernel objects, configfs is a filesystem-based manager of kernel +objects, or config_items. + +With sysfs, an object is created in kernel (for example, when a device +is discovered) and it is registered with sysfs. Its attributes then +appear in sysfs, allowing userspace to read the attributes via +readdir(3)/read(2). It may allow some attributes to be modified via +write(2). The important point is that the object is created and +destroyed in kernel, the kernel controls the lifecycle of the sysfs +representation, and sysfs is merely a window on all this. + +A configfs config_item is created via an explicit userspace operation: +mkdir(2). It is destroyed via rmdir(2). The attributes appear at +mkdir(2) time, and can be read or modified via read(2) and write(2). +As with sysfs, readdir(3) queries the list of items and/or attributes. +symlink(2) can be used to group items together. Unlike sysfs, the +lifetime of the representation is completely driven by userspace. The +kernel modules backing the items must respond to this. + +Both sysfs and configfs can and should exist together on the same +system. One is not a replacement for the other. + +[Using configfs] + +configfs can be compiled as a module or into the kernel. You can access +it by doing + + mount -t configfs none /config + +The configfs tree will be empty unless client modules are also loaded. +These are modules that register their item types with configfs as +subsystems. Once a client subsystem is loaded, it will appear as a +subdirectory (or more than one) under /config. Like sysfs, the +configfs tree is always there, whether mounted on /config or not. + +An item is created via mkdir(2). The item's attributes will also +appear at this time. readdir(3) can determine what the attributes are, +read(2) can query their default values, and write(2) can store new +values. Like sysfs, attributes should be ASCII text files, preferably +with only one value per file. The same efficiency caveats from sysfs +apply. Don't mix more than one attribute in one attribute file. + +Like sysfs, configfs expects write(2) to store the entire buffer at +once. When writing to configfs attributes, userspace processes should +first read the entire file, modify the portions they wish to change, and +then write the entire buffer back. Attribute files have a maximum size +of one page (PAGE_SIZE, 4096 on i386). + +When an item needs to be destroyed, remove it with rmdir(2). An +item cannot be destroyed if any other item has a link to it (via +symlink(2)). Links can be removed via unlink(2). + +[Configuring FakeNBD: an Example] + +Imagine there's a Network Block Device (NBD) driver that allows you to +access remote block devices. Call it FakeNBD. FakeNBD uses configfs +for its configuration. Obviously, there will be a nice program that +sysadmins use to configure FakeNBD, but somehow that program has to tell +the driver about it. Here's where configfs comes in. + +When the FakeNBD driver is loaded, it registers itself with configfs. +readdir(3) sees this just fine: + + # ls /config + fakenbd + +A fakenbd connection can be created with mkdir(2). The name is +arbitrary, but likely the tool will make some use of the name. Perhaps +it is a uuid or a disk name: + + # mkdir /config/fakenbd/disk1 + # ls /config/fakenbd/disk1 + target device rw + +The target attribute contains the IP address of the server FakeNBD will +connect to. The device attribute is the device on the server. +Predictably, the rw attribute determines whether the connection is +read-only or read-write. + + # echo 10.0.0.1 > /config/fakenbd/disk1/target + # echo /dev/sda1 > /config/fakenbd/disk1/device + # echo 1 > /config/fakenbd/disk1/rw + +That's it. That's all there is. Now the device is configured, via the +shell no less. + +[Coding With configfs] + +Every object in configfs is a config_item. A config_item reflects an +object in the subsystem. It has attributes that match values on that +object. configfs handles the filesystem representation of that object +and its attributes, allowing the subsystem to ignore all but the +basic show/store interaction. + +Items are created and destroyed inside a config_group. A group is a +collection of items that share the same attributes and operations. +Items are created by mkdir(2) and removed by rmdir(2), but configfs +handles that. The group has a set of operations to perform these tasks + +A subsystem is the top level of a client module. During initialization, +the client module registers the subsystem with configfs, the subsystem +appears as a directory at the top of the configfs filesystem. A +subsystem is also a config_group, and can do everything a config_group +can. + +[struct config_item] + + struct config_item { + char *ci_name; + char ci_namebuf[UOBJ_NAME_LEN]; + struct kref ci_kref; + struct list_head ci_entry; + struct config_item *ci_parent; + struct config_group *ci_grou |