diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/overlayfs.txt b/Documentation/filesystems/overlayfs.txt index c9e884b52698020f88fdab12588687c10f16004e..36f528a7fdd64d18c7ee7b3a50849b45bc046ef3 100644 --- a/Documentation/filesystems/overlayfs.txt +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/overlayfs.txt @@ -201,6 +201,40 @@ rightmost one and going left. In the above example lower1 will be the top, lower2 the middle and lower3 the bottom layer. +Sharing and copying layers +-------------------------- + +Lower layers may be shared among several overlay mounts and that is indeed +a very common practice. An overlay mount may use the same lower layer +path as another overlay mount and it may use a lower layer path that is +beneath or above the path of another overlay lower layer path. + +Using an upper layer path and/or a workdir path that are already used by +another overlay mount is not allowed and will fail with EBUSY. Using +partially overlapping paths is not allowed but will not fail with EBUSY. + +Mounting an overlay using an upper layer path, where the upper layer path +was previously used by another mounted overlay in combination with a +different lower layer path, is allowed, unless the "inodes index" feature +is enabled. + +With the "inodes index" feature, on the first time mount, an NFS file +handle of the lower layer root directory, along with the UUID of the lower +filesystem, are encoded and stored in the "trusted.overlay.origin" extended +attribute on the upper layer root directory. On subsequent mount attempts, +the lower root directory file handle and lower filesystem UUID are compared +to the stored origin in upper root directory. On failure to verify the +lower root origin, mount will fail with ESTALE. An overlayfs mount with +"inodes index" enabled will fail with EOPNOTSUPP if the lower filesystem +does not support NFS export, lower filesystem does not have a valid UUID or +if the upper filesystem does not support extended attributes. + +It is quite a common practice to copy overlay layers to a different +directory tree on the same or different underlying filesystem, and even +to a different machine. With the "inodes index" feature, trying to mount +the copied layers will fail the verification of the lower root file handle. + + Non-standard behavior ---------------------