Commit Graph

18 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
mycroft
c52352c819 Add a set of generic file system operations that most file systems use.
Also, fix some time stamp bogosities.
1996-09-01 23:47:48 +00:00
christos
01b73223a6 msdog prototype changes 1996-02-09 19:13:39 +00:00
ws
144472e875 Deal (hopefully) better with uninitialized date fields 1996-02-03 16:04:09 +00:00
jtc
299e1fe9df Rename struct timespec fields to conform to POSIX.1b 1996-02-01 00:31:05 +00:00
mycroft
9836ea60d6 Remember to multiply the seconds field by 2. Pointer out by John Hayward. 1996-01-31 20:51:40 +00:00
ws
debbf2f60e - Add support for Win'95 separate creation/modification/access timestamps
- Re-introduce lowercase filenames for non-Win'95-filesystems
1995-11-29 15:08:32 +00:00
ws
9c20d7c675 Win95 ignores case on lookup 1995-10-30 19:06:15 +00:00
ws
a96f4bc2fc Add support for Win'95 long filenames 1995-10-15 15:34:19 +00:00
mycroft
7225b8231e Push more of the time conversion code into unix2dostime(). Maintain the
ATTR_ARCHIVE bit according to DOS semantics, and allow it to be changed by chflags(2).
1994-12-27 18:36:21 +00:00
cgd
f704435aa1 light clean; make sure headers are properly included, types are OK, etc.
use UNALINGNED_ACCESS macro, to determine how to get at fields.
1994-10-29 07:59:27 +00:00
mycroft
ae583dca34 Various changes:
* Make some of the code look more like UFS.
* Check permissions in lookup().
* Move the directory size special case into DE_EXTERNALIZE().
* Fix some conditions where lookup() might not release a buffer.
* Remove bogus flag handling in setattr().
* Pass timespec, not timeval, to deupdat().
* Check more error conditions.
* Fix possible panics in rename().
* Simplify readdir().
* General code cleanup; add prototypes, delete unused variables, etc.
1994-09-28 11:31:23 +00:00
mycroft
c8899c8f8e Fix an off-by-one error reported by Mike Hartman. 1994-08-30 01:31:11 +00:00
cgd
cf92afd66e New RCS ID's, take two. they're more aesthecially pleasant, and use 'NetBSD' 1994-06-29 06:29:24 +00:00
cgd
d071d1cf05 some prototype cleanup, eliminate/replace bogus types (e.g. quad and
u_quad) -> use better types (e.g. quad_t & u_quad_t in inodes),
some cleanup.
1994-04-25 03:49:27 +00:00
cgd
e6a6d0ec1b fix from nnd@KremlSun.ussr.EU.net for lookup/conversion bug 1994-04-07 02:24:17 +00:00
paulus
7c687a255f msdos filesystem now works on big-endian machines. 1994-03-03 00:51:30 +00:00
mycroft
95b048b53a Canonicalize all #includes. 1993-12-18 00:40:47 +00:00
cgd
54eb3b1f88 brought in fixed/renamed/matching MS-DOS FS code, from Jeff Polk
<polk@bsdi.com>.  His notes are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 July 22, 1993

 - Changed name of entire package from PCFS to MSDOSFS

 - Fixed bugs:
      root directory size in clusters instead of bytes
      growing directory didn't update in-core size
      link, symlink, mknod didn't free locked parent (deadlock)
      lookup returned real error on create and rename instead of EJUSTRETURN
      rename changed `.' entry in child instead of name entry in parent
      rename removed `.' entry in child instead of removing entry in
              parent when moving a directory from one dir to another
      createde() left new node locked when write of parent failed (deadlock)
      removede() decremented refcount even on error (rmdir's which failed
              due to write errors left in-core cache entries inconsistent)
      changed validation for filesystem to not check for the boot signature
              since some disks (e.g., mtools) aren't bootable
      directories are always show current time as modify time
              (needed for NFS export since DOS never updates dir mod times --
               ctime is true create time).

 - Added support for cookies changes to the readdir() vnode
      interface (#ifdef __bsdi__)

 - Punted on the whole problem of inode generation numbers.  This means
   that there's a chance of using a stale file handle to access a new
   file, but it doesn't appear to be the common case, and I don't see
   how to generate reasonable generation numbers without changing something
   on the disk (which is the way the SVR4 filesystem survival kit guys
   did it).  I don't think it would be very safe to change the on-disk
   format.

        Jeff Polk (polk@BSDI.COM)

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1993-08-13 11:35:13 +00:00