1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2
3Written by: Neil Brown
4Please see MAINTAINERS file for where to send questions.
5
6Overlay Filesystem
7==================
8
9This document describes a prototype for a new approach to providing
10overlay-filesystem functionality in Linux (sometimes referred to as
11union-filesystems).  An overlay-filesystem tries to present a
12filesystem which is the result over overlaying one filesystem on top
13of the other.
14
15
16Overlay objects
17---------------
18
19The overlay filesystem approach is 'hybrid', because the objects that
20appear in the filesystem do not always appear to belong to that filesystem.
21In many cases, an object accessed in the union will be indistinguishable
22from accessing the corresponding object from the original filesystem.
23This is most obvious from the 'st_dev' field returned by stat(2).
24
25While directories will report an st_dev from the overlay-filesystem,
26non-directory objects may report an st_dev from the lower filesystem or
27upper filesystem that is providing the object.  Similarly st_ino will
28only be unique when combined with st_dev, and both of these can change
29over the lifetime of a non-directory object.  Many applications and
30tools ignore these values and will not be affected.
31
32In the special case of all overlay layers on the same underlying
33filesystem, all objects will report an st_dev from the overlay
34filesystem and st_ino from the underlying filesystem.  This will
35make the overlay mount more compliant with filesystem scanners and
36overlay objects will be distinguishable from the corresponding
37objects in the original filesystem.
38
39On 64bit systems, even if all overlay layers are not on the same
40underlying filesystem, the same compliant behavior could be achieved
41with the "xino" feature.  The "xino" feature composes a unique object
42identifier from the real object st_ino and an underlying fsid index.
43The "xino" feature uses the high inode number bits for fsid, because the
44underlying filesystems rarely use the high inode number bits.  In case
45the underlying inode number does overflow into the high xino bits, overlay
46filesystem will fall back to the non xino behavior for that inode.
47
48The "xino" feature can be enabled with the "-o xino=on" overlay mount option.
49If all underlying filesystems support NFS file handles, the value of st_ino
50for overlay filesystem objects is not only unique, but also persistent over
51the lifetime of the filesystem.  The "-o xino=auto" overlay mount option
52enables the "xino" feature only if the persistent st_ino requirement is met.
53
54The following table summarizes what can be expected in different overlay
55configurations.
56
57Inode properties
58````````````````
59
60+--------------+------------+------------+-----------------+----------------+
61|Configuration | Persistent | Uniform    | st_ino == d_ino | d_ino == i_ino |
62|              | st_ino     | st_dev     |                 | [*]            |
63+==============+=====+======+=====+======+========+========+========+=======+
64|              | dir | !dir | dir | !dir |  dir   +  !dir  |  dir   | !dir  |
65+--------------+-----+------+-----+------+--------+--------+--------+-------+
66| All layers   |  Y  |  Y   |  Y  |  Y   |  Y     |   Y    |  Y     |  Y    |
67| on same fs   |     |      |     |      |        |        |        |       |
68+--------------+-----+------+-----+------+--------+--------+--------+-------+
69| Layers not   |  N  |  N   |  Y  |  N   |  N     |   Y    |  N     |  Y    |
70| on same fs,  |     |      |     |      |        |        |        |       |
71| xino=off     |     |      |     |      |        |        |        |       |
72+--------------+-----+------+-----+------+--------+--------+--------+-------+
73| xino=on/auto |  Y  |  Y   |  Y  |  Y   |  Y     |   Y    |  Y     |  Y    |
74+--------------+-----+------+-----+------+--------+--------+--------+-------+
75| xino=on/auto,|  N  |  N   |  Y  |  N   |  N     |   Y    |  N     |  Y    |
76| ino overflow |     |      |     |      |        |        |        |       |
77+--------------+-----+------+-----+------+--------+--------+--------+-------+
78
79[*] nfsd v3 readdirplus verifies d_ino == i_ino. i_ino is exposed via several
80/proc files, such as /proc/locks and /proc/self/fdinfo/<fd> of an inotify
81file descriptor.
82
83Upper and Lower
84---------------
85
86An overlay filesystem combines two filesystems - an 'upper' filesystem
87and a 'lower' filesystem.  When a name exists in both filesystems, the
88object in the 'upper' filesystem is visible while the object in the
89'lower' filesystem is either hidden or, in the case of directories,
90merged with the 'upper' object.
