xref: /openbmc/linux/fs/ntfs/namei.c (revision 89076bc3)
1 /*
2  * namei.c - NTFS kernel directory inode operations. Part of the Linux-NTFS
3  *	     project.
4  *
5  * Copyright (c) 2001-2006 Anton Altaparmakov
6  *
7  * This program/include file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
8  * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published
9  * by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
10  * (at your option) any later version.
11  *
12  * This program/include file is distributed in the hope that it will be
13  * useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty
14  * of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
15  * GNU General Public License for more details.
16  *
17  * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18  * along with this program (in the main directory of the Linux-NTFS
19  * distribution in the file COPYING); if not, write to the Free Software
20  * Foundation,Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA  02111-1307  USA
21  */
22 
23 #include <linux/dcache.h>
24 #include <linux/exportfs.h>
25 #include <linux/security.h>
26 #include <linux/slab.h>
27 
28 #include "attrib.h"
29 #include "debug.h"
30 #include "dir.h"
31 #include "mft.h"
32 #include "ntfs.h"
33 
34 /**
35  * ntfs_lookup - find the inode represented by a dentry in a directory inode
36  * @dir_ino:	directory inode in which to look for the inode
37  * @dent:	dentry representing the inode to look for
38  * @flags:	lookup flags
39  *
40  * In short, ntfs_lookup() looks for the inode represented by the dentry @dent
41  * in the directory inode @dir_ino and if found attaches the inode to the
42  * dentry @dent.
43  *
44  * In more detail, the dentry @dent specifies which inode to look for by
45  * supplying the name of the inode in @dent->d_name.name. ntfs_lookup()
46  * converts the name to Unicode and walks the contents of the directory inode
47  * @dir_ino looking for the converted Unicode name. If the name is found in the
48  * directory, the corresponding inode is loaded by calling ntfs_iget() on its
49  * inode number and the inode is associated with the dentry @dent via a call to
50  * d_splice_alias().
51  *
52  * If the name is not found in the directory, a NULL inode is inserted into the
53  * dentry @dent via a call to d_add(). The dentry is then termed a negative
54  * dentry.
55  *
56  * Only if an actual error occurs, do we return an error via ERR_PTR().
57  *
58  * In order to handle the case insensitivity issues of NTFS with regards to the
59  * dcache and the dcache requiring only one dentry per directory, we deal with
60  * dentry aliases that only differ in case in ->ntfs_lookup() while maintaining
61  * a case sensitive dcache. This means that we get the full benefit of dcache
62  * speed when the file/directory is looked up with the same case as returned by
63  * ->ntfs_readdir() but that a lookup for any other case (or for the short file
64  * name) will not find anything in dcache and will enter ->ntfs_lookup()
65  * instead, where we search the directory for a fully matching file name
66  * (including case) and if that is not found, we search for a file name that
67  * matches with different case and if that has non-POSIX semantics we return
68  * that. We actually do only one search (case sensitive) and keep tabs on
69  * whether we have found a case insensitive match in the process.
70  *
71  * To simplify matters for us, we do not treat the short vs long filenames as
72  * two hard links but instead if the lookup matches a short filename, we
73  * return the dentry for the corresponding long filename instead.
74  *
75  * There are three cases we need to distinguish here:
76  *
77  * 1) @dent perfectly matches (i.e. including case) a directory entry with a
78  *    file name in the WIN32 or POSIX namespaces. In this case
79  *    ntfs_lookup_inode_by_name() will return with name set to NULL and we
80  *    just d_splice_alias() @dent.
81  * 2) @dent matches (not including case) a directory entry with a file name in
82  *    the WIN32 namespace. In this case ntfs_lookup_inode_by_name() will return
83  *    with name set to point to a kmalloc()ed ntfs_name structure containing
84  *    the properly cased little endian Unicode name. We convert the name to the
85  *    current NLS code page, search if a dentry with this name already exists
86  *    and if so return that instead of @dent.  At this point things are
87  *    complicated by the possibility of 'disconnected' dentries due to NFS
88  *    which we deal with appropriately (see the code comments).  The VFS will
89  *    then destroy the old @dent and use the one we returned.  If a dentry is
90  *    not found, we allocate a new one, d_splice_alias() it, and return it as
91  *    above.
92  * 3) @dent matches either perfectly or not (i.e. we don't care about case) a
93  *    directory entry with a file name in the DOS namespace. In this case
94  *    ntfs_lookup_inode_by_name() will return with name set to point to a
95  *    kmalloc()ed ntfs_name structure containing the mft reference (cpu endian)
96  *    of the inode. We use the mft reference to read the inode and to find the
97  *    file name in the WIN32 namespace corresponding to the matched short file
98  *    name. We then convert the name to the current NLS code page, and proceed
99  *    searching for a dentry with this name, etc, as in case 2), above.
