- added an "union inode_ext" to struct inode, for the per-fs extentions.
For now only ext2fs uses it.
- i_din is now an union:
union {
struct dinode ffs_din; /* 128 bytes of the on-disk dinode. */
struct ext2fs_dinode e2fs_din; /* 128 bytes of the on-disk dinode. */
} i_din
Added a lot of #define i_ffs_* and i_e2fs_* to access the fields.
- Added two macros: FFS_ITIMES and EXT2FS_ITIMES. ITIMES calls the rigth
macro, depending on the time of the inode. ITIMES is used where necessary,
FFS_ITIMES and EXT2FS_ITIMES in other places.
non-existent file and the end of the pathname is reached, and this `current'
directory resides on a read-only mounted file system, don't update/prepare
its inode for the actual operation but return EROFS.
'const char *', and 'void *', respectively. The second arg is taken directly
from user arguments, and is const there, so must be const in the prototypes
and functions. The third arg is also taken directly from user arguments.
It doesn't have to be changed, but since it's cleaner to keep the type
the same as the user arg's type, and I'm already making the 'const char *'
change...
align 32bit integers. Use explicit sized typing at some other places.
XXX This still won't fix lfs for 64bit machines, as we have some
assumptions about sizeof(pointer)=sizeof(u_int32_t) in here, and (if I
looked right) a misaligned u_int64_t. The right fix (to cite cgd) will
be to seperate on-disk-representation from in-core, but I don't have
the time (at the moment) to do this.
gcc thinks that the 'q' modifier describes a "long long", and so -Wformat
whines when printing with 'q' on the alpha, since int64_t-sized types are
done with variations on "long" rather than "long long".
* Make 2nd and 3rd args timespecs, not timevals.
* Consistently pass a Boolean as the 4th arg (except in LFS).
Also, fix ffs_update() and lfs_update() to actually change the nsec fields.
* Change the argument names to vop_link so they actually make sense.
* Implement vop_link and vop_symlink for all file systems, so they do proper
cleanup.
* Require the file system to decide whether or not linking and unlinking of
directories is allowed, and disable it for all current file systems.