Re: [RFC] netns / sysfs interaction

From: Al Viro
Date: Mon Jan 07 2008 - 05:24:37 EST


On Mon, Jan 07, 2008 at 03:01:47AM -0700, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:

> What appears to be a clean solution is to have multiple sysfs superblocks
> and to capture the namespace at mount time.

It is not a clean solution at all. In particular, it leaves you with hell
of a coherency issues between these trees.

> For planning purposes there
> is a device namespace on the drawing board as well, so you can keep
> your same major minor numbers for devices (tty names, network attached
> disk) in a migration event.

Yes, I'm quite sure there's more coming. Which is why I'm asking now,
before we are even deeper into that... area

> This means netns isn't the only
> namespace we will have to worry about with sysfs before it is all
> done.

Exciting.

> > a) what happens if I do chdir("/sys/class/net/eth42/") and then
> > migrate?
>
> It shouldn't be any better or worse then any other filesystem. The
> prerequisite for a OS level migration is that the set of all
> namespaces and all of the processes that use them all go together.
> As we recreate the virtual filesystem and virtual devices we should
> recreate a sysfs that is essentially the same. I doubt we will go
> to the trouble of keeping the unnamed device number we are mounted on
> and the inode numbers the same, but otherwise we should be able to
> recreate an identical looking sysfs (baring real hardware changes).

Have you even bothered to read the pathname in question? Please, do so.

> > c) what happens to open files? E.g. to /sys/class/net - say it,
> > if migration happens between two getdents(2).
>
> How do we restore the internal state? Hmm. The rule is that you
> are only guaranteed to see directory entries that existed
> both before you started to read the directory and after you finished.
>
> The cheap solution is just to declared everything hotplugged and
> deleted and recreated. Removing any meaningful guarantee of seeing
> anything.
>
> Since we only depend upon the value of f_pos that should largely work.
>
> If we ever figure out how to preserve inode numbers over a migration
> event the current scheme will work unmodified but that sounds like
> more pain then it is worth.
>

Inode numbers? Are you suggesting a wholesale replacement of all struct
file referenced by descriptor tables, all way down to inodes? May I see
the patches for that, please?

> Third when the goal is isolation and not migration (a better chroot)
> then our hardware never changes.

... and you have quite a bit of system state (starting with those net:eth0
symlinks, etc.) visible in there, not just the hardware.

> The idea is supporting multiple superblocks for sysfs:
>
> Ultimately capturing the relevant namespace at mount time
> and if we don't have a superblock for that namespace creating
> a new one.
>
> So we have one sysfs dirent tree and multiple dentry trees.
>
> The tricky parts are rename/move and blocking mount/unmount requests
> for sysfs until we complete the rename operation calling d_move
> everywhere.

Excuse me, _what_? Are you seriously suggesting going through all dentry
trees, doing d_move() in each? I want to see your locking. It's promising
to be worse than devfs had ever been. Much worse.
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/