100  *
101  * Locking: Caller must hold i_mutex on the directory.
102  */
103 static struct dentry *ntfs_lookup(struct inode *dir_ino, struct dentry *dent,
104 		unsigned int flags)
105 {
106 	ntfs_volume *vol = NTFS_SB(dir_ino->i_sb);
107 	struct inode *dent_inode;
108 	ntfschar *uname;
109 	ntfs_name *name = NULL;
110 	MFT_REF mref;
111 	unsigned long dent_ino;
112 	int uname_len;
113 
114 	ntfs_debug("Looking up %pd in directory inode 0x%lx.",
115 			dent, dir_ino->i_ino);
116 	/* Convert the name of the dentry to Unicode. */
117 	uname_len = ntfs_nlstoucs(vol, dent->d_name.name, dent->d_name.len,
118 			&uname);
119 	if (uname_len < 0) {
120 		if (uname_len != -ENAMETOOLONG)
121 			ntfs_error(vol->sb, "Failed to convert name to "
122 					"Unicode.");
123 		return ERR_PTR(uname_len);
124 	}
125 	mref = ntfs_lookup_inode_by_name(NTFS_I(dir_ino), uname, uname_len,
126 			&name);
127 	kmem_cache_free(ntfs_name_cache, uname);
128 	if (!IS_ERR_MREF(mref)) {
129 		dent_ino = MREF(mref);
130 		ntfs_debug("Found inode 0x%lx. Calling ntfs_iget.", dent_ino);
131 		dent_inode = ntfs_iget(vol->sb, dent_ino);
132 		if (likely(!IS_ERR(dent_inode))) {
133 			/* Consistency check. */
134 			if (is_bad_inode(dent_inode) || MSEQNO(mref) ==
135 					NTFS_I(dent_inode)->seq_no ||
136 					dent_ino == FILE_MFT) {
137 				/* Perfect WIN32/POSIX match. -- Case 1. */
138 				if (!name) {
139 					ntfs_debug("Done.  (Case 1.)");
140 					return d_splice_alias(dent_inode, dent);
141 				}
142 				/*
143 				 * We are too indented.  Handle imperfect
144 				 * matches and short file names further below.
145 				 */
146 				goto handle_name;
147 			}
148 			ntfs_error(vol->sb, "Found stale reference to inode "
149 					"0x%lx (reference sequence number = "
150 					"0x%x, inode sequence number = 0x%x), "
151 					"returning -EIO. Run chkdsk.",
152 					dent_ino, MSEQNO(mref),
153 					NTFS_I(dent_inode)->seq_no);
154 			iput(dent_inode);
155 			dent_inode = ERR_PTR(-EIO);
156 		} else
157 			ntfs_error(vol->sb, "ntfs_iget(0x%lx) failed with "
158 					"error code %li.", dent_ino,
159 					PTR_ERR(dent_inode));
160 		kfree(name);
161 		/* Return the error code. */
162 		return (struct dentry *)dent_inode;
163 	}
164 	/* It is guaranteed that @name is no longer allocated at this point. */
165 	if (MREF_ERR(mref) == -ENOENT) {
166 		ntfs_debug("Entry was not found, adding negative dentry.");
167 		/* The dcache will handle negative entries. */
168 		d_add(dent, NULL);
169 		ntfs_debug("Done.");
170 		return NULL;
171 	}
172 	ntfs_error(vol->sb, "ntfs_lookup_ino_by_name() failed with error "
173 			"code %i.", -MREF_ERR(mref));
174 	return ERR_PTR(MREF_ERR(mref));
175 	// TODO: Consider moving this lot to a separate function! (AIA)
176 handle_name:
177    {
178 	MFT_RECORD *m;
179 	ntfs_attr_search_ctx *ctx;
180 	ntfs_inode *ni = NTFS_I(dent_inode);
181 	int err;
182 	struct qstr nls_name;
183 
184 	nls_name.name = NULL;
185 	if (name->type != FILE_NAME_DOS) {			/* Case 2. */
186 		ntfs_debug("Case 2.");
187 		nls_name.len = (unsigned)ntfs_ucstonls(vol,
188 				(ntfschar*)&name->name, name->len,
189 				(unsigned char**)&nls_name.name, 0);
190 		kfree(name);
191 	} else /* if (name->type == FILE_NAME_DOS) */ {		/* Case 3. */
192 		FILE_NAME_ATTR *fn;
193 
194 		ntfs_debug("Case 3.");
195 		kfree(name);
196 
