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			There are lots of documents that belong to the admin-guide but are on random places (most under Documentation root dir). Move them to the admin guide. Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+samsung@kernel.org> Acked-by: Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.belloni@bootlin.com> Acked-by: Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz <b.zolnierkie@samsung.com>
		
			
				
	
	
		
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			81 lines
		
	
	
		
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| ===================================================
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| Notes on the change from 16-bit UIDs to 32-bit UIDs
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| ===================================================
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| 
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| :Author: Chris Wing <wingc@umich.edu>
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| :Last updated: January 11, 2000
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| 
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| - kernel code MUST take into account __kernel_uid_t and __kernel_uid32_t
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|   when communicating between user and kernel space in an ioctl or data
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|   structure.
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| 
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| - kernel code should use uid_t and gid_t in kernel-private structures and
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|   code.
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| 
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| What's left to be done for 32-bit UIDs on all Linux architectures:
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| 
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| - Disk quotas have an interesting limitation that is not related to the
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|   maximum UID/GID. They are limited by the maximum file size on the
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|   underlying filesystem, because quota records are written at offsets
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|   corresponding to the UID in question.
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|   Further investigation is needed to see if the quota system can cope
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|   properly with huge UIDs. If it can deal with 64-bit file offsets on all 
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|   architectures, this should not be a problem.
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| 
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| - Decide whether or not to keep backwards compatibility with the system
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|   accounting file, or if we should break it as the comments suggest
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|   (currently, the old 16-bit UID and GID are still written to disk, and
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|   part of the former pad space is used to store separate 32-bit UID and
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|   GID)
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| 
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| - Need to validate that OS emulation calls the 16-bit UID
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|   compatibility syscalls, if the OS being emulated used 16-bit UIDs, or
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|   uses the 32-bit UID system calls properly otherwise.
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| 
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|   This affects at least:
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| 
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| 	- iBCS on Intel
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| 
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| 	- sparc32 emulation on sparc64
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| 	  (need to support whatever new 32-bit UID system calls are added to
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| 	  sparc32)
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| 
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| - Validate that all filesystems behave properly.
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| 
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|   At present, 32-bit UIDs _should_ work for:
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| 
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| 	- ext2
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| 	- ufs
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| 	- isofs
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| 	- nfs
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| 	- coda
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| 	- udf
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| 
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|   Ioctl() fixups have been made for:
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| 
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| 	- ncpfs
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| 	- smbfs
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| 
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|   Filesystems with simple fixups to prevent 16-bit UID wraparound:
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| 
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| 	- minix
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| 	- sysv
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| 	- qnx4
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| 
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|   Other filesystems have not been checked yet.
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| 
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| - The ncpfs and smpfs filesystems cannot presently use 32-bit UIDs in
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|   all ioctl()s. Some new ioctl()s have been added with 32-bit UIDs, but
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|   more are needed. (as well as new user<->kernel data structures)
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| 
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| - The ELF core dump format only supports 16-bit UIDs on arm, i386, m68k,
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|   sh, and sparc32. Fixing this is probably not that important, but would
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|   require adding a new ELF section.
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| 
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| - The ioctl()s used to control the in-kernel NFS server only support
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|   16-bit UIDs on arm, i386, m68k, sh, and sparc32.
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| 
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| - make sure that the UID mapping feature of AX25 networking works properly
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|   (it should be safe because it's always used a 32-bit integer to
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|   communicate between user and kernel)
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