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-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/path-lookup.rst | 24 |
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/path-lookup.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/path-lookup.rst index 9d6b68853f5b..80e22eda4132 100644 --- a/Documentation/filesystems/path-lookup.rst +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/path-lookup.rst @@ -344,7 +344,7 @@ In particular it is held while scanning chains in the dcache hash table, and the mount point hash table. Bringing it together with ``struct nameidata`` --------------------------------------------- +---------------------------------------------- .. _First edition Unix: http://minnie.tuhs.org/cgi-bin/utree.pl?file=V1/u2.s @@ -355,7 +355,7 @@ converts a "name" to an "inode". ``struct nameidata`` contains (among other fields): ``struct path path`` -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A ``path`` contains a ``struct vfsmount`` (which is embedded in a ``struct mount``) and a ``struct dentry``. Together these @@ -366,13 +366,13 @@ step. A reference through ``d_lockref`` and ``mnt_count`` is always held. ``struct qstr last`` -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is a string together with a length (i.e. _not_ ``nul`` terminated) that is the "next" component in the pathname. ``int last_type`` -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is one of ``LAST_NORM``, ``LAST_ROOT``, ``LAST_DOT``, ``LAST_DOTDOT``, or ``LAST_BIND``. The ``last`` field is only valid if the type is @@ -381,7 +381,7 @@ components of the symlink have been processed yet. Others should be fairly self-explanatory. ``struct path root`` -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is used to hold a reference to the effective root of the filesystem. Often that reference won't be needed, so this field is @@ -510,7 +510,7 @@ potentially interesting things about these dentries corresponding to three different flags that might be set in ``dentry->d_flags``: ``DCACHE_MANAGE_TRANSIT`` -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If this flag has been set, then the filesystem has requested that the ``d_manage()`` dentry operation be called before handling any possible @@ -529,7 +529,7 @@ filesystem, which will then give it a special pass through ``d_manage()`` by returning ``-EISDIR``. ``DCACHE_MOUNTED`` -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This flag is set on every dentry that is mounted on. As Linux supports multiple filesystem namespaces, it is possible that the @@ -542,7 +542,7 @@ If this flag is set, and ``d_manage()`` didn't return ``-EISDIR``, and a new ``dentry`` (both with counted references). ``DCACHE_NEED_AUTOMOUNT`` -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If ``d_manage()`` allowed us to get this far, and ``lookup_mnt()`` didn't find a mount point, then this flag causes the ``d_automount()`` dentry @@ -698,7 +698,7 @@ With that little refresher on seqlocks out of the way we can look at the bigger picture of how RCU-walk uses seqlocks. ``mount_lock`` and ``nd->m_seq`` -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ We already met the ``mount_lock`` seqlock when REF-walk used it to ensure that crossing a mount point is performed safely. RCU-walk uses @@ -727,7 +727,7 @@ results would have been the same. This ensures the invariant holds, at least for vfsmount structures. ``dentry->d_seq`` and ``nd->seq`` -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In place of taking a count or lock on ``d_reflock``, RCU-walk samples the per-dentry ``d_seq`` seqlock, and stores the sequence number in the @@ -774,7 +774,7 @@ getting a counted reference to the new dentry before dropping that for the old dentry which we saw in REF-walk. No ``inode->i_rwsem`` or even ``rename_lock`` -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A semaphore is a fairly heavyweight lock that can only be taken when it is permissible to sleep. As ``rcu_read_lock()`` forbids sleeping, @@ -796,7 +796,7 @@ locking. This neatly handles all cases, so adding extra checks on rename_lock would bring no significant value. ``unlazy walk()`` and ``complete_walk()`` -------------------------------------- +----------------------------------------- That "dropping down to REF-walk" typically involves a call to ``unlazy_walk()``, so named because "RCU-walk" is also sometimes |