On Monday May 5, [email protected] wrote:
> On Mon, May 05, 2008 at 09:22:49AM +1000, Neil Brown wrote:
> >
> > Now it could be argued that this permission test is really a dumb idea
> > that buys nothing and costs much. And if you were to queue a patch to
> > get rid of it, I doubt you would get any objections .... certainly not
> > from me :-)
>
> Dumb idea or not, it looks like it's explicitly documented in
> exports(5):
>
> " subtree checking is also used to make sure that files
> inside directories to which only root has access can only be
> accessed if the filesystem is exported with no_root_squash
> (see below), even if the file itself allows more general
> access."
>
> So as much as I'd like to I'm not comfortable silently turning off that
> check.
Ack.
>
> I suppose we could choose to acquire those capabilities only in the
> no_subtree_check case.
If only it were that easy ;-)
reconnect_path potentially requires both 'r' and 'x' permission on
parent directories. 'r' to be able to read the directory to find the
name of the object being reconnected, and 'x' to do the lookup which
effects the reconnect.
To fix the current bug properly, reconnect_path still needs to bypass
normal permission checks even when subtree_check is in effect, so it
can be sure of getting read permission on the parent directory.
There is another way .... but it would need careful consideration.
While the dentry returned by exportfs_decode_fh (for a directory) must
be connected in the dcache tree, it does *not* need to have a correct
name. All that is needed is that d_parent is correct (this is used,
as mentioned before, to correctly lock directory renames).
We can leave the dentry unhashed but with a correct d_parent pointer.
If the directory is ever access by name, d_slice_alias will be called
and this will update the name in the dentry to be correct.
We could then get rid of exportfs_get_name and the call to
lookup_one_len, and add some dcache magic after the ->get_parent call
to make 'pd' an anonymous child of 'ppd'.
Some matching changes to d_splice_alias should finish the task.
Does this seem sane to anyone else? Is it worth a try?
NeilBrown