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-.\".so aufs.tmac
-.
-.eo
-.de TQ
-.br
-.ns
-.TP \$1
-..
-.de Bu
-.IP \(bu 4
-..
-.ec
-.\" end of macro definitions
-.
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.TH aufs 5 \*[AUFS_VERSION] Linux "Linux Aufs User's Manual"
-.SH NAME
-aufs \- advanced multi layered unification filesystem. version \*[AUFS_VERSION]
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH DESCRIPTION
-Aufs is a stackable unification filesystem such as Unionfs, which unifies
-several directories and provides a merged single directory.
-In the early days, aufs was entirely re-designed and re-implemented
-Unionfs Version 1.x series. After
-many original ideas, approaches and improvements, it
-becomes totally different from Unionfs while keeping the basic features.
-See Unionfs Version 1.x series for the basic features.
-Recently, Unionfs Version 2.x series begin taking some of same
-approaches to aufs's.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH MOUNT OPTIONS
-At mount-time, the order of interpreting options is,
-.RS
-.Bu
-simple flags, except xino/noxino and udba=inotify
-.Bu
-branches
-.Bu
-xino/noxino
-.Bu
-udba=inotify
-.RE
-
-At remount-time,
-the options are interpreted in the given order,
-e.g. left to right.
-.RS
-.Bu
-create or remove
-whiteout-base(\*[AUFS_WH_BASE]) and
-whplink-dir(\*[AUFS_WH_PLINKDIR]) if necessary
-.RE
-.
-.TP
-.B br:BRANCH[:BRANCH ...] (dirs=BRANCH[:BRANCH ...])
-Adds new branches.
-(cf. Branch Syntax).
-
-Aufs rejects the branch which is an ancestor or a descendant of another
-branch. It is called overlapped. When the branch is loopback-mounted
-directory, aufs also checks the source fs-image file of loopback
-device. If the source file is a descendant of another branch, it will
-be rejected too.
-
-After mounting aufs or adding a branch, if you move a branch under
-another branch and make it descendant of another branch, aufs will not
-work correctly.
-.
-.TP
-.B [ add | ins ]:index:BRANCH
-Adds a new branch.
-The index begins with 0.
-Aufs creates
-whiteout-base(\*[AUFS_WH_BASE]) and
-whplink-dir(\*[AUFS_WH_PLINKDIR]) if necessary.
-
-If there is the same named file on the lower branch (larger index),
-aufs will hide the lower file.
-You can only see the highest file.
-You will be confused if the added branch has whiteouts (including
-diropq), they may or may not hide the lower entries.
-.\" It is recommended to make sure that the added branch has no whiteout.
-
-Even if a process have once mapped a file by mmap(2) with MAP_SHARED
-and the same named file exists on the lower branch,
-the process still refers the file on the lower(hidden)
-branch after adding the branch.
-If you want to update the contents of a process address space after
-adding, you need to restart your process or open/mmap the file again.
-.\" Usually, such files are executables or shared libraries.
-(cf. Branch Syntax).
-.
-.TP
-.B del:dir
-Removes a branch.
-Aufs does not remove
-whiteout-base(\*[AUFS_WH_BASE]) and
-whplink-dir(\*[AUFS_WH_PLINKDIR]) automatically.
-For example, when you add a RO branch which was unified as RW, you
-will see whiteout-base or whplink-dir on the added RO branch.
-
-If a process is referencing the file/directory on the deleting branch
-(by open, mmap, current working directory, etc.), aufs will return an
-error EBUSY.
-.
-.TP
-.B mod:BRANCH
-Modifies the permission flags of the branch.
-Aufs creates or removes
-whiteout-base(\*[AUFS_WH_BASE]) and/or
-whplink-dir(\*[AUFS_WH_PLINKDIR]) if necessary.
-
-If the branch permission is been changing `rw' to `ro', and a process
-is mapping a file by mmap(2)
-.\" with MAP_SHARED
-on the branch, the process may or may not
-be able to modify its mapped memory region after modifying branch
-permission flags.
-Additioanlly when you enable CONFIG_IMA (in linux-2.6.30 and later), IMA
-may produce some wrong messages. But this is equivalent when the
-filesystem is changed `ro' in emergency.
-(cf. Branch Syntax).
-.
-.TP
-.B append:BRANCH
-equivalent to `add:(last index + 1):BRANCH'.
-(cf. Branch Syntax).
-.
-.TP
-.B prepend:BRANCH
-equivalent to `add:0:BRANCH.'
-(cf. Branch Syntax).
-.
-.TP
-.B xino=filename
-Use external inode number bitmap and translation table.
-When CONFIG_AUFS_EXPORT is enabled, external inode generation table too.
-It is set to
-<FirstWritableBranch>/\*[AUFS_XINO_FNAME] by default, or
-\*[AUFS_XINO_DEFPATH].
-Comma character in filename is not allowed.
-
-The files are created per an aufs and per a branch filesystem, and
-unlinked. So you
-cannot find this file, but it exists and is read/written frequently by
-aufs.
-(cf. External Inode Number Bitmap, Translation Table and Generation Table).
-
-If you enable CONFIG_SYSFS, the path of xino files are not shown in
-/proc/mounts (and /etc/mtab), instead it is shown in
-<sysfs>/fs/aufs/si_<id>/xi_path.
-Otherwise, it is shown in /proc/mounts unless it is not the default
-path.
-.
-.TP
-.B noxino
-Stop using external inode number bitmap and translation table.
-
-If you use this option,
-Some applications will not work correctly.
-.\" And pseudo link feature will not work after the inode cache is
-.\" shrunk.
-(cf. External Inode Number Bitmap, Translation Table and Generation Table).
-.
-.TP
-.B trunc_xib
-Truncate the external inode number bitmap file. The truncation is done
-automatically when you delete a branch unless you do not specify
-`notrunc_xib' option.
-(cf. External Inode Number Bitmap, Translation Table and Generation Table).
-.
-.TP
-.B notrunc_xib
-Stop truncating the external inode number bitmap file when you delete
-a branch.
-(cf. External Inode Number Bitmap, Translation Table and Generation Table).
-.
-.TP
-.B create_policy | create=CREATE_POLICY
-.TQ
-.B copyup_policy | copyup | cpup=COPYUP_POLICY
-Policies to select one among multiple writable branches. The default
-values are `create=tdp' and `cpup=tdp'.
-link(2) and rename(2) systemcalls have an exception. In aufs, they
-try keeping their operations in the branch where the source exists.
-(cf. Policies to Select One among Multiple Writable Branches).
-.
-.TP
-.B verbose | v
-Print some information.
-Currently, it is only busy file (or inode) at deleting a branch.
-.
-.TP
-.B noverbose | quiet | q | silent
-Disable `verbose' option.
-This is default value.
-.
-.TP
-.B sum
-df(1)/statfs(2) returns the total number of blocks and inodes of
-all branches.
-Note that there are cases that systemcalls may return ENOSPC, even if
-df(1)/statfs(2) shows that aufs has some free space/inode.
-.
-.TP
-.B nosum
-Disable `sum' option.
-This is default value.
-.
-.TP
-.B dirwh=N
-Watermark to remove a dir actually at rmdir(2) and rename(2).
-
-If the target dir which is being removed or renamed (destination dir)
-has a huge number of whiteouts, i.e. the dir is empty logically but
-physically, the cost to remove/rename the single
-dir may be very high.
-It is
-required to unlink all of whiteouts internally before issuing
-rmdir/rename to the branch.
-To reduce the cost of single systemcall,
-aufs renames the target dir to a whiteout-ed temporary name and
-invokes a pre-created
-kernel thread to remove whiteout-ed children and the target dir.
-The rmdir/rename systemcall returns just after kicking the thread.
-
-When the number of whiteout-ed children is less than the value of
-dirwh, aufs remove them in a single systemcall instead of passing
-another thread.
-This value is ignored when the branch is NFS.
-The default value is \*[AUFS_DIRWH_DEF].
-.\" .
-.\" .TP
-.\" .B rdcache=N
-.
-.TP
-.B rdblk=N
-Specifies a size of internal VDIR block which is allocated at a time in
-byte.
-The VDIR block will be allocated several times when necessary. If your
-directory has millions of files, you may want to expand this size.
-The default value is defined as \*[AUFS_RDBLK_DEF].
