Commit graph

9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Fabian Dellwing
5180e41918 Kernel: Call did_modify_contents() after truncate()
Truncating a file should absolutly mark it as modified. With this
change our `tail` implementation can correctly handle it.
2024-02-24 15:48:36 -07:00
Liav A
a10e63f08e Kernel/FileSystem: Send proper filetypes when traversing RAM-backed FSes
SysFS, ProcFS and DevPtsFS were all sending filetype 0 when traversing
their directories, but it is actually very easy to send proper filetypes
in these filesystems.
This patch binds all RAM backed filesystems to use only one enum for
their internal filetype, to simplify the implementation and allow
sharing of code.
Please note that the Plan9FS case is currently not solved as I am not
familiar with this filesystem and its constructs.

The ProcFS mostly keeps track of the filetype, and a fix was needed for
the /proc root directory - all processes exhibit a directory inside it
which makes it very easy to hardcode the directory filetype for them.
There's also the `self` symlink inode which is now exposed as DT_LNK.

As for SysFS, we could leverage the fact everything inherits from the
SysFSComponent class, so we could have a virtual const method to return
the proper filetype.
Most of the files in SysFS are "regular" files though, so the base class
has a non-pure virtual method.

Lastly, the DevPtsFS simply hardcodes '.' and '..' as directory file
type, and everything else is hardcoded to send the character device file
type, as this filesystem is only exposing character pts device files.
2024-01-13 19:01:07 -07:00
Ali Mohammad Pur
b545427d53 Kernel: Make RAMFS pass along the inode type when traversing as a dir
RAMFS was passing 0, which lead to the userspace seeing all entries as
DT_UNKNOWN when iterating over the directory contents.
To repro prior to this commit, simply check `echo /tmp/*/`.
2023-12-01 20:46:16 +01:00
Liav A
1b04726c85 Kernel: Move all tasks-related code to the Tasks subdirectory 2023-06-04 21:32:34 +02:00
kleines Filmröllchen
939600d2d4 Kernel: Use UnixDateTime wherever applicable
"Wherever applicable" = most places, actually :^), especially for
networking and filesystem timestamps.

This includes changes to unzip, which uses DOSPackedTime, since that is
changed for the FAT file systems.
2023-05-24 23:18:07 +02:00
kleines Filmröllchen
213025f210 AK: Rename Time to Duration
That's what this class really is; in fact that's what the first line of
the comment says it is.

This commit does not rename the main files, since those will contain
other time-related classes in a little bit.
2023-05-24 23:18:07 +02:00
Andreas Kling
e6fc7b3ff7 Kernel: Switch LockRefPtr<Inode> to RefPtr<Inode>
The main place where this is a little iffy is in RAMFS where inodes
have a LockWeakPtr to their parent inode. I've left that as a
LockWeakPtr for now.
2023-03-09 21:54:59 +01:00
Liav A
4a14138230 Kernel/FileSystem: Fix check of read offset for the RAMFSInode code
The check of ensuring we are not trying to read beyond the end of the
inode data buffer is already there, it's just that we need to disallow
further reading if the read offset equals to the inode data size.
2023-02-19 01:01:45 +01:00
Liav A
ed67a877a3 Kernel+SystemServer+Base: Introduce the RAMFS filesystem
This filesystem is based on the code of the long-lived TmpFS. It differs
from that filesystem in one keypoint - its root inode doesn't have a
sticky bit on it.

Therefore, we mount it on /dev, to ensure only root can modify files on
that directory. In addition to that, /tmp is mounted directly in the
SystemServer main (start) code, so it's no longer specified in the fstab
file. We ensure that /tmp has a sticky bit and has the value 0777 for
root directory permissions, which is certainly a special case when using
RAM-backed (and in general other) filesystems.

Because of these 2 changes, it's no longer needed to maintain the TmpFS
filesystem, hence it's removed (renamed to RAMFS), because the RAMFS
represents the purpose of this filesystem in a much better way - it
relies on being backed by RAM "storage", and therefore it's easy to
conclude it's temporary and volatile, so its content is gone on either
system shutdown or unmounting of the filesystem.
2023-02-04 15:32:45 -07:00
Renamed from Kernel/FileSystem/TmpFS/Inode.cpp (Browse further)