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diff --git a/fuse/README b/fuse/README index 3d1f6f091..398dd6557 100644 --- a/fuse/README +++ b/fuse/README @@ -1,12 +1,380 @@ -Libfuse for Android +General Information +=================== -FUSE[1] is a framework to develop userspace file systems for linux. Since Android is based on linux, it won't be too difficult to port libfuse to Android. +FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for userspace +programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux kernel. FUSE +also aims to provide a secure method for non privileged users to +create and mount their own filesystem implementations. -The main problem of building and running libfuse on Android is that the bionic c library lacks support for pthread_cancel(), which is necessary for libfuse multi-thread code. This stackoverflow entry[2] has suggested a solution, which uses SIGUSR1 as an alternative. It seems to work. +You can download the source code releases from -Libfuse can be build with Android NDK[3]. If success, you will get libfuse.a and an example program fusexmp. To run the example, the android kernel should be built with FUSE kernel support. + http://sourceforge.net/projects/fuse -References: -[1]. http://fuse.sourceforge.net -[2]. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4610086/pthread-cancel-alternatives-in-android-ndk -[3]. http://developer.android.com/sdk/ndk/index.html +or alternatively you can use CVS to get the very latest development +version: + + cvs -d :pserver:anonymous@fuse.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/fuse co fuse + + +Dependencies +============ + +Linux kernel version 2.6.X where X >= 9. + +Alternatively a kernel module from FUSE release 2.5.* can be used with +this release, which supports kernels >= 2.4.21. + +Installation +============ + +./configure +make +make install +modprobe fuse + +You may also need to add '/usr/local/lib' to '/etc/ld.so.conf' and/or +run ldconfig. + +You'll also need a fuse kernel module, Linux kernels 2.6.14 or later +contain FUSE support. + +For more details see the file 'INSTALL' + +How To Use +========== + +FUSE is made up of three main parts: + + - A kernel filesystem module + + - A userspace library + + - A mount/unmount program + + +Here's how to create your very own virtual filesystem in five easy +steps (after installing FUSE): + + 1) Edit the file example/fusexmp.c to do whatever you want... + + 2) Build the fusexmp program + + 3) run 'example/fusexmp /mnt/fuse -d' + + 4) ls -al /mnt/fuse + + 5) Be glad + +If it doesn't work out, please ask! Also see the file 'include/fuse.h' for +detailed documentation of the library interface. + +Security +======== + +If you run 'make install', the fusermount program is installed +set-user-id to root. This is done to allow normal users to mount +their own filesystem implementations. + +There must however be some limitations, in order to prevent Bad User from +doing nasty things. Currently those limitations are: + + - The user can only mount on a mountpoint, for which it has write + permission + + - The mountpoint is not a sticky directory which isn't owned by the + user (like /tmp usually is) + + - No other user (including root) can access the contents of the mounted + filesystem. + +Configuration +============= + +Some options regarding mount policy can be set in the file +'/etc/fuse.conf' + +Currently these options are: + +mount_max = NNN + + Set the maximum number of FUSE mounts allowed to non-root users. + The default is 1000. + +user_allow_other + + Allow non-root users to specify the 'allow_other' or 'allow_root' + mount options. + + +Mount options +============= + +Most of the generic mount options described in 'man mount' are +supported (ro, rw, suid, nosuid, dev, nodev, exec, noexec, atime, +noatime, sync async, dirsync). Filesystems are mounted with +'-onodev,nosuid' by default, which can only be overridden by a +privileged user. + +These are FUSE specific mount options that can be specified for all +filesystems: + +default_permissions + + By default FUSE doesn't check file access permissions, the + filesystem is free to implement it's access policy or leave it to + the underlying file access mechanism (e.g. in case of network + filesystems). This option enables permission checking, restricting + access based on file mode. This is option is usually useful + together with the 'allow_other' mount option. + +allow_other + + This option overrides the security measure restricting file access + to the user mounting the filesystem. So all users (including root) + can access the files. This option is by default only allowed to + root, but this restriction can be removed with a configuration + option described in the previous section. + +allow_root + + This option is similar to 'allow_other' but file access is limited + to the user mounting the filesystem and root. This option and + 'allow_other' are mutually exclusive. + +kernel_cache + + This option disables flushing the cache of the file contents on + every open(). This should only be enabled on filesystems, where the + file data is never changed externally (not through the mounted FUSE + filesystem). Thus it is not suitable for network filesystems and + other "intermediate" filesystems. + + NOTE: if this option is not specified (and neither 'direct_io') data + is still cached after the open(), so a read() system call will not + always initiate a read operation. + +auto_cache + + This option enables automatic flushing of the data cache on open(). + The cache will only be flushed if the modification time or the size + of the file has changed. + +large_read + + Issue large read requests. This can improve performance for some + filesystems, but can also degrade performance. This option is only + useful on 2.4.X kernels, as on 2.6 kernels requests size is + automatically determined for optimum performance. + +direct_io + + This option disables the use of page cache (file content cache) in + the kernel for this