Re: [2.6.16 PATCH] Connector: Filesystem Events Connector

From: Evgeniy Polyakov
Date: Thu Mar 23 2006 - 03:50:21 EST


On Wed, Mar 22, 2006 at 11:43:28PM -0800, Matt Helsley (matthltc@xxxxxxxxxx) wrote:
> On Wed, 2006-03-22 at 22:58 +0800, Yi Yang wrote:
> > This patch implements a new connector, Filesystem Event Connector,
> > the user can monitor filesystem activities via it, currently, it
> > can monitor access, attribute change, open, create, modify, delete,
> > move and close of any file or directory.
> >
> > Every filesystem event will include tgid, uid and gid of the process
> > which triggered this event, process name, file or directory name
> > operated by it.
> >
> > Filesystem events connector is never a duplicate of inotify, inotify
> > just concerns change on file or directory, Beagle uses it to watch
> > file changes in order to regenerate index for it, inotify can't tell
> > us who did that change and what is its process name, but filesystem
> > events connector can do these, moreover inotify's overhead is greater
> > than filesystem events connector, inotify needs compare inode with
> > watched file or directories list to decide whether it should generate an
> > inotify_event, some locks also increase overhead, filesystem event
> > connector hasn't these overhead, it just generates a fsevent and send.
> >
> > To be important, filesystem event connector doesn't add any new system
> > call, the user space application can make use of it by netlink socket,
> > but inotify added several system calls, many events mechanism in kernel
> > have used netlink as communication way with user space, for example,
> > KOBJECT_UEVENT, PROC_EVENTS, to use netlink will make it more possible
> > to unify events interface to netlink, the user space application can use
> > it very easy.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Yi Yang <yang.y.yi@xxxxxxxxx>

Ugh, I like the idea!

> > --- a/include/linux/connector.h.orig 2006-03-15 23:21:37.000000000 +0800
> > +++ b/include/linux/connector.h 2006-03-15 23:23:09.000000000 +0800
> > @@ -34,6 +34,8 @@
> > #define CN_VAL_PROC 0x1
> > #define CN_IDX_CIFS 0x2
> > #define CN_VAL_CIFS 0x1
> > +#define CN_IDX_FS 0x3
> > +#define CN_VAL_FS 0x1


Please add some on-line comment about what it is here.

> > #define CN_NETLINK_USERS 1


This must be increased each time new id is added.
Although connector code does allocation with reserve, better to not
exhaust it.
Please increase it to 3.

...

> > +/*
> > + * Userspace sends this enum to register with the kernel that it is listening
> > + * for events on the connector.
> > + */
> > +enum fsevent_mode {
> > + FSEVENT_LISTEN = 1,
> > + FSEVENT_IGNORE = 2
> > +};
> > +
>
> Process Events Connector uses this mechanism to avoid most of the event
> generation code if there are no listeners.
>
> Michael Kerrisk has privately suggested to me that this mechanism gives
> userspace too much rope with which to hang itself. I think it just gives
> userspace more rope.
>
> That said, perhaps we can shorten the rope by adding a connector
> function to quickly return a value indicating if a process in userspace
> is listening to messages sent by the kernel. Then connectors could use
> that function rather that reinvent the same mechanism.

Btw, current connector code performs check for listeners before it
allocates any skbs.
If there are no listenres -ESRCH is returned from cn_netlink_send().

...

> Pull the assignment out of the condition. You're not saving any space by
> putting it into the if () and it's harder to read. I don't think the
> __u8 cast is necessary..
>
> > + printk("cn_fs: out of memory\n");
>
> missing printk tag

Do not print such info at all.

> > +void raise_fsevent(struct dentry * dentryp, u32 mask)
> > +{
> > + __raise_fsevent(dentryp->d_name.name, NULL, mask);
> > +}
> > +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(raise_fsevent);
> > +
> > +void raise_fsevent_create(struct inode * inode, const char * name, u32 mask)
> > +{
> > + __raise_fsevent(name, NULL, mask);
> > +}
> > +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(raise_fsevent_create);
> > +
> > +void raise_fsevent_move(struct inode * olddir, const char * oldname,
> > + struct inode * newdir, const char * newname, u32 mask)
> > +{
> > + __raise_fsevent(oldname, newname, mask);
> > +}
> > +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(raise_fsevent_move);

Are there external modules which might use it?

--
Evgeniy Polyakov
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