-The size has to be lager than NAME_MAX (usually 255) and kmalloc\-able
-(the maximum limit depends on your system. at least 128KB is available
-for every system).
-Whenever you can reset the value to default by specifying rdblk=def.
-(cf. Virtual or Vertical Directory Block).
-.
-.TP
-.B rdhash=N
-Specifies a size of internal VDIR hash table which is used to compare
-the file names under the same named directory on multiple branches.
-The VDIR hash table will be allocated in readdir(3)/getdents(2),
-rmdir(2) and rename(2) for the existing target directory. If your
-directory has millions of files, you may want to expand this size.
-The default value is defined as \*[AUFS_RDHASH_DEF].
-The size has to be lager than zero, and it will be multiplied by 4 or 8
-(for 32\-bit and 64\-bit respectively, currently). The result must be
-kmalloc\-able
-(the maximum limit depends on your system. at least 128KB is available
-for every system).
-Whenever you can reset the value to default by specifying rdhash=def.
-(cf. Virtual or Vertical Directory Block).
-.
-.TP
-.B plink
-.TQ
-.B noplink
-Specifies to use `pseudo link' feature or not.
-The default is `plink' which means use this feature.
-(cf. Pseudo Link)
-.
-.TP
-.B clean_plink
-Removes all pseudo-links in memory.
-In order to make pseudo-link permanent, use
-`auplink' utility just before one of these operations,
-unmounting aufs,
-using `ro' or `noplink' mount option,
-deleting a branch from aufs,
-adding a branch into aufs,
-or changing your writable branch as readonly.
-If you installed both of /sbin/mount.aufs and /sbin/umount.aufs, and your
-mount(8) and umount(8) support them,
-`auplink' utility will be executed automatically and flush pseudo-links.
-(cf. Pseudo Link)
-.
-.TP
-.B udba=none | reval | inotify
-Specifies the level of UDBA (User's Direct Branch Access) test.
-(cf. User's Direct Branch Access and Inotify Limitation).
-.
-.TP
-.B diropq=whiteouted | w | always | a
-Specifies whether mkdir(2) and rename(2) dir case make the created directory
-`opaque' or not.
-In other words, to create `\*[AUFS_WH_DIROPQ]' under the created or renamed
-directory, or not to create.
-When you specify diropq=w or diropq=whiteouted, aufs will not create
-it if the
-directory was not whiteouted or opaqued. If the directory was whiteouted
-or opaqued, the created or renamed directory will be opaque.
-When you specify diropq=a or diropq==always, aufs will always create
-it regardless
-the directory was whiteouted/opaqued or not.
-The default value is diropq=w, it means not to create when it is unnecessary.
-If you define CONFIG_AUFS_COMPAT at aufs compiling time, the default will be
-diropq=a.
-You need to consider this option if you are planning to add a branch later
-since `diropq' affects the same named directory on the added branch.
-.
-.TP
-.B warn_perm
-.TQ
-.B nowarn_perm
-Adding a branch, aufs will issue a warning about uid/gid/permission of
-the adding branch directory,
-when they differ from the existing branch's. This difference may or
-may not impose a security risk.
-If you are sure that there is no problem and want to stop the warning,
-use `nowarn_perm' option.
-The default is `warn_perm' (cf. DIAGNOSTICS).
-.
-.TP
-.B shwh
-.TQ
-.B noshwh
-By default (noshwh), aufs doesn't show the whiteouts and
-they just hide the same named entries in the lower branches. The
-whiteout itself also never be appeared.
-If you enable CONFIG_AUFS_SHWH and specify `shwh' option, aufs
-will show you the name of whiteouts
-with keeping its feature to hide the lowers.
-Honestly speaking, I am rather confused with this `visible whiteouts.'
-But a user who originally requested this feature wrote a nice how-to
-document about this feature. See Tips file in the aufs CVS tree.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Module Parameters
-.TP
-.B nwkq=N
-The number of kernel thread named \*[AUFS_WKQ_NAME].
-
-Those threads stay in the system while the aufs module is loaded,
-and handle the special I/O requests from aufs.
-The default value is \*[AUFS_NWKQ_DEF].
-
-The special I/O requests from aufs include a part of copy-up, lookup,
-directory handling, pseudo-link, xino file operations and the
-delegated access to branches.
-For example, Unix filesystems allow you to rmdir(2) which has no write
-permission bit, if its parent directory has write permission bit. In aufs, the
-removing directory may or may not have whiteout or `dir opaque' mark as its
-child. And aufs needs to unlink(2) them before rmdir(2).
-Therefore aufs delegates the actual unlink(2) and rmdir(2) to another kernel
-thread which has been created already and has a superuser privilege.
-
-If you enable CONFIG_SYSFS, you can check this value through
-<sysfs>/module/aufs/parameters/nwkq.
-
-.
-.TP
-.B brs=1 | 0
-Specifies to use the branch path data file under sysfs or not.
-
-If the number of your branches is large or their path is long
-and you meet the limitation of mount(8) ro /etc/mtab, you need to
-enable CONFIG_SYSFS and set aufs module parameter brs=1.
-
-When this parameter is set as 1, aufs does not show `br:' (or dirs=)
-mount option through /proc/mounts (and /etc/mtab). So you can
-keep yourself from the page limitation of
-mount(8) or /etc/mtab.
-Aufs shows branch paths through <sysfs>/fs/aufs/si_XXX/brNNN.
-Actually the file under sysfs has also a size limitation, but I don't
-think it is harmful.
-
-There is one more side effect in setting 1 to this parameter.
-If you rename your branch, the branch path written in /etc/mtab will be
-obsoleted and the future remount will meet some error due to the
-unmatched parameters (Remember that mount(8) may take the options from
-/etc/mtab and pass them to the systemcall).
-If you set 1, /etc/mtab will not hold the branch path and you will not
-meet such trouble. On the other hand, the entries for the
-branch path under sysfs are generated dynamically. So it must not be obsoleted.
-But I don't think users want to rename branches so often.
-
-If CONFIG_SYSFS is disable, this parameter is always set to 0.
-.
-.TP
-.B sysrq=key
-Specifies MagicSysRq key for debugging aufs.
-You need to enable both of CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ and CONFIG_AUFS_DEBUG.
-Currently this is for developers only.
-The default is `a'.
-.
-.TP
-.B debug= 0 | 1
-Specifies disable(0) or enable(1) debug print in aufs.
-This parameter can be changed dynamically.
-You need to enable CONFIG_AUFS_DEBUG.
-Currently this is for developers only.
-The default is `0' (disable).
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Entries under Sysfs and Debugfs
-See linux/Documentation/ABI/*/{sys,debug}fs-aufs.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Branch Syntax
-.TP
-.B dir_path[ =permission [ + attribute ] ]
-.TQ
-.B permission := rw | ro | rr
-.TQ
-.B attribute := wh | nolwh
-dir_path is a directory path.
-The keyword after `dir_path=' is a
-permission flags for that branch.
-Comma, colon and the permission flags string (including `=')in the path
-are not allowed.
-
-Any filesystem can be a branch, But some are not accepted such like
-sysfs, procfs and unionfs.
-If you specify such filesystems as an aufs branch, aufs will return an error
-saying it is unsupported.
-
-Cramfs in linux stable release has strange inodes and it makes aufs
-confused. For example,
-.nf
-$ mkdir -p w/d1 w/d2
-$ > w/z1
-$ > w/z2
-$ mkcramfs w cramfs
-$ sudo mount -t cramfs -o ro,loop cramfs /mnt
-$ find /mnt -ls
- 76 1 drwxr-xr-x 1 jro 232 64 Jan 1 1970 /mnt
- 1 1 drwxr-xr-x 1 jro 232 0 Jan 1 1970 /mnt/d1
- 1 1 drwxr-xr-x 1 jro 232 0 Jan 1 1970 /mnt/d2
- 1 1 -rw-r--r-- 1 jro 232 0 Jan 1 1970 /mnt/z1
- 1 1 -rw-r--r-- 1 jro 232 0 Jan 1 1970 /mnt/z2
-.fi
-
-All these two directories and two files have the same inode with one
-as their link count. Aufs cannot handle such inode correctly.
-Currently, aufs involves a tiny workaround for such inodes. But some
-applications may not work correctly since aufs inode number for such
-inode will change silently.
-If you do not have any empty files, empty directories or special files,
-inodes on cramfs will be all fine.
