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ovl: document copying layers restrictions with inodes index

The inodes index feature introduces a behavior change - on mount,
upper root origin file handle is verified to match the lower root dir.
This implies that copied layers cannot be mounted with the inodes index
feature enabled, without explicitly removing the upper dir origin xattr
and the index dir.

The inodes index feature is required to support:
- Prevent breaking hardlinks on copy up
- NFS export support (upcoming)
- Overlayfs snapshots (POC)

Signed-off-by: Amir Goldstein <amir73il@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Miklos Szeredi <mszeredi@redhat.com>
zero-colors
Amir Goldstein 2017-05-25 15:08:24 +03:00 committed by Miklos Szeredi
parent caf70cb2ba
commit 9412812ef5
1 changed files with 34 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -201,6 +201,40 @@ rightmost one and going left. In the above example lower1 will be the
top, lower2 the middle and lower3 the bottom layer.
Sharing and copying layers
--------------------------
Lower layers may be shared among several overlay mounts and that is indeed
a very common practice. An overlay mount may use the same lower layer
path as another overlay mount and it may use a lower layer path that is
beneath or above the path of another overlay lower layer path.
Using an upper layer path and/or a workdir path that are already used by
another overlay mount is not allowed and will fail with EBUSY. Using
partially overlapping paths is not allowed but will not fail with EBUSY.
Mounting an overlay using an upper layer path, where the upper layer path
was previously used by another mounted overlay in combination with a
different lower layer path, is allowed, unless the "inodes index" feature
is enabled.
With the "inodes index" feature, on the first time mount, an NFS file
handle of the lower layer root directory, along with the UUID of the lower
filesystem, are encoded and stored in the "trusted.overlay.origin" extended
attribute on the upper layer root directory. On subsequent mount attempts,
the lower root directory file handle and lower filesystem UUID are compared
to the stored origin in upper root directory. On failure to verify the
lower root origin, mount will fail with ESTALE. An overlayfs mount with
"inodes index" enabled will fail with EOPNOTSUPP if the lower filesystem
does not support NFS export, lower filesystem does not have a valid UUID or
if the upper filesystem does not support extended attributes.
It is quite a common practice to copy overlay layers to a different
directory tree on the same or different underlying filesystem, and even
to a different machine. With the "inodes index" feature, trying to mount
the copied layers will fail the verification of the lower root file handle.
Non-standard behavior
---------------------