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authorSteven J. Magnani <steve.magnani@digidescorp.com>2019-08-27 15:13:59 +0300
committerJan Kara <jack@suse.cz>2019-08-27 16:38:46 +0300
commitc3367a1b47d590f97109cd4b5189e750fb26c0f1 (patch)
tree8f29eb87d3375f3ff048b3384bef9692bde86367 /fs/udf/ecma_167.h
parent8cbd9af9d208b1f015cf8a4645602f0a007270a8 (diff)
downloadlinux-c3367a1b47d590f97109cd4b5189e750fb26c0f1.tar.xz
udf: augment UDF permissions on new inodes
Windows presents files created within Linux as read-only, even when permissions in Linux indicate the file should be writable. UDF defines a slightly different set of basic file permissions than Linux. Specifically, UDF has "delete" and "change attribute" permissions for each access class (user/group/other). Linux has no equivalents for these. When the Linux UDF driver creates a file (or directory), no UDF delete or change attribute permissions are granted. The lack of delete permission appears to cause Windows to mark an item read-only when its permissions otherwise indicate that it should be read-write. Fix this by having UDF delete permissions track Linux write permissions. Also grant UDF change attribute permission to the owner when creating a new inode. Reported by: Ty Young Signed-off-by: Steven J. Magnani <steve@digidescorp.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20190827121359.9954-1-steve@digidescorp.com Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
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