-
-A branch should not be shared as the writable branch between multiple
-aufs. A readonly branch can be shared.
-
-The maximum number of branches is configurable at compile time (127 by
-default).
-
-When an unknown permission or attribute is given, aufs sets ro to that
-branch silently.
-
-.SS Permission
-.
-.TP
-.B rw
-Readable and writable branch. Set as default for the first branch.
-If the branch filesystem is mounted as readonly, you cannot set it `rw.'
-.\" A filesystem which does not support link(2) and i_op\->setattr(), for
-.\" example FAT, will not be used as the writable branch.
-.
-.TP
-.B ro
-Readonly branch and it has no whiteouts on it.
-Set as default for all branches except the first one. Aufs never issue
-both of write operation and lookup operation for whiteout to this branch.
-.
-.TP
-.B rr
-Real readonly branch, special case of `ro', for natively readonly
-branch. Assuming the branch is natively readonly, aufs can optimize
-some internal operation. For example, if you specify `udba=inotify'
-option, aufs does not set inotify for the things on rr branch.
-Set by default for a branch whose fs-type is either `iso9660',
-`cramfs' or `romfs' (and `squashfs' for linux\-2.6.29 and later).
-
-When your branch exists on slower device and you have some
-capacity on your hdd, you may want to try ulobdev tool in ULOOP sample.
-It can cache the contents of the real devices on another faster device,
-so you will be able to get the better access performance.
-The ulobdev tool is for a generic block device, and the ulohttp is for a
-filesystem image on http server.
-If you want to spin down your hdd to save the
-battery life or something, then you may want to use ulobdev to save the
-access to the hdd, too.
-See $AufsCVS/sample/uloop in detail.
-
-.SS Attribute
-.
-.TP
-.B wh
-Readonly branch and it has/might have whiteouts on it.
-Aufs never issue write operation to this branch, but lookup for whiteout.
-Use this as `<branch_dir>=ro+wh'.
-.
-.TP
-.B nolwh
-Usually, aufs creates a whiteout as a hardlink on a writable
-branch. This attributes prohibits aufs to create the hardlinked
-whiteout, including the source file of all hardlinked whiteout
-(\*[AUFS_WH_BASE].)
-If you do not like a hardlink, or your writable branch does not support
-link(2), then use this attribute.
-But I am afraid a filesystem which does not support link(2) natively
-will fail in other place such as copy-up.
-Use this as `<branch_dir>=rw+nolwh'.
-Also you may want to try `noplink' mount option, while it is not recommended.
-
-.\" .SS FUSE as a branch
-.\" A FUSE branch needs special attention.
-.\" The struct fuse_operations has a statfs operation. It is OK, but the
-.\" parameter is struct statvfs* instead of struct statfs*. So almost
-.\" all user\-space implementation will call statvfs(3)/fstatvfs(3) instead of
-.\" statfs(2)/fstatfs(2).
-.\" In glibc, [f]statvfs(3) issues [f]statfs(2), open(2)/read(2) for
-.\" /proc/mounts,
-.\" and stat(2) for the mountpoint. With this situation, a FUSE branch will
-.\" cause a deadlock in creating something in aufs. Here is a sample
-.\" scenario,
-.\" .\" .RS
-.\" .\" .IN -10
-.\" .Bu
-.\" create/modify a file just under the aufs root dir.
-.\" .Bu
-.\" aufs acquires a write\-lock for the parent directory, ie. the root dir.
-.\" .Bu
-.\" A library function or fuse internal may call statfs for a fuse branch.
-.\" The create=mfs mode in aufs will surely call statfs for each writable
-.\" branches.
-.\" .Bu
-.\" FUSE in kernel\-space converts and redirects the statfs request to the
-.\" user\-space.
-.\" .Bu
-.\" the user\-space statfs handler will call [f]statvfs(3).
-.\" .Bu
-.\" the [f]statvfs(3) in glibc will access /proc/mounts and issue
-.\" stat(2) for the mountpoint. But those require a read\-lock for the aufs
-.\" root directory.
-.\" .Bu
-.\" Then a deadlock occurs.
-.\" .\" .RE 1
-.\" .\" .IN
-.\"
-.\" In order to avoid this deadlock, I would suggest not to call
-.\" [f]statvfs(3) from fuse. Here is a sample code to do this.
-.\" .nf
-.\" struct statvfs stvfs;
-.\"
-.\" main()
-.\" {
-.\" statvfs(..., &stvfs)
-.\" or
-.\" fstatvfs(..., &stvfs)
-.\" stvfs.f_fsid = 0
-.\" }
-.\"
-.\" statfs_handler(const char *path, struct statvfs *arg)
-.\" {
-.\" struct statfs stfs
-.\"
-.\" memcpy(arg, &stvfs, sizeof(stvfs))
-.\"
-.\" statfs(..., &stfs)
-.\" or
-.\" fstatfs(..., &stfs)
-.\"
-.\" arg->f_bfree = stfs.f_bfree
-.\" arg->f_bavail = stfs.f_bavail
-.\" arg->f_ffree = stfs.f_ffree
-.\" arg->f_favail = /* any value */
-.\" }
-.\" .fi
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH External Inode Number Bitmap, Translation Table and Generation Table (xino)
-Aufs uses one external bitmap file and one external inode number
-translation table files per an aufs and per a branch
-filesystem by default.
-Additionally when CONFIG_AUFS_EXPORT is enabled, one external inode
-generation table is added.
-The bitmap (and the generation table) is for recycling aufs inode number
-and the others
-are a table for converting an inode number on a branch to
-an aufs inode number. The default path
-is `first writable branch'/\*[AUFS_XINO_FNAME].
-If there is no writable branch, the
-default path
-will be \*[AUFS_XINO_DEFPATH].
-.\" A user who executes mount(8) needs the privilege to create xino
-.\" file.
-
-If you enable CONFIG_SYSFS, the path of xino files are not shown in
-/proc/mounts (and /etc/mtab), instead it is shown in
-<sysfs>/fs/aufs/si_<id>/xi_path.
-Otherwise, it is shown in /proc/mounts unless it is not the default
-path.
-
-Those files are always opened and read/write by aufs frequently.
-If your writable branch is on flash memory device, it is recommended
-to put xino files on other than flash memory by specifying `xino='
-mount option.
-
-The
-maximum file size of the bitmap is, basically, the amount of the
-number of all the files on all branches divided by 8 (the number of
-bits in a byte).
-For example, on a 4KB page size system, if you have 32,768 (or
-2,599,968) files in aufs world,
-then the maximum file size of the bitmap is 4KB (or 320KB).
-
-The
-maximum file size of the table will
-be `max inode number on the branch x size of an inode number'.
-For example in 32bit environment,
-
-.nf
-$ df -i /branch_fs
-/dev/hda14 2599968 203127 2396841 8% /branch_fs
-.fi
-
-and /branch_fs is an branch of the aufs. When the inode number is
-assigned contiguously (without `hole'), the maximum xino file size for
-/branch_fs will be 2,599,968 x 4 bytes = about 10 MB. But it might not be
-allocated all of disk blocks.
-When the inode number is assigned discontinuously, the maximum size of
-xino file will be the largest inode number on a branch x 4 bytes.
-Additionally, the file size is limited to LLONG_MAX or the s_maxbytes
-in filesystem's superblock (s_maxbytes may be smaller than
-LLONG_MAX). So the
-support-able largest inode number on a branch is less than
-2305843009213693950 (LLONG_MAX/4\-1).
-This is the current limitation of aufs.
-On 64bit environment, this limitation becomes more strict and the
-supported largest inode number is less than LLONG_MAX/8\-1.
-
-The xino files are always hidden, i.e. removed. So you cannot
-do `ls \-l xino_file'.
-If you enable CONFIG_DEBUG_FS, you can check these information through
-<debugfs>/aufs/<si_id>/{xib,xi[0-9]*,xigen}. xib is for the bitmap file,
-xi0 ix for the first branch, and xi1 is for the next. xigen is for the
-generation table.
-xib and xigen are in the format of,
-
-.nf
-<blocks>x<block size> <file size>
-.fi
-
-Note that a filesystem usually has a
-feature called pre-allocation, which means a number of
-blocks are allocated automatically, and then deallocated
-silently when the filesystem thinks they are unnecessary.
-You do not have to be surprised the sudden changes of the number of
-blocks, when your filesystem which xino files are placed supports the
-pre-allocation feature.