91
92It would be more correct to refer to an upper and lower 'directory
93tree' rather than 'filesystem' as it is quite possible for both
94directory trees to be in the same filesystem and there is no
95requirement that the root of a filesystem be given for either upper or
96lower.
97
98A wide range of filesystems supported by Linux can be the lower filesystem,
99but not all filesystems that are mountable by Linux have the features
100needed for OverlayFS to work.  The lower filesystem does not need to be
101writable.  The lower filesystem can even be another overlayfs.  The upper
102filesystem will normally be writable and if it is it must support the
103creation of trusted.* and/or user.* extended attributes, and must provide
104valid d_type in readdir responses, so NFS is not suitable.
105
106A read-only overlay of two read-only filesystems may use any
107filesystem type.
108
109Directories
110-----------
111
112Overlaying mainly involves directories.  If a given name appears in both
113upper and lower filesystems and refers to a non-directory in either,
114then the lower object is hidden - the name refers only to the upper
115object.
116
117Where both upper and lower objects are directories, a merged directory
118is formed.
119
120At mount time, the two directories given as mount options "lowerdir" and
121"upperdir" are combined into a merged directory:
122
123  mount -t overlay overlay -olowerdir=/lower,upperdir=/upper,\
124  workdir=/work /merged
125
126The "workdir" needs to be an empty directory on the same filesystem
127as upperdir.
128
129Then whenever a lookup is requested in such a merged directory, the
130lookup is performed in each actual directory and the combined result
131is cached in the dentry belonging to the overlay filesystem.  If both
132actual lookups find directories, both are stored and a merged
133directory is created, otherwise only one is stored: the upper if it
134exists, else the lower.
135
136Only the lists of names from directories are merged.  Other content
137such as metadata and extended attributes are reported for the upper
138directory only.  These attributes of the lower directory are hidden.
139
140whiteouts and opaque directories
141--------------------------------
142
143In order to support rm and rmdir without changing the lower
144filesystem, an overlay filesystem needs to record in the upper filesystem
145that files have been removed.  This is done using whiteouts and opaque
146directories (non-directories are always opaque).
147
148A whiteout is created as a character device with 0/0 device number.
149When a whiteout is found in the upper level of a merged directory, any
150matching name in the lower level is ignored, and the whiteout itself
151is also hidden.
152
153A directory is made opaque by setting the xattr "trusted.overlay.opaque"
154to "y".  Where the upper filesystem contains an opaque directory, any
155directory in the lower filesystem with the same name is ignored.
156
157readdir
158-------
159
160When a 'readdir' request is made on a merged directory, the upper and
161lower directories are each read and the name lists merged in the
162obvious way (upper is read first, then lower - entries that already
163exist are not re-added).  This merged name list is cached in the
164'struct file' and so remains as long as the file is kept open.  If the
165directory is opened and read by two processes at the same time, they
166will each have separate caches.  A seekdir to the start of the
167directory (offset 0) followed by a readdir will cause the cache to be
168discarded and rebuilt.
169
170This means that changes to the merged directory do not appear while a
171directory is being read.  This is unlikely to be noticed by many
172programs.
173
174seek offsets are assigned sequentially when the directories are read.
175Thus if
176
177  - read part of a directory
178  - remember an offset, and close the directory
179  - re-open the directory some time later
180  - seek to the remembered offset
181
182there may be little correlation between the old and new locations in
183the list of filenames, particularly if anything has changed in the
184directory.
185
186Readdir on directories that are not merged is simply handled by the
187underlying directory (upper or lower).
188
189renaming directories
190--------------------
191
192When renaming a directory that is on the lower layer or merged (i.e. the
193directory was not created on the upper layer to start with) overlayfs can
194handle it in two different ways:
195
1961. return EXDEV error: this error is returned by rename(2) when trying to
197   move a file or directory across filesystem boundaries.  Hence
198   applications are usually prepared to handle this error (mv(1) for example
199   recursively copies the directory tree).  This is the default behavior.
200
2012. If the "redirect_dir" feature is enabled, then the directory will be
202   copied up (but not the contents).  Then the "trusted.overlay.redirect"
203   extended attribute is set to the path of the original location from the
204   root of the overlay.  Finally the directory is moved to the new
205   location.
