Christian Brabandt wrote:
> Hi Gary!
>
> On Mi, 03 Mai 2017, Gary Johnson wrote:
>
>>>> If that was true, I would expect the inode number of the file to be
>>>> different after Vim had edited it, but that is not what I observe.
>>>> The inode number is unchanged.
>>>>
>>>> I created a file with only read permissions and successfully edited
>>>> it with Vim. I repeated the experiment in a directory with only
>>>> read and execute permissions and was able to edit that file as well.
>>> Did you check the backupcopy option?
>> 'backupcopy' is set to "yes".
> Okay, so apparently it is not so easy (as usual).
>
> I made a little test:
>
> #v+
> ~$ mkdir /tmp/cb && cd /tmp/cb && touch file{1,2} && sudo chown root:root file2
> [sudo] password for chrisbra:
> 4197366 -rw-r--r-- 1 chrisbra chrisbra 0 Mai 3 21:03 file1
> 4197367 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Mai 3 21:03 file2
> /tmp/cb$ strace -o trace.log vim -u NONE -N --noplugin -c ':wq!' file2
> /tmp/cb$ ls -li file*
> 4197366 -rw-r--r-- 1 chrisbra chrisbra 0 Mai 3 21:03 file1
> 4197367 -rw-r--r-- 1 chrisbra chrisbra 0 Mai 3 21:04 file2
> #v-
>
> So the files inode did indeed not change. However let's have a look into
> the trace file:
> #v+
> […]
> access("file2", W_OK) = -1 EACCES (Permission denied)
> getxattr("file2", "system.posix_acl_access", 0x7ffc05784db0, 132) = -1 ENODATA (No data available)
> stat("file2", {st_mode=S_IFREG|0644, st_size=0, ...}) = 0
> open("file2", O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_TRUNC, 0644) = -1 EACCES (Permission denied)
> lstat("file2", {st_mode=S_IFREG|0644, st_size=0, ...}) = 0
> getuid() = 1002
> unlink("file2") = 0
> open("file2", O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_TRUNC, 0644) = 3
> fsync(3) = 0
> close(3) = 0
> chmod("file2", 0644) = 0
> […]
> #v-
>
> So we can clearly see Vim first tries to open the file. That does not
> work, and it gets an error EACCESS. It then unlinks (deletes) the file
> and re-creates it (open(), fsync() and close()).
>
> It did some more research. It seems, that inodes are indeed reused. This
> is of course filesystem dependent and for my case ext4 this seems to be
> the case.
>
> Googling around, I found this Stackoverflow answer:
> http://stackoverflow.com/a/25559643/789222 which states:
>
> "There are two policies for allocating an inode. If the new inode is a
> directory, […]. For other inodes, search forward from the
> parent directory's block group to find a free inode."
>
> I haven't looked at the source, but assume that ext4 is similar enough
> to ext3 that this behaves the same. So I did another test :)
>
> #v+
> /tmp/cb$ sudo chown root:root file2
> [sudo] password for chrisbra:
> /tmp/cb$ ls -li file*
> 4197366 -rw-r--r-- 1 chrisbra chrisbra 0 Mai 3 21:03 file1
> 4197367 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Mai 3 21:04 file2
> /tmp/cb$ vim -u NONE -N --noplugin -c '! rm file1' -c ':wq!' file2
> /tmp/cb$ ls -li file*
> 4197366 -rw-r--r-- 1 chrisbra chrisbra 0 Mai 3 21:06 file2
> #v-
>
> So it is clear, by removing a file with a lower inode number before
> trying to write file2, that inode number of the deleted file file1 is
> re-used when re-creating file2.
>
> So it looks like ext3/ext4 always uses the first free inode number for a
> directory it can find and therefore, when deleting a file and
> re-creating the file, it is possible that the same inode is re-used.
>
> Today I learned something new ;)
>
Hello, Christian:
What is v+ and v- ?
Regards,
Chip Campbell
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Thursday, May 4, 2017
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