-
-The rests are hidden xino file information in the format of,
-
-.nf
-<file count>, <blocks>x<block size> <file size>
-.fi
-
-If the file count is larger than 1, it means some of your branches are
-on the same filesystem and the xino file is shared by them.
-Note that the file size may not be equal to the actual consuming blocks
-since xino file is a sparse file, i.e. a hole in a file which does not
-consume any disk blocks.
-
-Once you unmount aufs, the xino files for that aufs are totally gone.
-It means that the inode number is not permanent across umount or
-shutdown.
-
-The xino files should be created on the filesystem except NFS.
-If your first writable branch is NFS, you will need to specify xino
-file path other than NFS.
-Also if you are going to remove the branch where xino files exist or
-change the branch permission to readonly, you need to use xino option
-before del/mod the branch.
-
-The bitmap file can be truncated.
-For example, if you delete a branch which has huge number of files,
-many inode numbers will be recycled and the bitmap will be truncated
-to smaller size. Aufs does this automatically when a branch is
-deleted.
-You can truncate it anytime you like if you specify `trunc_xib' mount
-option. But when the accessed inode number was not deleted, nothing
-will be truncated.
-If you do not want to truncate it (it may be slow) when you delete a
-branch, specify `notrunc_xib' after `del' mount option.
-
-If you do not want to use xino, use noxino mount option. Use this
-option with care, since the inode number may be changed silently and
-unexpectedly anytime.
-For example,
-rmdir failure, recursive chmod/chown/etc to a large and deep directory
-or anything else.
-And some applications will not work correctly.
-.\" When the inode number has been changed, your system
-.\" can be crazy.
-If you want to change the xino default path, use xino mount option.
-
-After you add branches, the persistence of inode number may not be
-guaranteed.
-At remount time, cached but unused inodes are discarded.
-And the newly appeared inode may have different inode number at the
-next access time. The inodes in use have the persistent inode number.
-
-When aufs assigned an inode number to a file, and if you create the
-same named file on the upper branch directly, then the next time you
-access the file, aufs may assign another inode number to the file even
-if you use xino option.
-Some applications may treat the file whose inode number has been
-changed as totally different file.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Pseudo Link (hardlink over branches)
-Aufs supports `pseudo link' which is a logical hard-link over
-branches (cf. ln(1) and link(2)).
-In other words, a copied-up file by link(2) and a copied-up file which was
-hard-linked on a readonly branch filesystem.
-
-When you have files named fileA and fileB which are
-hardlinked on a readonly branch, if you write something into fileA,
-aufs copies-up fileA to a writable branch, and write(2) the originally
-requested thing to the copied-up fileA. On the writable branch,
-fileA is not hardlinked.
-But aufs remembers it was hardlinked, and handles fileB as if it existed
-on the writable branch, by referencing fileA's inode on the writable
-branch as fileB's inode.
-
-Once you unmount aufs, the plink info for that aufs kept in memory are totally
-gone.
-It means that the pseudo-link is not permanent.
-If you want to make plink permanent, try `auplink' utility just before
-one of these operations,
-unmounting your aufs,
-using `ro' or `noplink' mount option,
-deleting a branch from aufs,
-adding a branch into aufs,
-or changing your writable branch to readonly.
-
-This utility will reproduces all real hardlinks on a writable branch by linking
-them, and removes pseudo-link info in memory and temporary link on the
-writable branch.
-Since this utility access your branches directly, you cannot hide them by
-`mount \-\-bind /tmp /branch' or something.
-
-If you are willing to rebuild your aufs with the same branches later, you
-should use auplink utility before you umount your aufs.
-If you installed both of /sbin/mount.aufs and /sbin/umount.aufs, and your
-mount(8) and umount(8) support them,
-`auplink' utility will be executed automatically and flush pseudo-links.
-
-.nf
-# auplink /your/aufs/root flush
-# umount /your/aufs/root
-or
-# auplink /your/aufs/root flush
-# mount -o remount,mod:/your/writable/branch=ro /your/aufs/root
-or
-# auplink /your/aufs/root flush
-# mount -o remount,noplink /your/aufs/root
-or
-# auplink /your/aufs/root flush
-# mount -o remount,del:/your/aufs/branch /your/aufs/root
-or
-# auplink /your/aufs/root flush
-# mount -o remount,append:/your/aufs/branch /your/aufs/root
-.fi
-
-The plinks are kept both in memory and on disk. When they consumes too much
-resources on your system, you can use the `auplink' utility at anytime and
-throw away the unnecessary pseudo-links in safe.
-
-Additionally, the `auplink' utility is very useful for some security reasons.
-For example, when you have a directory whose permission flags
-are 0700, and a file who is 0644 under the 0700 directory. Usually,
-all files under the 0700 directory are private and no one else can see
-the file. But when the directory is 0711 and someone else knows the 0644
-filename, he can read the file.
-
-Basically, aufs pseudo-link feature creates a temporary link under the
-directory whose owner is root and the permission flags are 0700.
-But when the writable branch is NFS, aufs sets 0711 to the directory.
-When the 0644 file is pseudo-linked, the temporary link, of course the
-contents of the file is totally equivalent, will be created under the
-0711 directory. The filename will be generated by its inode number.
-While it is hard to know the generated filename, someone else may try peeping
-the temporary pseudo-linked file by his software tool which may try the name
-from one to MAX_INT or something.
-In this case, the 0644 file will be read unexpectedly.
-I am afraid that leaving the temporary pseudo-links can be a security hole.
-It makes sense to execute `auplink /your/aufs/root flush'
-periodically, when your writable branch is NFS.
-
-When your writable branch is not NFS, or all users are careful enough to set 0600
-to their private files, you do not have to worry about this issue.
-
-If you do not want this feature, use `noplink' mount option.
-
-.SS The behaviours of plink and noplink
-This sample shows that the `f_src_linked2' with `noplink' option cannot follow
-the link.
-
-.nf
-none on /dev/shm/u type aufs (rw,xino=/dev/shm/rw/.aufs.xino,br:/dev/shm/rw=rw:/dev/shm/ro=ro)
-$ ls -li ../r?/f_src_linked* ./f_src_linked* ./copied
-ls: ./copied: No such file or directory
-15 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ../ro/f_src_linked
-15 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ../ro/f_src_linked2
-22 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ./f_src_linked
-22 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ./f_src_linked2
-$ echo abc >> f_src_linked
-$ cp f_src_linked copied
-$ ls -li ../r?/f_src_linked* ./f_src_linked* ./copied
-15 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ../ro/f_src_linked
-15 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ../ro/f_src_linked2
-36 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 6 Dec 22 11:03 ../rw/f_src_linked
-53 -rw-r--r-- 1 jro jro 6 Dec 22 11:03 ./copied
-22 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 6 Dec 22 11:03 ./f_src_linked
-22 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 6 Dec 22 11:03 ./f_src_linked2
-$ cmp copied f_src_linked2
-$
-
-none on /dev/shm/u type aufs (rw,xino=/dev/shm/rw/.aufs.xino,noplink,br:/dev/shm/rw=rw:/dev/shm/ro=ro)
-$ ls -li ../r?/f_src_linked* ./f_src_linked* ./copied
-ls: ./copied: No such file or directory
-17 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ../ro/f_src_linked
-17 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ../ro/f_src_linked2
-23 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ./f_src_linked
-23 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ./f_src_linked2
-$ echo abc >> f_src_linked
-$ cp f_src_linked copied
-$ ls -li ../r?/f_src_linked* ./f_src_linked* ./copied
-17 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ../ro/f_src_linked
-17 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 2 Dec 22 11:03 ../ro/f_src_linked2
-36 -rw-r--r-- 1 jro jro 6 Dec 22 11:03 ../rw/f_src_linked
-53 -rw-r--r-- 1 jro jro 6 Dec 22 11:03 ./copied
-23 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 6 Dec 22 11:03 ./f_src_linked
-23 -rw-r--r-- 2 jro jro 6 Dec 22 11:03 ./f_src_linked2
-$ cmp copied f_src_linked2
-cmp: EOF on f_src_linked2
-$
-.fi
-
-.\"
-.\" If you add/del a branch, or link/unlink the pseudo-linked
-.\" file on a branch
-.\" directly, aufs cannot keep the correct link count, but the status of
-.\" `pseudo-linked.'
-.\" Those files may or may not keep the file data after you unlink the
-.\" file on the branch directly, especially the case of your branch is
-.\" NFS.
