Thread (31 messages) 31 messages, 8 authors, 2026-03-09

Re: [PATCH v3 00/12] vfs: change inode->i_ino from unsigned long to u64

From: Jeff Layton <jlayton@kernel.org>
Date: 2026-03-09 17:59:50
Also in: amd-gfx, autofs, bpf, ceph-devel, dri-devel, linux-bluetooth, linux-can, linux-cifs, linux-ext4, linux-f2fs-devel, linux-fscrypt, linux-hams, linux-integrity, linux-media, linux-mm, linux-nfs, linux-perf-users, linux-sctp, linux-security-module, linux-trace-kernel, linux-unionfs, linux-xfs, lkml, netdev, netfs, ntfs3, nvdimm, ocfs2-devel, selinux, v9fs
Subsystem: extended verification module (evm), integrity measurement architecture (ima), security subsystem, the rest · Maintainers: Mimi Zohar, Roberto Sassu, Dmitry Kasatkin, Paul Moore, James Morris, "Serge E. Hallyn", Linus Torvalds

On Mon, 2026-03-09 at 13:47 -0400, Mimi Zohar wrote:
[ I/O socket time out.  Trimming the To list.]

On Wed, 2026-03-04 at 10:32 -0500, Jeff Layton wrote:
quoted
This version squashes all of the format-string changes and the i_ino
type change into the same patch. This results in a giant 600+ line patch
at the end of the series, but it does remain bisectable.  Because the
patchset was reorganized (again) some of the R-b's and A-b's have been
dropped.

The entire pile is in the "iino-u64" branch of my tree, if anyone is
interested in testing this.

    https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jlayton/linux.git/

Original cover letter follows:

----------------------8<-----------------------

Christian said [1] to "just do it" when I proposed this, so here we are!

For historical reasons, the inode->i_ino field is an unsigned long,
which means that it's 32 bits on 32 bit architectures. This has caused a
number of filesystems to implement hacks to hash a 64-bit identifier
into a 32-bit field, and deprives us of a universal identifier field for
an inode.

This patchset changes the inode->i_ino field from an unsigned long to a
u64. This shouldn't make any material difference on 64-bit hosts, but
32-bit hosts will see struct inode grow by at least 4 bytes. This could
have effects on slabcache sizes and field alignment.

The bulk of the changes are to format strings and tracepoints, since the
kernel itself doesn't care that much about the i_ino field. The first
patch changes some vfs function arguments, so check that one out
carefully.

With this change, we may be able to shrink some inode structures. For
instance, struct nfs_inode has a fileid field that holds the 64-bit
inode number. With this set of changes, that field could be eliminated.
I'd rather leave that sort of cleanups for later just to keep this
simple.

Much of this set was generated by LLM, but I attributed it to myself
since I consider this to be in the "menial tasks" category of LLM usage.

[1]: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-fsdevel/20260219-portrait-winkt-959070cee42f@brauner/ (local)

Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@kernel.org>
Jeff, missing from this patch set is EVM.  In hmac_add_misc() EVM copies the
i_ino and calculates either an HMAC or file meta-data hash, which is then
signed. 
Thanks Mimi, good catch.

It looks like we should just be able to change the ino field to a u64
alongside everything else. Something like this:
diff --git a/security/integrity/evm/evm_crypto.c b/security/integrity/evm/evm_crypto.c
index c0ca4eedb0fe..77b6c2fa345e 100644
--- a/security/integrity/evm/evm_crypto.c
+++ b/security/integrity/evm/evm_crypto.c
@@ -144,7 +144,7 @@ static void hmac_add_misc(struct shash_desc *desc, struct inode *inode,
                          char type, char *digest)
 {
        struct h_misc {
-               unsigned long ino;
+               u64 ino;
                __u32 generation;
                uid_t uid;
                gid_t gid;


That should make no material difference on 64-bit hosts. What's the
effect on 32-bit? Will they just need to remeasure everything or would
the consequences be more dire? Do we have any clue whether anyone is
using EVM in 32-bit environments?

Thanks,
-- 
Jeff Layton [off-list ref]
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