197 		/* Find the WIN32 name corresponding to the matched DOS name. */
198 		ni = NTFS_I(dent_inode);
199 		m = map_mft_record(ni);
200 		if (IS_ERR(m)) {
201 			err = PTR_ERR(m);
202 			m = NULL;
203 			ctx = NULL;
204 			goto err_out;
205 		}
206 		ctx = ntfs_attr_get_search_ctx(ni, m);
207 		if (unlikely(!ctx)) {
208 			err = -ENOMEM;
209 			goto err_out;
210 		}
211 		do {
212 			ATTR_RECORD *a;
213 			u32 val_len;
214 
215 			err = ntfs_attr_lookup(AT_FILE_NAME, NULL, 0, 0, 0,
216 					NULL, 0, ctx);
217 			if (unlikely(err)) {
218 				ntfs_error(vol->sb, "Inode corrupt: No WIN32 "
219 						"namespace counterpart to DOS "
220 						"file name. Run chkdsk.");
221 				if (err == -ENOENT)
222 					err = -EIO;
223 				goto err_out;
224 			}
225 			/* Consistency checks. */
226 			a = ctx->attr;
227 			if (a->non_resident || a->flags)
228 				goto eio_err_out;
229 			val_len = le32_to_cpu(a->data.resident.value_length);
230 			if (le16_to_cpu(a->data.resident.value_offset) +
231 					val_len > le32_to_cpu(a->length))
232 				goto eio_err_out;
233 			fn = (FILE_NAME_ATTR*)((u8*)ctx->attr + le16_to_cpu(
234 					ctx->attr->data.resident.value_offset));
235 			if ((u32)(fn->file_name_length * sizeof(ntfschar) +
236 					sizeof(FILE_NAME_ATTR)) > val_len)
237 				goto eio_err_out;
238 		} while (fn->file_name_type != FILE_NAME_WIN32);
239 
240 		/* Convert the found WIN32 name to current NLS code page. */
241 		nls_name.len = (unsigned)ntfs_ucstonls(vol,
242 				(ntfschar*)&fn->file_name, fn->file_name_length,
243 				(unsigned char**)&nls_name.name, 0);
244 
245 		ntfs_attr_put_search_ctx(ctx);
246 		unmap_mft_record(ni);
247 	}
248 	m = NULL;
249 	ctx = NULL;
250 
251 	/* Check if a conversion error occurred. */
252 	if ((signed)nls_name.len < 0) {
253 		err = (signed)nls_name.len;
254 		goto err_out;
255 	}
256 	nls_name.hash = full_name_hash(nls_name.name, nls_name.len);
257 
258 	dent = d_add_ci(dent, dent_inode, &nls_name);
259 	kfree(nls_name.name);
260 	return dent;
261 
262 eio_err_out:
263 	ntfs_error(vol->sb, "Illegal file name attribute. Run chkdsk.");
264 	err = -EIO;
265 err_out:
266 	if (ctx)
267 		ntfs_attr_put_search_ctx(ctx);
268 	if (m)
269 		unmap_mft_record(ni);
270 	iput(dent_inode);
271 	ntfs_error(vol->sb, "Failed, returning error code %i.", err);
272 	return ERR_PTR(err);
273    }
274 }
275 
276 /**
277  * Inode operations for directories.
278  */
279 const struct inode_operations ntfs_dir_inode_ops = {
280 	.lookup	= ntfs_lookup,	/* VFS: Lookup directory. */
281 };
282 
283 /**
284  * ntfs_get_parent - find the dentry of the parent of a given directory dentry
285  * @child_dent:		dentry of the directory whose parent directory to find
286  *
287  * Find the dentry for the parent directory of the directory specified by the
288  * dentry @child_dent.  This function is called from
289  * fs/exportfs/expfs.c::find_exported_dentry() which in turn is called from the
290  * default ->decode_fh() which is export_decode_fh() in the same file.
291  *
292  * The code is based on the ext3 ->get_parent() implementation found in
293  * fs/ext3/namei.c::ext3_get_parent().
294  *
295  * Note: ntfs_get_parent() is called with @d_inode(child_dent)->i_mutex down.
296  *
297  * Return the dentry of the parent directory on success or the error code on
298  * error (IS_ERR() is true).
