libfs: Introduce case-insensitive string comparison helper

generic_ci_match can be used by case-insensitive filesystems to compare
strings under lookup with dirents in a case-insensitive way.  This
function is currently reimplemented by each filesystem supporting
casefolding, so this reduces code duplication in filesystem-specific
code.

[eugen.hristev@collabora.com: rework to first test the exact match, cleanup
and add error message]

Signed-off-by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Eugen Hristev <eugen.hristev@collabora.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240606073353.47130-4-eugen.hristev@collabora.com
Reviewed-by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
This commit is contained in:
Gabriel Krisman Bertazi 2024-06-06 10:33:49 +03:00 committed by Christian Brauner
parent 632f4054b2
commit 6a79a4e187
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2 changed files with 78 additions and 0 deletions

View file

@ -1854,6 +1854,80 @@ static const struct dentry_operations generic_ci_dentry_ops = {
.d_revalidate = fscrypt_d_revalidate,
#endif
};
/**
* generic_ci_match() - Match a name (case-insensitively) with a dirent.
* This is a filesystem helper for comparison with directory entries.
* generic_ci_d_compare should be used in VFS' ->d_compare instead.
*
* @parent: Inode of the parent of the dirent under comparison
* @name: name under lookup.
* @folded_name: Optional pre-folded name under lookup
* @de_name: Dirent name.
* @de_name_len: dirent name length.
*
* Test whether a case-insensitive directory entry matches the filename
* being searched. If @folded_name is provided, it is used instead of
* recalculating the casefold of @name.
*
* Return: > 0 if the directory entry matches, 0 if it doesn't match, or
* < 0 on error.
*/
int generic_ci_match(const struct inode *parent,
const struct qstr *name,
const struct qstr *folded_name,
const u8 *de_name, u32 de_name_len)
{
const struct super_block *sb = parent->i_sb;
const struct unicode_map *um = sb->s_encoding;
struct fscrypt_str decrypted_name = FSTR_INIT(NULL, de_name_len);
struct qstr dirent = QSTR_INIT(de_name, de_name_len);
int res = 0;
if (IS_ENCRYPTED(parent)) {
const struct fscrypt_str encrypted_name =
FSTR_INIT((u8 *) de_name, de_name_len);
if (WARN_ON_ONCE(!fscrypt_has_encryption_key(parent)))
return -EINVAL;
decrypted_name.name = kmalloc(de_name_len, GFP_KERNEL);
if (!decrypted_name.name)
return -ENOMEM;
res = fscrypt_fname_disk_to_usr(parent, 0, 0, &encrypted_name,
&decrypted_name);
if (res < 0) {
kfree(decrypted_name.name);
return res;
}
dirent.name = decrypted_name.name;
dirent.len = decrypted_name.len;
}
/*
* Attempt a case-sensitive match first. It is cheaper and
* should cover most lookups, including all the sane
* applications that expect a case-sensitive filesystem.
*/
if (dirent.len == name->len &&
!memcmp(name->name, dirent.name, dirent.len))
goto out;
if (folded_name->name)
res = utf8_strncasecmp_folded(um, folded_name, &dirent);
else
res = utf8_strncasecmp(um, name, &dirent);
out:
kfree(decrypted_name.name);
if (res < 0 && sb_has_strict_encoding(sb)) {
pr_err_ratelimited("Directory contains filename that is invalid UTF-8");
return 0;
}
return !res;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(generic_ci_match);
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_FS_ENCRYPTION

View file

@ -3351,6 +3351,10 @@ extern int generic_file_fsync(struct file *, loff_t, loff_t, int);
extern int generic_check_addressable(unsigned, u64);
extern void generic_set_sb_d_ops(struct super_block *sb);
extern int generic_ci_match(const struct inode *parent,
const struct qstr *name,
const struct qstr *folded_name,
const u8 *de_name, u32 de_name_len);
static inline bool sb_has_encoding(const struct super_block *sb)
{