ostree/src/rofiles-fuse
Colin Walters b83d509e78 tree-wide: Switch tabs ⭾ in various files over to spaces ␠
As $DEITY intended.

I was reading the `prepare-root.c` code and the indentation damage was
distracting. Squash tabs that have leaked into various places in the code. I
didn't yet touch the `src/libostree` bits as that has higher potential for
conflict.

Closes: #852
Approved by: jlebon
2017-05-11 18:17:26 +00:00
..
Makefile-inc.am Import rofiles-fuse 2016-02-10 13:11:25 +01:00
README.md Import rofiles-fuse 2016-02-10 13:11:25 +01:00
main.c tree-wide: Switch tabs ⭾ in various files over to spaces ␠ 2017-05-11 18:17:26 +00:00

README.md

rofiles-fuse

Create a mountpoint that represents an underlying directory hierarchy, but where non-directory inodes cannot have content or xattrs changed. Files can still be unlinked, and new ones created.

This filesystem is designed for OSTree and other systems that create "hardlink farms", i.e. filesystem trees deduplicated via hardlinks.

Normally with hard links, if you change one, you change them all.

There are two approaches to dealing with that:

Usage

Let's say that you have immutable data in /srv/backups/20150410, and you want to update it with a new version, storing the result in /srv/backups/20150411. Further assume that all software operating on the directory does the "create tempfile and rename()" dance rather than in-place edits.

$ mkdir -p /srv/backups/mnt   # Ensure we have a mount point
$ cp -al /srv/backups/20150410 /srv/backups/20150411
$ rofiles-fuse /srv/backups/20150411 /srv/backups/mnt

Now we have a "rofiles" mount at /srv/backups/mnt. If we try this:

$ echo new doc content > /srv/backups/mnt/document
bash: /srv/backups/mnt/document: Read-only file system

It failed because the > redirection operator will try to truncate the existing file. If instead we create document.tmp and then rename it atomically over the old one, it will work:

$ echo new doc content > /srv/backups/mnt/document.tmp
$ mv /srv/backups/mnt/document.tmp /srv/backups/mnt/document

Let's unmount:

$ fusermount -u /srv/backups/mnt

Now we have two directories /srv/backups/20150410 /srv/backups/20150411 which share all file storage except for the new document.