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diff --git a/web/l-name.html b/web/l-name.html deleted file mode 100644 index 9c211f3..0000000 --- a/web/l-name.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,181 +0,0 @@ -<title>L11</title> -<html> -<head> -</head> -<body> - -<h1>Naming in file systems</h1> - -<p>Required reading: nami(), and all other file system code. - -<h2>Overview</h2> - -<p>To help users to remember where they stored their data, most -systems allow users to assign their own names to their data. -Typically the data is organized in files and users assign names to -files.  To deal with many files, users can organize their files in -directories, in a hierarchical manner.  Each name is a pathname, with -the components separated by "/". - -<p>To avoid that users have to type long abolute names (i.e., names -starting with "/" in Unix), users can change their working directory -and use relative names (i.e., naming that don't start with "/"). - -<p>User file namespace operations include create, mkdir, mv, ln -(link), unlink, and chdir. (How is "mv a b" implemented in xv6? -Answer: "link a b"; "unlink a".)  To be able to name the current -directory and the parent directory every directory includes two -entries "." and "..".  Files and directories can reclaimed if users -cannot name it anymore (i.e., after the last unlink). - -<p>Recall from last lecture, all directories entries contain a name, -followed by an inode number. The inode number names an inode of the -file system.  How can we merge file systems from different disks into -a single name space? - -<p>A user grafts new file systems on a name space using mount.  Umount -removes a file system from the name space.  (In DOS, a file system is -named by its device letter.)  Mount takes the root inode of the -to-be-mounted file system and grafts it on the inode of the name space -entry where the file system is mounted (e.g., /mnt/disk1). The -in-memory inode of /mnt/disk1 records the major and minor number of -the file system mounted on it.  When namei sees an inode on which a -file system is mounted, it looks up the root inode of the mounted file -system, and proceeds with that inode. - -<p>Mount is not a durable operation; it doesn't surive power failures. -After a power failure, the system administrator must remount the file -system (i.e., often in a startup script that is run from init). - -<p>Links are convenient, because with users can create synonyms for -  file names.  But, it creates the potential of introducing cycles in -  the naning tree.  For example, consider link("a/b/c", "a").  This -  makes c a synonym for a. This cycle can complicate matters; for -  example: -<ul> -<li>If a user subsequently calls unlink ("a"), then the user cannot -  name the directory "b" and the link "c" anymore, but how can the -  file system decide that? -</ul> - -<p>This problem can be solved by detecting cycles.  The second problem -  can be solved by computing with files are reacheable from "/" and -  reclaim all the ones that aren't reacheable.  Unix takes a simpler -  approach: avoid cycles by disallowing users to create links for -  directories.  If there are no cycles, then reference counts can be -  used to see if a file is still referenced. In the inode maintain a -  field for counting references (nlink in xv6's dinode). link -  increases the reference count, and unlink decreases the count; if -  the count reaches zero the inode and disk blocks can be reclaimed. - -<p>How to handle symbolic links across file systems (i.e., from one -  mounted file system to another)?  Since inodes are not unique across -  file systems, we cannot create a link across file systems; the -  directory entry only contains an inode number, not the inode number -  and the name of the disk on which the inode is located.  To handle -  this case, Unix provides a second type of link, which are called -  soft links. - -<p>Soft links are a special file type (e.g., T_SYMLINK).  If namei -  encounters a inode of type T_SYMLINK, it resolves the the name in -  the symlink file to an inode, and continues from there.  With -  symlinks one can create cycles and they can point to non-existing -  files. - -<p>The design of the name system can have security implications. For -  example, if you tests if a name exists, and then use the name, -  between testing and using it an adversary can have change the -  binding from name to object.  Such problems are called TOCTTOU. - -<p>An example of TOCTTOU is follows.  Let's say root runs a script -  every night to remove file in /tmp.  This gets rid off the files -  that editors might left behind, but we will never be used again. An -  adversary can exploit this script as follows: -<pre> -    Root                         Attacker -                                 mkdir ("/tmp/etc") -				 creat ("/tmp/etc/passw") -    readdir ("tmp"); -    lstat ("tmp/etc"); -    readdir ("tmp/etc"); -                                 rename ("tmp/etc", "/tmp/x"); -				 symlink ("etc", "/tmp/etc"); -    unlink ("tmp/etc/passwd"); -</pre> -Lstat checks whether /tmp/etc is not symbolic link, but by the time it -runs unlink the attacker had time to creat a symbolic link in the -place of /tmp/etc, with a password file of the adversary's choice. - -<p>This problem could have been avoided if every user or process group -  had its own private /tmp, or if access to the shared one was -  mediated. - -<h2>V6 code examples</h2> - -<p> namei (sheet 46) is the core of the Unix naming system. namei can -  be called in several ways: NAMEI_LOOKUP (resolve a name to an inode -  and lock inode), NAMEI_CREATE (resolve a name, but lock parent -  inode), and NAMEI_DELETE (resolve a name, lock parent inode, and -  return offset in the directory).  The reason is that namei is -  complicated is that we want to atomically test if a name exist and -  remove/create it, if it does; otherwise, two concurrent processes -  could interfere with each other and directory could end up in an -  inconsistent state. - -<p>Let's trace open("a", O_RDWR), focussing on namei: -<ul> -<li>5263: we will look at creating a file in a bit. -<li>5277: call namei with NAMEI_LOOKUP -<li>4629: if path name start with "/", lookup root inode (1). -<li>4632: otherwise, use inode for current working directory. -<li>4638: consume row of "/", for example in "/////a////b" -<li>4641: if we are done with NAMEI_LOOKUP, return inode (e.g., -  namei("/")). -<li>4652: if the inode we are searching for a name isn't of type -  directory, give up. -<li>4657-4661: determine length of the current component of the -  pathname we are resolving. -<li>4663-4681: scan the directory for the component. -<li>4682-4696: the entry wasn't found. if we are the end of the -  pathname and NAMEI_CREATE is set, lock parent directory and return a -  pointer to the start of the component.  In all other case, unlock -  inode of directory, and return 0. -<li>4701: if NAMEI_DELETE is set, return locked parent inode and the -  offset of the to-be-deleted component in the directory. -<li>4707: lookup inode of the component, and go to the top of the loop. -</ul> - -<p>Now let's look at creating a file in a directory: -<ul> -<li>5264: if the last component doesn't exist, but first part of the -  pathname resolved to a directory, then dp will be 0, last will point -  to the beginning of the last component, and ip will be the locked -  parent directory. -<li>5266: create an entry for last in the directory. -<li>4772: mknod1 allocates a new named inode and adds it to an -  existing directory. -<li>4776: ialloc. skan inode block, find unused entry, and write -  it. (if lucky 1 read and 1 write.) -<li>4784: fill out the inode entry, and write it. (another write) -<li>4786: write the entry into the directory (if lucky, 1 write) -</ul> - -</ul> -Why must the parent directory be locked?  If two processes try to -create the same name in the same directory, only one should succeed -and the other one, should receive an error (file exist). - -<p>Link, unlink, chdir, mount, umount could have taken file -descriptors instead of their path argument. In fact, this would get -rid of some possible race conditions (some of which have security -implications, TOCTTOU). However, this would require that the current -working directory be remembered by the process, and UNIX didn't have -good ways of maintaining static state shared among all processes -belonging to a given user. The easiest way is to create shared state -is to place it in the kernel. -    -<p>We have one piece of code in xv6 that we haven't studied: exec. -  With all the ground work we have done this code can be easily -  understood (see sheet 54). - -</body>  | 
