Well the GUI I think is just Windows, it's all just APIs that are
presented to windows.
On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 10:16 PM, Edward Ned Harvey
wrote:
>> From: jason.brian.k...@gmail.com [mailto:jason.brian.k...@gmail.com] On
>> Behalf Of Jason King
>>
>> If you're just wanting to do something like th
> From: jason.brian.k...@gmail.com [mailto:jason.brian.k...@gmail.com] On
> Behalf Of Jason King
>
> If you're just wanting to do something like the netapp .snapshot
> (where it's in every directory), I'd be curious if the CIFS shadow
> copy support might already have done a lot of the heavy lifti
> From: Peter Jeremy [mailto:peter.jer...@alcatel-lucent.com]
>
> >Therefore, it should be very easy to implement proof of concept, by
> writing
> >a setuid root C program, similar to "sudo" which could then become
> root,
> >identify the absolute path of a directory by its inode number, and
> the
If you're just wanting to do something like the netapp .snapshot
(where it's in every directory), I'd be curious if the CIFS shadow
copy support might already have done a lot of the heavy lifting for
this. That might be a good place to look
On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 7:25 PM, Peter Jeremy
wrote:
> On
On 2010-Apr-30 21:56:46 +0800, Edward Ned Harvey wrote:
>How many bytes long is an inode number? I couldn't find that easily by
>googling, so for the moment, I'll guess it's a fixed size, and I'll guess
>64bits (8 bytes).
Based on a rummage in some header files, it looks like it's 8 bytes.
>How
> From: Peter Jeremy [mailto:peter.jer...@alcatel-lucent.com]
>
> Whilst it's trivially easy to get from the file to the list of
> directories containing that file, actually getting from one directory
> to its parent is less so: A directory containing N sub-directories has
> N+2 links. Whilst the
> From: Peter Jeremy [mailto:peter.jer...@alcatel-lucent.com]
>
> I gather you are suggesting that the inode be extended to contain a
> list of the inode numbers of all directories that contain a filename
> referring to that inode.
Correct.
> [inodes] can have up to 32767 links [to them]. Wh
On 2010-Apr-30 10:24:14 +0800, Edward Ned Harvey wrote:
>Each inode contain a link count. In most cases, each inode has a
>link count of 1, but of course that can't be assumed. It seems
>trivially simple to me, that along with the link count in each inode,
>the filesystem could also store a list
> From: zfs-discuss-boun...@opensolaris.org [mailto:zfs-discuss-
> boun...@opensolaris.org] On Behalf Of Edward Ned Harvey
>
> Each inode contain a link count. It seems trivially
> simple to me, that along with the link count in each inode, the
> filesystem could also store a list of which inodes
I finally got it, I think. Somebody (with deep and intimate knowledge of
ZFS development) please tell me if I've been hitting the crack pipe too
hard. But .
Part 1 of this email:
Netapp snapshot security flaw. Inherent in their implementation of
.snapshot directories.
Part 2 of this em
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