On Mon, Feb 02, 2015 at 06:05:09PM +0100, Alexander Holler wrote:
> +     if (inode) {
> +             // TODO:
> +             // if (inode is file and 's' flag is set)
> +             //      secure = true;
> +             if (!secure)
> +                     iput(inode);    /* truncate the inode here */
> +             else {
> +                     struct super_block *sb = inode->i_sb;
> +                     if (sb->s_op->set_secure_delete)
> +                             sb->s_op->set_secure_delete(sb, true);
> +                     // TODO: We should fail if secure isn't supported,
> +                     // look up how that's possible here.
> +                     iput(inode);    /* truncate the inode here */
> +                     // TODO: check if sb is still valid after the inode is 
> gone
> +                     sync_filesystem(sb);
> +                     if (sb->s_op->set_secure_delete)
> +                             sb->s_op->set_secure_delete(sb, false);
> +             }

Charming.  Now, what exactly happens if two such syscalls overlap in time?
Moroever, what makes you equate unlink() with inode removal?  What happens
if you race e.g. with stat(2) on the same thing?  Or if there's an opened
file over that sucker, for that matter?
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