-
-If you add a branch which has fileA or fileB, aufs does not follow the
-pseudo link. The file on the added branch has no relation to the same
-named file(s) on the lower branch(es).
-If you use noxino mount option, pseudo link will not work after the
-kernel shrinks the inode cache.
-
-This feature will not work for squashfs before version 3.2 since its
-inode is tricky.
-When the inode is hardlinked, squashfs inodes has the same inode
-number and correct link count, but the inode memory object is
-different. Squashfs inodes (before v3.2) are generated for each, even
-they are hardlinked.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH User's Direct Branch Access (UDBA)
-UDBA means a modification to a branch filesystem manually or directly,
-e.g. bypassing aufs.
-While aufs is designed and implemented to be safe after UDBA,
-it can make yourself and your aufs confused. And some information like
-aufs inode will be incorrect.
-For example, if you rename a file on a branch directly, the file on
-aufs may
-or may not be accessible through both of old and new name.
-Because aufs caches various information about the files on
-branches. And the cache still remains after UDBA.
-
-Aufs has a mount option named `udba' which specifies the test level at
-access time whether UDBA was happened or not.
-.
-.TP
-.B udba=none
-Aufs trusts the dentry and the inode cache on the system, and never
-test about UDBA. With this option, aufs runs fastest, but it may show
-you incorrect data.
-Additionally, if you often modify a branch
-directly, aufs will not be able to trace the changes of inodes on the
-branch. It can be a cause of wrong behaviour, deadlock or anything else.
-
-It is recommended to use this option only when you are sure that
-nobody access a file on a branch.
-It might be difficult for you to achieve real `no UDBA' world when you
-cannot stop your users doing `find / \-ls' or something.
-If you really want to forbid all of your users to UDBA, here is a trick
-for it.
-With this trick, users cannot see the
-branches directly and aufs runs with no problem, except `auplink' utility.
-But if you are not familiar with aufs, this trick may make
-yourself confused.
-
-.nf
-# d=/tmp/.aufs.hide
-# mkdir $d
-# for i in $branches_you_want_to_hide
-> do
-> mount -n --bind $d $i
-> done
-.fi
-
-When you unmount the aufs, delete/modify the branch by remount, or you
-want to show the hidden branches again, unmount the bound
-/tmp/.aufs.hide.
-
-.nf
-# umount -n $branches_you_want_to_unbound
-.fi
-
-If you use FUSE filesystem as an aufs branch which supports hardlink,
-you should not set this option, since FUSE makes inode objects for
-each hardlinks (at least in linux\-2.6.23). When your FUSE filesystem
-maintains them at link/unlinking, it is equivalent
-to `direct branch access' for aufs.
-
-.
-.TP
-.B udba=reval
-Aufs tests only the existence of the file which existed. If
-the existed file was removed on the branch directly, aufs
-discard the cache about the file and
-re-lookup it. So the data will be updated.
-This test is at minimum level to keep the performance and ensure the
-existence of a file.
-This is default and aufs runs still fast.
-
-This rule leads to some unexpected situation, but I hope it is
-harmless. Those are totally depends upon cache. Here are just a few
-examples.
-.
-.RS
-.Bu
-If the file is cached as negative or
-not-existed, aufs does not test it. And the file is still handled as
-negative after a user created the file on a branch directly. If the
-file is not cached, aufs will lookup normally and find the file.
-.
-.Bu
-When the file is cached as positive or existed, and a user created the
-same named file directly on the upper branch. Aufs detects the cached
-inode of the file is still existing and will show you the old (cached)
-file which is on the lower branch.
-.
-.Bu
-When the file is cached as positive or existed, and a user renamed the
-file by rename(2) directly. Aufs detects the inode of the file is
-still existing. You may or may not see both of the old and new files.
-Todo: If aufs also tests the name, we can detect this case.
-.RE
-
-If your outer modification (UDBA) is rare and you can ignore the
-temporary and minor differences between virtual aufs world and real
-branch filesystem, then try this mount option.
-.
-.TP
-.B udba=inotify
-Aufs sets `inotify' to all the accessed directories on its branches
-and receives the event about the dir and its children. It consumes
-resources, cpu and memory. And I am afraid that the performance will be
-hurt, but it is most strict test level.
-There are some limitations of linux inotify, see also Inotify
-Limitation.
-So it is recommended to leave udba default option usually, and set it
-to inotify by remount when you need it.
-
-When a user accesses the file which was notified UDBA before, the cached data
-about the file will be discarded and aufs re-lookup it. So the data will
-be updated.
-When an error condition occurs between UDBA and aufs operation, aufs
-will return an error, including EIO.
-To use this option, you need to enable CONFIG_INOTIFY and
-CONFIG_AUFS_UDBA_INOTIFY.
-
-To rename/rmdir a directory on a branch directory may reveal the same named
-directory on the lower branch. Aufs tries re-lookuping the renamed
-directory and the revealed directory and assigning different inode
-number to them. But the inode number including their children can be a
-problem. The inode numbers will be changed silently, and
-aufs may produce a warning. If you rename a directory repeatedly and
-reveal/hide the lower directory, then aufs may confuse their inode
-numbers too. It depends upon the system cache.
-
-When you make a directory in aufs and mount other filesystem on it,
-the directory in aufs cannot be removed expectedly because it is a
-mount point. But the same named directory on the writable branch can
-be removed, if someone wants. It is just an empty directory, instead
-of a mount point.
-Aufs cannot stop such direct rmdir, but produces a warning about it.
-
-If the pseudo-linked file is hardlinked or unlinked on the branch
-directly, its inode link count in aufs may be incorrect. It is
-recommended to flush the pseudo-links by auplink script.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Linux Inotify Limitation
-Unfortunately, current inotify (linux\-2.6.18) has some limitations,
-and aufs must derive it.
-
-.SS IN_ATTRIB, updating atime
-When a file/dir on a branch is accessed directly, the inode atime (access
-time, cf. stat(2)) may or may not be updated. In some cases, inotify
-does not fire this event. So the aufs inode atime may remain old.
-
-.SS IN_ATTRIB, updating nlink
-When the link count of a file on a branch is incremented by link(2)
-directly,
-inotify fires IN_CREATE to the parent
-directory, but IN_ATTRIB to the file. So the aufs inode nlink may
-remain old.
-
-.SS IN_DELETE, removing file on NFS
-When a file on a NFS branch is deleted directly, inotify may or may
-not fire
-IN_DELETE event. It depends upon the status of dentry
-(DCACHE_NFSFS_RENAMED flag).
-In this case, the file on aufs seems still exists. Aufs and any user can see
-the file.
-
-.SS IN_IGNORED, deleted rename target
-When a file/dir on a branch is unlinked by rename(2) directly, inotify
-fires IN_IGNORED which means the inode is deleted. Actually, in some
-cases, the inode survives. For example, the rename target is linked or
-opened. In this case, inotify watch set by aufs is removed by VFS and
-inotify.
-And aufs cannot receive the events anymore. So aufs may show you
-incorrect data about the file/dir.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Virtual or Vertical Directory Block (VDIR)
-In order to provide the merged view of file listing, aufs builds
-internal directory block on memory. For readdir, aufs performs readdir()
-internally for each dir on branches, merges their entries with
-eliminating the whiteout\-ed ones, and sets it to the opened file (dir)
-object. So the file object has its entry list until it is closed. The
-entry list will be updated when the file position is zero (by
-rewinddir(3)) and becomes obsoleted.
-
-Some people may call it can be a security hole or invite DoS attack
-since the opened and once readdir\-ed dir (file object) holds its entry
-list and becomes a pressure for system memory. But I would say it is similar
-to files under /proc or /sys. The virtual files in them also holds a
-memory page (generally) while they are opened. When an idea to reduce
-memory for them is introduced, it will be applied to aufs too.
-
-The dynamically allocated memory block for the name of entries has a
-unit of \*[AUFS_RDBLK_DEF] bytes by default.
-During building dir blocks, aufs creates hash list (hashed and divided by
-\*[AUFS_RDHASH_DEF] by default) and judging whether
-the entry is whiteouted by its upper branch or already listed.
-
-These values are suitable for normal environments. But you may have
-millions of files or very long filenames under a single directory. For
-such cases, you may need to customize these values by specifying rdblk=
-and rdhash= aufs mount options.