206
207There are several ways to tune the "redirect_dir" feature.
208
209Kernel config options:
210
211- OVERLAY_FS_REDIRECT_DIR:
212    If this is enabled, then redirect_dir is turned on by  default.
213- OVERLAY_FS_REDIRECT_ALWAYS_FOLLOW:
214    If this is enabled, then redirects are always followed by default. Enabling
215    this results in a less secure configuration.  Enable this option only when
216    worried about backward compatibility with kernels that have the redirect_dir
217    feature and follow redirects even if turned off.
218
219Module options (can also be changed through /sys/module/overlay/parameters/):
220
221- "redirect_dir=BOOL":
222    See OVERLAY_FS_REDIRECT_DIR kernel config option above.
223- "redirect_always_follow=BOOL":
224    See OVERLAY_FS_REDIRECT_ALWAYS_FOLLOW kernel config option above.
225- "redirect_max=NUM":
226    The maximum number of bytes in an absolute redirect (default is 256).
227
228Mount options:
229
230- "redirect_dir=on":
231    Redirects are enabled.
232- "redirect_dir=follow":
233    Redirects are not created, but followed.
234- "redirect_dir=nofollow":
235    Redirects are not created and not followed.
236- "redirect_dir=off":
237    If "redirect_always_follow" is enabled in the kernel/module config,
238    this "off" translates to "follow", otherwise it translates to "nofollow".
239
240When the NFS export feature is enabled, every copied up directory is
241indexed by the file handle of the lower inode and a file handle of the
242upper directory is stored in a "trusted.overlay.upper" extended attribute
243on the index entry.  On lookup of a merged directory, if the upper
244directory does not match the file handle stores in the index, that is an
245indication that multiple upper directories may be redirected to the same
246lower directory.  In that case, lookup returns an error and warns about
247a possible inconsistency.
248
249Because lower layer redirects cannot be verified with the index, enabling
250NFS export support on an overlay filesystem with no upper layer requires
251turning off redirect follow (e.g. "redirect_dir=nofollow").
252
253
254Non-directories
255---------------
256
257Objects that are not directories (files, symlinks, device-special
258files etc.) are presented either from the upper or lower filesystem as
259appropriate.  When a file in the lower filesystem is accessed in a way
260the requires write-access, such as opening for write access, changing
261some metadata etc., the file is first copied from the lower filesystem
262to the upper filesystem (copy_up).  Note that creating a hard-link
263also requires copy_up, though of course creation of a symlink does
264not.
265
266The copy_up may turn out to be unnecessary, for example if the file is
267opened for read-write but the data is not modified.
268
269The copy_up process first makes sure that the containing directory
270exists in the upper filesystem - creating it and any parents as
271necessary.  It then creates the object with the same metadata (owner,
272mode, mtime, symlink-target etc.) and then if the object is a file, the
273data is copied from the lower to the upper filesystem.  Finally any
274extended attributes are copied up.
275
276Once the copy_up is complete, the overlay filesystem simply
277provides direct access to the newly created file in the upper
278filesystem - future operations on the file are barely noticed by the
279overlay filesystem (though an operation on the name of the file such as
280rename or unlink will of course be noticed and handled).
281
282
283Permission model
284----------------
285
286Permission checking in the overlay filesystem follows these principles:
287
288 1) permission check SHOULD return the same result before and after copy up
289
290 2) task creating the overlay mount MUST NOT gain additional privileges
291
292 3) non-mounting task MAY gain additional privileges through the overlay,
293 compared to direct access on underlying lower or upper filesystems
294
295This is achieved by performing two permission checks on each access
296
297 a) check if current task is allowed access based on local DAC (owner,
298    group, mode and posix acl), as well as MAC checks
299
300 b) check if mounting task would be allowed real operation on lower or
301    upper layer based on underlying filesystem permissions, again including
302    MAC checks
303
304Check (a) ensures consistency (1) since owner, group, mode and posix acls
305are copied up.  On the other hand it can result in server enforced
306permissions (used by NFS, for example) being ignored (3).
