On Thu, 2008-02-14 at 10:30 +0100, rzryyvzy wrote: > /dev/null is often very useful, specially if programs force to save data in > some file. But some programs like to creates different temporary file names, > so /dev/null could no more work. > > What is with a "/dev/null"-directory? > I mean a "blackhole pseudo directory" which eats every write to null. > > Here is how it could work: > mount -t nulldir nulldir /dev/nulldir > > Now if a program does a create(2), > it creates in the memory the file with its fd. > Then if a program does a write(2) to the fd, it eats the writes and give out > fakely it has written the number of bytes. > When the program calls does a close(2) of the fd, then the complete inode is > deleted in the memory. > > The directory should be permanently empty except for the inodes with open > file descriptors. So only inode information would be temporary saved in this > "nulldir tmpfs" directory. > > Is there already existing a possibility to create a null directory?
This could be done fairly trivially with FUSE, and IMHO is a good use for FUSE because since you're just throwing most data away, performance is not a concern. -j
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