filesystem. This has several affects: + + - Each read() or write() system call will initiate one or more + read or write operations, data will not be cached in the + kernel. + + - The return value of the read() and write() system calls will + correspond to the return values of the read and write + operations. This is useful for example if the file size is not + known in advance (before reading it). + +max_read=N + + With this option the maximum size of read operations can be set. + The default is infinite. Note that the size of read requests is + limited anyway to 32 pages (which is 128kbyte on i386). + +max_readahead=N + + Set the maximum number of bytes to read-ahead. The default is + determined by the kernel. On linux-2.6.22 or earlier it's 131072 + (128kbytes) + +max_write=N + + Set the maximum number of bytes in a single write operation. The + default is 128kbytes. Note, that due to various limitations, the + size of write requests can be much smaller (4kbytes). This + limitation will be removed in the future. + +async_read + + Perform reads asynchronously. This is the default + +sync_read + + Perform all reads (even read-ahead) synchronously. + +hard_remove + + The default behavior is that if an open file is deleted, the file is + renamed to a hidden file (.fuse_hiddenXXX), and only removed when + the file is finally released. This relieves the filesystem + implementation of having to deal with this problem. This option + disables the hiding behavior, and files are removed immediately in + an unlink operation (or in a rename operation which overwrites an + existing file). + + It is recommended that you not use the hard_remove option. When + hard_remove is set, the following libc functions fail on unlinked + files (returning errno of ENOENT): + - read() + - write() + - fsync() + - close() + - f*xattr() + - ftruncate() + - fstat() + - fchmod() + - fchown() + +debug + + Turns on debug information printing by the library. + +fsname=NAME + + Sets the filesystem source (first field in /etc/mtab). The default + is the program name. + +subtype=TYPE + + Sets the filesystem type (third field in /etc/mtab). The default is + the program name. + + If the kernel suppports it, /etc/mtab and /proc/mounts will show the + filesystem type as "fuse.TYPE" + + If the kernel doesn't support subtypes, the source filed will be + "TYPE#NAME", or if fsname option is not specified, just "TYPE". + +use_ino + + Honor the 'st_ino' field in getattr() and fill_dir(). This value is + used to fill in the 'st_ino' field in the stat()/lstat()/fstat() + functions and the 'd_ino' field in the readdir() function. The + filesystem does not have to guarantee uniqueness, however some + applications rely on this value being unique for the whole + filesystem. + +readdir_ino + + If 'use_ino' option is not given, still try to fill in the 'd_ino' + field in readdir(). If the name was previously looked up, and is + still in the cache, the inode number found there will be used. + Otherwise it will be set to '-1'. If 'use_ino' option is given, + this option is ignored. + +nonempty + + Allows mounts over a non-empty file or directory. By default these + mounts are rejected (from version 2.3.1) to prevent accidental + covering up of data, which could for example prevent automatic + backup. + +umask=M + + Override the permission bits in 'st_mode' set by the filesystem. + The resulting permission bits are the ones missing from the given + umask value. The value is given in octal representation. + +uid=N + + Override the 'st_uid' field set by the filesystem. + +gid=N + + Override the 'st_gid' field set by the filesystem. + +blkdev + + Mount a filesystem backed by a block device. This is a privileged + option. The device must be specified with the 'fsname=NAME' option. + +entry_timeout=T + + The timeout in seconds for which name lookups will be cached. The + default is 1.0 second. For all the timeout options, it is possible + to give fractions of a second as well (e.g. "-oentry_timeout=2.8") + +negative_timeout=T + + The timeout in seconds for which a negative lookup will be cached. + This means, that if file did not exist (lookup retuned ENOENT), the + lookup will only be redone after the timeout, and the file/directory + will be assumed to not exist until then. The default is 0.0 second, + meaning that caching negative lookups are disabled. + +attr_timeout=T + + The timeout in seconds for which file/directory attributes are + cached. The default is 1.0 second. + +ac_attr_timeout=T + + The timeout in seconds for which file attributes are cached for the + purpose of checking if "auto_cache" should flush the file data on + open. The default is the value of 'attr_timeout' + +intr + + Allow requests to be interrupted. Turning on this option may result + in unexpected behavior, if the filesystem does not support request + interruption. + +intr_signal=NUM + + Specify which signal number to send to the filesystem when a request + is interrupted. The default is 10 (USR1). + +modules=M1[:M2...] + + Add modules to the filesystem stack. Modules are pushed in the + order they are specified, with the original filesystem being on the + bottom of the stack. + + +Modules distributed with fuse +----------------------------- + +iconv +````` +Perform file name character set conversion. Options are: + +from_code=CHARSET + + Character set to convert from (see iconv -l for a list of possible + values). Default is UTF-8. + +to_code=CHARSET + + Character set to convert to. Default is determined by the current + locale. + + +subdir +`````` +Prepend a given directory to each path. Options are: + +subdir=DIR + + Directory to prepend to all paths. This option is mandatory. + +rellinks + + Transform absolute symlinks into relative + +norellinks + + Do not transform absolute symlinks into relative. This is the default. + + +Reporting bugs +============== + +Please send bug reports to the <fuse-devel@lists.sourceforge.net> +mailing list. + +The list is open, you need not be subscribed to post. |