299  */
300 static struct dentry *ntfs_get_parent(struct dentry *child_dent)
301 {
302 	struct inode *vi = d_inode(child_dent);
303 	ntfs_inode *ni = NTFS_I(vi);
304 	MFT_RECORD *mrec;
305 	ntfs_attr_search_ctx *ctx;
306 	ATTR_RECORD *attr;
307 	FILE_NAME_ATTR *fn;
308 	unsigned long parent_ino;
309 	int err;
310 
311 	ntfs_debug("Entering for inode 0x%lx.", vi->i_ino);
312 	/* Get the mft record of the inode belonging to the child dentry. */
313 	mrec = map_mft_record(ni);
314 	if (IS_ERR(mrec))
315 		return (struct dentry *)mrec;
316 	/* Find the first file name attribute in the mft record. */
317 	ctx = ntfs_attr_get_search_ctx(ni, mrec);
318 	if (unlikely(!ctx)) {
319 		unmap_mft_record(ni);
320 		return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
321 	}
322 try_next:
323 	err = ntfs_attr_lookup(AT_FILE_NAME, NULL, 0, CASE_SENSITIVE, 0, NULL,
324 			0, ctx);
325 	if (unlikely(err)) {
326 		ntfs_attr_put_search_ctx(ctx);
327 		unmap_mft_record(ni);
328 		if (err == -ENOENT)
329 			ntfs_error(vi->i_sb, "Inode 0x%lx does not have a "
330 					"file name attribute.  Run chkdsk.",
331 					vi->i_ino);
332 		return ERR_PTR(err);
333 	}
334 	attr = ctx->attr;
335 	if (unlikely(attr->non_resident))
336 		goto try_next;
337 	fn = (FILE_NAME_ATTR *)((u8 *)attr +
338 			le16_to_cpu(attr->data.resident.value_offset));
339 	if (unlikely((u8 *)fn + le32_to_cpu(attr->data.resident.value_length) >
340 			(u8*)attr + le32_to_cpu(attr->length)))
341 		goto try_next;
342 	/* Get the inode number of the parent directory. */
343 	parent_ino = MREF_LE(fn->parent_directory);
344 	/* Release the search context and the mft record of the child. */
345 	ntfs_attr_put_search_ctx(ctx);
346 	unmap_mft_record(ni);
347 
348 	return d_obtain_alias(ntfs_iget(vi->i_sb, parent_ino));
349 }
350 
351 static struct inode *ntfs_nfs_get_inode(struct super_block *sb,
352 		u64 ino, u32 generation)
353 {
354 	struct inode *inode;
355 
356 	inode = ntfs_iget(sb, ino);
357 	if (!IS_ERR(inode)) {
358 		if (is_bad_inode(inode) || inode->i_generation != generation) {
359 			iput(inode);
360 			inode = ERR_PTR(-ESTALE);
361 		}
362 	}
363 
364 	return inode;
365 }
366 
367 static struct dentry *ntfs_fh_to_dentry(struct super_block *sb, struct fid *fid,
368 		int fh_len, int fh_type)
369 {
370 	return generic_fh_to_dentry(sb, fid, fh_len, fh_type,
371 				    ntfs_nfs_get_inode);
372 }
373 
374 static struct dentry *ntfs_fh_to_parent(struct super_block *sb, struct fid *fid,
375 		int fh_len, int fh_type)
376 {
377 	return generic_fh_to_parent(sb, fid, fh_len, fh_type,
378 				    ntfs_nfs_get_inode);
379 }
380 
381 /**
382  * Export operations allowing NFS exporting of mounted NTFS partitions.
383  *
384  * We use the default ->encode_fh() for now.  Note that they
385  * use 32 bits to store the inode number which is an unsigned long so on 64-bit
386  * architectures is usually 64 bits so it would all fail horribly on huge
387  * volumes.  I guess we need to define our own encode and decode fh functions
388  * that store 64-bit inode numbers at some point but for now we will ignore the
389  * problem...
390  *
391  * We also use the default ->get_name() helper (used by ->decode_fh() via
392  * fs/exportfs/expfs.c::find_exported_dentry()) as that is completely fs
393  * independent.
394  *
395  * The default ->get_parent() just returns -EACCES so we have to provide our
396  * own and the default ->get_dentry() is incompatible with NTFS due to not
397  * allowing the inode number 0 which is used in NTFS for the system file $MFT
398  * and due to using iget() whereas NTFS needs ntfs_iget().
399  */
400 const struct export_operations ntfs_export_ops = {
401 	.get_parent	= ntfs_get_parent,	/* Find the parent of a given
402 						   directory. */
403 	.fh_to_dentry	= ntfs_fh_to_dentry,
404 	.fh_to_parent	= ntfs_fh_to_parent,
405 };
406