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Exploring building a tiny FUSE filesystem

shayon.dev

79 points by shayonj a month ago · 17 comments

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fweimer 23 days ago

The glibc test suite contains a few tiny FUSE file systems. For example, there is one that just happens to contain every file that mkstemp attempts to create, for a test that exercises the O_CREAT|O_EXCL failure path. Like the Rust fuser crate, it uses the kernel API directly. The tests are slightly brittle because sometimes we encounter a new LSM that triggers unexpected file system operations, but it's not too bad overall.

What I found funny when I discovered it is that you can create a thread in the same process that provides the FUSE file system implementation for this very process. It makes it much easier to write certain tests, especially debugging. We had to teach valgrind that more system calls effectively perform callbacks into the same process, but fortunately valgrind already had a FUSE_COMPATIBLE_MAY_BLOCK mechanism for that.

  • rigonkulous 23 days ago

    Indeed, the glibc test suite .. plus a suite of BPF scripts for instrumenting .. can provide a great deal of information about how things are running in a target OS .. if you give a process its own filesystem and then rig up a bpf console with some hot gnuplot, you can get some very significant details, at the i/o level, about the heuristics of an application, library, user-space module/plugin, etc...

    It used to be you had to wade through massive logs though, if you don't get things quite tweaked - but in the AI/ML agent sense of things these days, just describe what you need, FUSE the right nodes, and run the bpf scripts, yo ..

  • paulf38 20 days ago

    Is that something that should be merged to upstream Valgrind?

    • fweimer 16 days ago

      Everything we need is already upstream. I think the changes were:

          commit 0690dc39644d15fc89813419ffcdf9754b098260
          Author: Mark Wielaard <mark@klomp.org>
          Date:   Sun Sep 22 23:24:34 2024 +0200
          
              Implement /proc/self/exe readlink[at] fallback in POST handler
              
              Calling the readlink[at] syscall directly from the PRE handler defeats
              the FUSE_COMPATIBLE_MAY_BLOCK (SfMayBlock) flag. Add a POST handler
              that only explicitly calls the readlink[at] handler for the
              /proc/self/exe fallback (this should be fine unless /proc is also
              implemented as fuse in this process).
              
              Adjust readlink[at] GENX_ and LINX_ syswrap macros to GENXY and LINXY.
              
              https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=493507
          
          commit ddf397c024c80382f7a2f3a0d46d58fb839eef96
          Author: Mark Wielaard <mark@klomp.org>
          Date:   Sat Sep 21 22:27:24 2024 +0200
          
              Add missing FUSE_COMPATIBLE_MAY_BLOCKs
              
              Various syscalls (in particular "at" variants) PRE handlers were
              missing a FUSE_COMPATIBLE_MAY_BLOCK statement.
              
              Add it to the generic PRE handlers of access and statfs64. And the
              linux PRE handlers of mknodat, fchownat, futimesat, utimensat,
              utimensat_time64, renameat, renameat2, readlinkat, fchmodat,
              fchmodat2, faccessat and faccessat2.
              
              https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=493454
oakinnagbe 24 days ago

The older I get, the more I appreciate posts that are basically I wanted to understand X, so I built a tiny version of it.

beratbozkurt0 24 days ago

I don't know why, but I really enjoy reading this kind of content. I admire the people who implement and maintain this system.

  • rigonkulous 23 days ago

    I agree with you, I also enjoy reading it, and admire the method as well as the result in this case.

    FUSE is immensely useful, also. Its the front-/back- door to a lot of things. There's only a few steps left to a tiny crypto-stack, hosted on top of it ..

    • beratbozkurt0 23 days ago

      I had saved this kind of content, but I hadn't shared it here; maybe it will catch the attention of others like us. but it looks I could not find it

direwolf20 23 days ago

Kernel FUSE documentation is a dead link

scorpioxy 24 days ago

Can someone tell me if this is LLM generated content or not? I tried to look for obvious signs but didn't notice anything.

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