-
-For instance, there are 97 files under my /bin, and the total name
-length is 597 bytes.
-
-.nf
-$ \\ls -1 /bin | wc
- 97 97 597
-.fi
-
-Strictly speaking, 97 end\-of\-line codes are
-included. But it is OK since aufs VDIR also stores the name length in 1
-byte. In this case, you do not need to customize the default values. 597 bytes
-filenames will be stored in 2 VDIR memory blocks (597 <
-\*[AUFS_RDBLK_DEF] x 2).
-And 97 filenames are distributed among \*[AUFS_RDHASH_DEF] lists, so one
-list will point 4 names in average. To judge the names is whiteouted or
-not, the number of comparison will be 4. 2 memory allocations
-and 4 comparison costs low (even if the directory is opened for a long
-time). So you do not need to customize.
-
-If your directory has millions of files, the you will need to specify
-rdblk= and rdhash=.
-
-.nf
-$ ls -U /mnt/rotating-rust | wc -l
-1382438
-.fi
-
-In this case, assuming the average length of filenames is 6, in order to
-get better time performance I would
-recommend to set $((128*1024)) or $((64*1024)) for rdblk, and
-$((8*1024)) or $((4*1024)) for rdhash.
-You can change these values of the active aufs mount by "mount -o
-remount".
-
-This customization is not for
-reducing the memory space, but for reducing time for the number of memory
-allocation and the name comparison. The larger value is faster, in
-general. Of course, you will need system memory. This is a generic
-"time\-vs\-space" problem.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Copy On Write, or aufs internal copyup and copydown
-Every stackable filesystem which implements copy\-on\-write supports the
-copyup feature. The feature is to copy a file/dir from the lower branch
-to the upper internally. When you have one readonly branch and one
-upper writable branch, and you append a string to a file which exists on
-the readonly branch, then aufs will copy the file from the readonly
-branch to the writable branch with its directory hierarchy. It means one
-write(2) involves several logical/internal mkdir(2), creat(2), read(2),
-write(2) and close(2) systemcalls
-before the actual expected write(2) is performed. Sometimes it may take
-a long time, particularly when the file is very large.
-If CONFIG_AUFS_DEBUG is enabled, aufs produces a message saying `copying
-a large file.'
-
-You may see the message when you change the xino file path or
-truncate the xino/xib files. Sometimes those files can be large and may
-take a long time to handle them.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Policies to Select One among Multiple Writable Branches
-Aufs has some policies to select one among multiple writable branches
-when you are going to write/modify something. There are two kinds of
-policies, one is for newly create something and the other is for
-internal copy-up.
-You can select them by specifying mount option `create=CREATE_POLICY'
-or `cpup=COPYUP_POLICY.'
-These policies have no meaning when you have only one writable
-branch. If there is some meaning, it must hurt the performance.
-
-.SS Exceptions for Policies
-In every cases below, even if the policy says that the branch where a
-new file should be created is /rw2, the file will be created on /rw1.
-.
-.Bu
-If there is a readonly branch with `wh' attribute above the
-policy-selected branch and the parent dir is marked as opaque,
-or the target (creating) file is whiteouted on the ro+wh branch, then
-the policy will be ignored and the target file will be created on the
-nearest upper writable branch than the ro+wh branch.
-.RS
-.nf
-/aufs = /rw1 + /ro+wh/diropq + /rw2
-/aufs = /rw1 + /ro+wh/wh.tgt + /rw2
-.fi
-.RE
-.
-.Bu
-If there is a writable branch above the policy-selected branch and the
-parent dir is marked as opaque or the target file is whiteouted on the
-branch, then the policy will be ignored and the target file will be
-created on the highest one among the upper writable branches who has
-diropq or whiteout. In case of whiteout, aufs removes it as usual.
-.RS
-.nf
-/aufs = /rw1/diropq + /rw2
-/aufs = /rw1/wh.tgt + /rw2
-.fi
-.RE
-.
-.Bu
-link(2) and rename(2) systemcalls are exceptions in every policy.
-They try selecting the branch where the source exists as possible since
-copyup a large file will take long time. If it can't be, ie. the
-branch where the source exists is readonly, then they will follow the
-copyup policy.
-.
-.Bu
-There is an exception for rename(2) when the target exists.
-If the rename target exists, aufs compares the index of the branches
-where the source and the target are existing and selects the higher
-one. If the selected branch is readonly, then aufs follows the copyup
-policy.
-
-.SS Policies for Creating
-.
-.TP
-.B create=tdp | top\-down\-parent
-Selects the highest writable branch where the parent dir exists. If
-the parent dir does not exist on a writable branch, then the internal
-copyup will happen. The policy for this copyup is always `bottom-up.'
-This is the default policy.
-.
-.TP
-.B create=rr | round\-robin
-Selects a writable branch in round robin. When you have two writable
-branches and creates 10 new files, 5 files will be created for each
-branch.
-mkdir(2) systemcall is an exception. When you create 10 new directories,
-all are created on the same branch.
-.
-.TP
-.B create=mfs[:second] | most\-free\-space[:second]
-Selects a writable branch which has most free space. In order to keep
-the performance, you can specify the duration (`second') which makes
-aufs hold the index of last selected writable branch until the
-specified seconds expires. The first time you create something in aufs
-after the specified seconds expired, aufs checks the amount of free
-space of all writable branches by internal statfs call
-and the held branch index will be updated.
-The default value is \*[AUFS_MFS_SECOND_DEF] seconds.
-.
-.TP
-.B create=mfsrr:low[:second]
-Selects a writable branch in most-free-space mode first, and then
-round-robin mode. If the selected branch has less free space than the
-specified value `low' in bytes, then aufs re-tries in round-robin mode.
-.\" `G', `M' and `K' (case insensitive) can be followed after `low.' Or
-Try an arithmetic expansion of shell which is defined by POSIX.
-For example, $((10 * 1024 * 1024)) for 10M.
-You can also specify the duration (`second') which is equivalent to
-the `mfs' mode.
-.
-.TP
-.B create=pmfs[:second]
-Selects a writable branch where the parent dir exists, such as tdp
-mode. When the parent dir exists on multiple writable branches, aufs
-selects the one which has most free space, such as mfs mode.
-
-.SS Policies for Copy-Up
-.
-.TP
-.B cpup=tdp | top\-down\-parent
-Equivalent to the same named policy for create.
-This is the default policy.
-.
-.TP
-.B cpup=bup | bottom\-up\-parent
-Selects the writable branch where the parent dir exists and the branch
-is nearest upper one from the copyup-source.
-.
-.TP
-.B cpup=bu | bottom\-up
-Selects the nearest upper writable branch from the copyup-source,
-regardless the existence of the parent dir.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Exporting Aufs via NFS
-Aufs is supporting NFS-exporting.
-Since aufs has no actual block device, you need to add NFS `fsid' option at
-exporting. Refer to the manual of NFS about the detail of this option.
-
-There are some limitations or requirements.
-.RS
-.Bu
-The branch filesystem must support NFS-exporting.
-.Bu
-NFSv2 is not supported. When you mount the exported aufs from your NFS
-client, you will need to some NFS options like v3 or nfsvers=3,
-especially if it is nfsroot.
-.Bu
-If the size of the NFS file handle on your branch filesystem is large,
-aufs will
-not be able to handle it. The maximum size of NFSv3 file
-handle for a filesystem is 64 bytes. Aufs uses 24 bytes for 32bit
-system, plus 12 bytes for 64bit system. The rest is a room for a file
-handle of a branch filesystem.
-.Bu
-The External Inode Number Bitmap, Translation Table and Generation Table
-(xino) is
-required since NFS file
-handle is based upon inode number. The mount option `xino' is enabled
-by default.
-The external inode generation table and its debugfs entry
-(<debugfs>/aufs/si_*/xigen) is created when CONFIG_AUFS_EXPORT is
-enabled even if you don't export aufs actually.
-The size of the external inode generation table grows only, never be
-truncated. You might need to pay attention to the free space of the
-filesystem where xino files are placed. By default, it is the first
-writable branch.
-.Bu
-The branch filesystems must be accessible, which means `not hidden.'
-It means you need to `mount \-\-move' when you use initramfs and
-switch_root(8), or chroot(8).
-.RE
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Dentry and Inode Caches
-If you want to clear caches on your system, there are several tricks
-for that. If your system ram is low,
-try `find /large/dir \-ls > /dev/null'.
