cache_lookup() work this week.

Jan Grant Jan.Grant at bristol.ac.uk
Fri Sep 5 03:36:04 PDT 2003


On Thu, 4 Sep 2003, Matthew Dillon wrote:

> :...
> :
> :Consider also:
> :    cd /a/b/c/d   ;  ln /a/outside
> :Time passes, and someone else types:
> :    cd /a/b/c     ;  rm -Rf *
> :
> :The person will think that they are just safely removing the
> :directory and everything below it, but now they could be
> :removing much more than that.  We'd have to do something to
> :guard against that problem too.  (and these hard links could
> :be created by users with nefarious purposes in mind, so the
> :person doing the 'rm' would have no reason to suspect that
> :this would be an issue).
>
>     This is a good one, and easy to solve... rm would just unlink() or
>     rmdir() the directory first, whether it is empty or not.  If the unlink
>     succeeds then rm considers its work done.
>
>     The last instance of the directory would not be unlinkable... rm -rf
>     would have to recurse through and delete the underlying files first.


mkdir -p /a/b/c/d/e
ln /a/b/c /a/b/c/d/e/f
rm -r /a/b

. ..leaves an unreachable cycle.

There are advantages in having a DAG for directory trees. I'm still
trying to figure out what good permitting cycles does.


-- 
jan grant, ILRT, University of Bristol. http://www.ilrt.bris.ac.uk/
Tel +44(0)117 9287088 Fax +44 (0)117 9287112 http://ioctl.org/jan/
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