Steve French smfrench@gmail.com wrote:
I also would prefer that we simply treat the time granularity as part of the superblock (mounted volume) ie returned on fstat rather than on every stat of the filesystem. For cifs mounts we could conceivably have different time granularity (1 or 2 second) on mounts to old servers rather than 100 nanoseconds.
The question is whether you want to have to do a statfs in addition to a stat? I suppose you can potentially cache the statfs based on device number.
That said, there are cases where caching filesystem-level info based on i_dev doesn't work. OpenAFS springs to mind as that only has one superblock and thus one set of device numbers, but keeps all the inodes for all the different volumes it may have mounted there.
I don't know whether this would be a problem for CIFS too - say on a windows server you fabricate P:, for example, by joining together several filesystems (with junctions?). How does this appear on a Linux client when it steps from one filesystem to another within a mounted share?
David