-It will read many inodes and dentries and cache them. Then old caches will be
-discarded.
-But when you have large ram or you do not have such large
-directory, it is not effective.
-
-If you want to discard cache within a certain filesystem,
-try `mount \-o remount /your/mntpnt'. Some filesystem may return an error of
-EINVAL or something, but VFS discards the unused dentry/inode caches on the
-specified filesystem.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Compatible/Incompatible with Unionfs Version 1.x Series
-If you compile aufs with \-DCONFIG_AUFS_COMPAT, dirs= option and =nfsro
-branch permission flag are available. They are interpreted as
-br: option and =ro flags respectively.
- `debug', `delete', `imap' options are ignored silently. When you
-compile aufs without \-DCONFIG_AUFS_COMPAT, these three options are
-also ignored, but a warning message is issued.
-
-Ignoring `delete' option, and to keep filesystem consistency, aufs tries
-writing something to only one branch in a single systemcall. It means
-aufs may copyup even if the copyup-src branch is specified as writable.
-For example, you have two writable branches and a large regular file
-on the lower writable branch. When you issue rename(2) to the file on aufs,
-aufs may copyup it to the upper writable branch.
-If this behaviour is not what you want, then you should rename(2) it
-on the lower branch directly.
-
-And there is a simple shell
-script `unionctl' under sample subdirectory, which is compatible with
-unionctl(8) in
-Unionfs Version 1.x series, except \-\-query action.
-This script executes mount(8) with `remount' option and uses
-add/del/mod aufs mount options.
-If you are familiar with Unionfs Version 1.x series and want to use unionctl(8), you can
-try this script instead of using mount \-o remount,... directly.
-Aufs does not support ioctl(2) interface.
-This script is highly depending upon mount(8) in
-util\-linux\-2.12p package, and you need to mount /proc to use this script.
-If your mount(8) version differs, you can try modifying this
-script. It is very easy.
-The unionctl script is just for a sample usage of aufs remount
-interface.
-
-Aufs uses the external inode number bitmap and translation table by
-default.
-
-The default branch permission for the first branch is `rw', and the
-rest is `ro.'
-
-The whiteout is for hiding files on lower branches. Also it is applied
-to stop readdir going lower branches.
-The latter case is called `opaque directory.' Any
-whiteout is an empty file, it means whiteout is just an mark.
-In the case of hiding lower files, the name of whiteout is
-`\*[AUFS_WH_PFX]<filename>.'
-And in the case of stopping readdir, the name is
-`\*[AUFS_WH_PFX]\*[AUFS_WH_PFX].opq' or
-`\*[AUFS_WH_PFX]__dir_opaque.' The name depends upon your compile
-configuration
-CONFIG_AUFS_COMPAT.
-.\" All of newly created or renamed directory will be opaque.
-All whiteouts are hardlinked,
-including `<writable branch top dir>/\*[AUFS_WH_BASE].'
-
-The hardlink on an ordinary (disk based) filesystem does not
-consume inode resource newly. But in linux tmpfs, the number of free
-inodes will be decremented by link(2). It is recommended to specify
-nr_inodes option to your tmpfs if you meet ENOSPC. Use this option
-after checking by `df \-i.'
-
-When you rmdir or rename-to the dir who has a number of whiteouts,
-aufs rename the dir to the temporary whiteouted-name like
-`\*[AUFS_WH_PFX]<dir>.<random hex>.' Then remove it after actual operation.
-cf. mount option `dirwh.'
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH Incompatible with an Ordinary Filesystem
-stat(2) returns the inode info from the first existence inode among
-the branches, except the directory link count.
-Aufs computes the directory link count larger than the exact value usually, in
-order to keep UNIX filesystem semantics, or in order to shut find(1) mouth up.
-The size of a directory may be wrong too, but it has to do no harm.
-The timestamp of a directory will not be updated when a file is
-created or removed under it, and it was done on a lower branch.
-
-The test for permission bits has two cases. One is for a directory,
-and the other is for a non-directory. In the case of a directory, aufs
-checks the permission bits of all existing directories. It means you
-need the correct privilege for the directories including the lower
-branches.
-The test for a non-directory is more simple. It checks only the
-topmost inode.
-
-statfs(2) returns the information of the first branch info except
-namelen when `nosum' is specified (the default). The namelen is
-decreased by the whiteout prefix length. And the block size may differ
-from st_blksize which is obtained by stat(2).
-
-Remember, seekdir(3) and telldir(3) are not defined in POSIX. They may
-not work as you expect. Try rewinddir(3) or re-open the dir.
-
-The whiteout prefix (\*[AUFS_WH_PFX]) is reserved on all branches. Users should
-not handle the filename begins with this prefix.
-In order to future whiteout, the maximum filename length is limited by
-the longest value \- \*[AUFS_WH_PFX_LEN]. It may be a violation of POSIX.
-
-If you dislike the difference between the aufs entries in /etc/mtab
-and /proc/mounts, and if you are using mount(8) in util\-linux package,
-then try ./mount.aufs utility. Copy the script to /sbin/mount.aufs.
-This simple utility tries updating
-/etc/mtab. If you do not care about /etc/mtab, you can ignore this
-utility.
-Remember this utility is highly depending upon mount(8) in
-util\-linux\-2.12p package, and you need to mount /proc.
-
-Since aufs uses its own inode and dentry, your system may cache huge
-number of inodes and dentries. It can be as twice as all of the files
-in your union.
-It means that unmounting or remounting readonly at shutdown time may
-take a long time, since mount(2) in VFS tries freeing all of the cache
-on the target filesystem.
-
-When you open a directory, aufs will open several directories
-internally.
-It means you may reach the limit of the number of file descriptor.
-And when the lower directory cannot be opened, aufs will close all the
-opened upper directories and return an error.
-
-The sub-mount under the branch
-of local filesystem
-is ignored.
-For example, if you have mount another filesystem on
-/branch/another/mntpnt, the files under `mntpnt' will be ignored by aufs.
-It is recommended to mount the sub-mount under the mounted aufs.
-For example,
-
-.nf
-# sudo mount /dev/sdaXX /ro_branch
-# d=another/mntpnt
-# sudo mount /dev/sdbXX /ro_branch/$d
-# mkdir -p /rw_branch/$d
-# sudo mount -t aufs -o br:/rw_branch:/ro_branch none /aufs
-# sudo mount -t aufs -o br:/rw_branch/${d}:/ro_branch/${d} none /aufs/another/$d
-.fi
-
-There are several characters which are not allowed to use in a branch
-directory path and xino filename. See detail in Branch Syntax and Mount
-Option.
-
-The file-lock which means fcntl(2) with F_SETLK, F_SETLKW or F_GETLK, flock(2)
-and lockf(3), is applied to virtual aufs file only, not to the file on a
-branch. It means you can break the lock by accessing a branch directly.
-TODO: check `security' to hook locks, as inotify does.
-
-The I/O to the named pipe or local socket are not handled by aufs, even
-if it exists in aufs. After the reader and the writer established their
-connection if the pipe/socket are copied-up, they keep using the old one
-instead of the copied-up one.
-
-The fsync(2) and fdatasync(2) systemcalls return 0 which means success, even
-if the given file descriptor is not opened for writing.
-I am afraid this behaviour may violate some standards. Checking the
-behaviour of fsync(2) on ext2, aufs decided to return success.
-
-If you want to use disk-quota, you should set it up to your writable
-branch since aufs does not have its own block device.
-
-When your aufs is the root directory of your system, and your system
-tells you some of the filesystem were not unmounted cleanly, try these
-procedure when you shutdown your system.
-.nf
-# mount -no remount,ro /
-# for i in $writable_branches
-# do mount -no remount,ro $i
-# done
-.fi
-If your xino file is on a hard drive, you also need to specify
-`noxino' option or `xino=/your/tmpfs/xino' at remounting root
-directory.
-
-To rename(2) directory may return EXDEV even if both of src and tgt
-are on the same aufs. When the rename-src dir exists on multiple
-branches and the lower dir has child(ren), aufs has to copyup all his
-children. It can be recursive copyup. Current aufs does not support
-such huge copyup operation at one time in kernel space, instead
-produces a warning and returns EXDEV.
-Generally, mv(1) detects this error and tries mkdir(2) and
-rename(2) or copy/unlink recursively. So the result is harmless.
-If your application which issues rename(2) for a directory does not
-support EXDEV, it will not work on aufs.
-Also this specification is applied to the case when the src directory
-exists on the lower readonly branch and it has child(ren).
-
-If a sudden accident such like a power failure happens during aufs is
-performing, and regular fsck for branch filesystems is completed after
-the disaster, you need to extra fsck for aufs writable branches. It is
-necessary to check whether the whiteout remains incorrectly or not,
-eg. the real filename and the whiteout for it under the same parent
-directory. If such whiteout remains, aufs cannot handle the file
-correctly.
-To check the consistency from the aufs' point of view, you can use a
-simple shell script called /sbin/auchk. Its purpose is a fsck tool for
-aufs, and it checks the illegal whiteout, the remained
-pseudo-links and the remained aufs-temp files. If they are found, the
-utility reports you and asks whether to delete or not.
-It is recommended to execute /sbin/auchk for every writable branch
-filesystem before mounting aufs if the system experienced crash.
-
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH EXAMPLES
-The mount options are interpreted from left to right at remount-time.
-These examples
-shows how the options are handled. (assuming /sbin/mount.aufs was
-installed)
-
-.nf
-# mount -v -t aufs br:/day0:/base none /u
-none on /u type aufs (rw,xino=/day0/.aufs.xino,br:/day0=rw:/base=ro)
-# mount -v -o remount,\\
- prepend:/day1,\\
- xino=/day1/xino,\\
- mod:/day0=ro,\\
- del:/day0 \\
- /u
-none on /u type aufs (rw,xino=/day1/xino,br:/day1=rw:/base=ro)
-.fi
-
-.nf
-# mount -t aufs br:/rw none /u
-# mount -o remount,append:/ro /u
-different uid/gid/permission, /ro
-# mount -o remount,del:/ro /u
-# mount -o remount,nowarn_perm,append:/ro /u
-#
-(there is no warning)
-.fi
-
-.\" If you want to expand your filesystem size, aufs may help you by
-.\" adding an writable branch. Since aufs supports multiple writable
-.\" branches, the old writable branch can be being writable, if you want.
-.\" In this example, any modifications to the files under /ro branch will
-.\" be copied-up to /new, but modifications to the files under /rw branch
-.\" will not.
-.\" And the next example shows the modifications to the files under /rw branch
-.\" will be copied-up to /new/a.
-.\"
-.\" Todo: test multiple writable branches policy. cpup=nearest, cpup=exist_parent.
-.\"
-.\" .nf
-.\" # mount -v -t aufs br:/rw:/ro none /u
-.\" none on /u type aufs (rw,xino=/rw/.aufs.xino,br:/rw=rw:/ro=ro)
-.\" # mkfs /new
-.\" # mount -v -o remount,add:1:/new=rw /u
-.\" none on /u type aufs (rw,xino=/rw/.aufs.xino,br:/rw=rw:/new=rw:/ro=ro)
-.\" .fi
-.\"
-.\" .nf
-.\" # mount -v -t aufs br:/rw:/ro none /u
-.\" none on /u type aufs (rw,xino=/rw/.aufs.xino,br:/rw=rw:/ro=ro)
-.\" # mkfs /new
-.\" # mkdir /new/a new/b
-.\" # mount -v -o remount,add:1:/new/b=rw,prepend:/new/a,mod:/rw=ro /u
-.\" none on /u type aufs (rw,xino=/rw/.aufs.xino,br:/new/a=rw:/rw=ro:/new/b=rw:/ro=ro)
-.\" .fi
-
-When you use aufs as root filesystem, it is recommended to consider to
-exclude some directories. For example, /tmp and /var/log are not need
-to stack in many cases. They do not usually need to copyup or to whiteout.
-Also the swapfile on aufs (a regular file, not a block device) is not
-supported.
-In order to exclude the specific dir from aufs, try bind mounting.
-
-And there is a good sample which is for network booted diskless machines. See
-sample/ in detail.
-
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.SH DIAGNOSTICS
-When you add a branch to your union, aufs may warn you about the
-privilege or security of the branch, which is the permission bits,
-owner and group of the top directory of the branch.
-For example, when your upper writable branch has a world writable top
-directory,
-a malicious user can create any files on the writable branch directly,
-like copyup and modify manually. I am afraid it can be a security
-issue.
-
-When you mount or remount your union without \-o ro common mount option
-and without writable branch, aufs will warn you that the first branch
-should be writable.
-
-.\" It is discouraged to set both of `udba' and `noxino' mount options. In
-.\" this case the inode number under aufs will always be changed and may
-.\" reach the end of inode number which is a maximum of unsigned long. If
-.\" the inode number reaches the end, aufs will return EIO repeatedly.
-
-When you set udba other than inotify and change something on your
-branch filesystem directly, later aufs may detect some mismatches to
-its cache. If it is a critical mismatch, aufs returns EIO.
-
-When an error occurs in aufs, aufs prints the kernel message with
-`errno.' The priority of the message (log level) is ERR or WARNING which
-depends upon the message itself.
-You can convert the `errno' into the error message by perror(3),
-strerror(3) or something.
-For example, the `errno' in the message `I/O Error, write failed (\-28)'
-is 28 which means ENOSPC or `No space left on device.'
-
-When CONFIG_AUFS_BR_RAMFS is enabled, you can specify ramfs as an aufs
-branch. Since ramfs is simple, it does not set the maximum link count
-originally. In aufs, it is very dangerous, particularly for
-whiteouts. Finally aufs sets the maximum link count for ramfs. The
-value is 32000 which is borrowed from ext2.
-
-
-.\" .SH Current Limitation
-.
-.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-.\" SYNOPSIS
-.\" briefly describes the command or function's interface. For commands, this
-.\" shows the syntax of the command and its arguments (including options); bold-
-.\" face is used for as-is text and italics are used to indicate replaceable
-.\" arguments. Brackets ([]) surround optional arguments, vertical bars (|) sep-
-.\" arate choices, and ellipses (...) can be repeated. For functions, it shows
-.\" any required data declarations or #include directives, followed by the func-
-.\" tion declaration.
-.
-.\" DESCRIPTION
-.\" gives an explanation of what the command, function, or format does. Discuss
-.\" how it interacts with files and standard input, and what it produces on
-.\" standard output or standard error. Omit internals and implementation
-.\" details unless they're critical for understanding the interface. Describe
-.\" the usual case; for information on options use the OPTIONS section. If
-.\" there is some kind of input grammar or complex set of subcommands, consider
-.\" describing them in a separate USAGE section (and just place an overview in
-.\" the DESCRIPTION section).
-.
-.\" RETURN VALUE
-.\" gives a list of the values the library routine will return to the caller and
-.\" the conditions that cause these values to be returned.
-.
-.\" EXIT STATUS
-.\" lists the possible exit status values or a program and the conditions that
-.\" cause these values to be returned.
-.
-.\" USAGE
-.\" describes the grammar of any sublanguage this implements.
-.
-.\" FILES
-.\" lists the files the program or function uses, such as configuration files,
-.\" startup files, and files the program directly operates on. Give the full
-.\" pathname of these files, and use the installation process to modify the
-.\" directory part to match user preferences. For many programs, the default
-.\" installation location is in /usr/local, so your base manual page should use
-.\" /usr/local as the base.
-.
-.\" ENVIRONMENT
-.\" lists all environment variables that affect your program or function and how
-.\" they affect it.
-.
-.\" SECURITY
-.\" discusses security issues and implications. Warn about configurations or
-.\" environments that should be avoided, commands that may have security impli-
-.\" cations, and so on, especially if they aren't obvious. Discussing security
-.\" in a separate section isn't necessary; if it's easier to understand, place
-.\" security information in the other sections (such as the DESCRIPTION or USAGE
-.\" section). However, please include security information somewhere!
-.
-.\" CONFORMING TO
-.\" describes any standards or conventions this implements.
-.
-.\" NOTES
-.\" provides miscellaneous notes.
-.
-.\" BUGS
-.\" lists limitations, known defects or inconveniences, and other questionable
-.\" activities.
-
-.SH COPYRIGHT
-Copyright \(co 2005\-2009 Junjiro R. Okajima
-
-.SH AUTHOR
-Junjiro R. Okajima
-
-.\" SEE ALSO
-.\" lists related man pages in alphabetical order, possibly followed by other
-.\" related pages or documents. Conventionally this is the last section.