307
308Check (b) ensures that no task gains permissions to underlying layers that
309the mounting task does not have (2).  This also means that it is possible
310to create setups where the consistency rule (1) does not hold; normally,
311however, the mounting task will have sufficient privileges to perform all
312operations.
313
314Another way to demonstrate this model is drawing parallels between
315
316  mount -t overlay overlay -olowerdir=/lower,upperdir=/upper,... /merged
317
318and
319
320  cp -a /lower /upper
321  mount --bind /upper /merged
322
323The resulting access permissions should be the same.  The difference is in
324the time of copy (on-demand vs. up-front).
325
326
327Multiple lower layers
328---------------------
329
330Multiple lower layers can now be given using the colon (":") as a
331separator character between the directory names.  For example:
332
333  mount -t overlay overlay -olowerdir=/lower1:/lower2:/lower3 /merged
334
335As the example shows, "upperdir=" and "workdir=" may be omitted.  In
336that case the overlay will be read-only.
337
338The specified lower directories will be stacked beginning from the
339rightmost one and going left.  In the above example lower1 will be the
340top, lower2 the middle and lower3 the bottom layer.
341
342Note: directory names containing colons can be provided as lower layer by
343escaping the colons with a single backslash.  For example:
344
345  mount -t overlay overlay -olowerdir=/a\:lower\:\:dir /merged
346
347Since kernel version v6.5, directory names containing colons can also
348be provided as lower layer using the fsconfig syscall from new mount api:
349
350  fsconfig(fs_fd, FSCONFIG_SET_STRING, "lowerdir", "/a:lower::dir", 0);
351
352In the latter case, colons in lower layer directory names will be escaped
353as an octal characters (\072) when displayed in /proc/self/mountinfo.
354
355Metadata only copy up
356---------------------
357
358When metadata only copy up feature is enabled, overlayfs will only copy
359up metadata (as opposed to whole file), when a metadata specific operation
360like chown/chmod is performed. Full file will be copied up later when
361file is opened for WRITE operation.
362
363In other words, this is delayed data copy up operation and data is copied
364up when there is a need to actually modify data.
365
366There are multiple ways to enable/disable this feature. A config option
367CONFIG_OVERLAY_FS_METACOPY can be set/unset to enable/disable this feature
368by default. Or one can enable/disable it at module load time with module
369parameter metacopy=on/off. Lastly, there is also a per mount option
370metacopy=on/off to enable/disable this feature per mount.
371
372Do not use metacopy=on with untrusted upper/lower directories. Otherwise
373it is possible that an attacker can create a handcrafted file with
374appropriate REDIRECT and METACOPY xattrs, and gain access to file on lower
375pointed by REDIRECT. This should not be possible on local system as setting
376"trusted." xattrs will require CAP_SYS_ADMIN. But it should be possible
377for untrusted layers like from a pen drive.
378
379Note: redirect_dir={off|nofollow|follow[*]} and nfs_export=on mount options
380conflict with metacopy=on, and will result in an error.
381
382[*] redirect_dir=follow only conflicts with metacopy=on if upperdir=... is
383given.
384
385
386Data-only lower layers
387----------------------
388
389With "metacopy" feature enabled, an overlayfs regular file may be a composition
390of information from up to three different layers:
391
392 1) metadata from a file in the upper layer
393
394 2) st_ino and st_dev object identifier from a file in a lower layer
395
396 3) data from a file in another lower layer (further below)
397
398The "lower data" file can be on any lower layer, except from the top most
399lower layer.
400
401Below the top most lower layer, any number of lower most layers may be defined
402as "data-only" lower layers, using double colon ("::") separators.
403A normal lower layer is not allowed to be below a data-only layer, so single
404colon separators are not allowed to the right of double colon ("::") separators.
405
406
407For example:
408
409  mount -t overlay overlay -olowerdir=/l1:/l2:/l3::/do1::/do2 /merged
410
411The paths of files in the "data-only" lower layers are not visible in the
412merged overlayfs directories and the metadata and st_ino/st_dev of files
413in the "data-only" lower layers are not visible in overlayfs inodes.
414
415Only the data of the files in the "data-only" lower layers may be visible
416when a "metacopy" file in one of the lower layers above it, has a "redirect"
417to the absolute path of the "lower data" file in the "data-only" lower layer.
418
419
420fs-verity support
421----------------------
422
423During metadata copy up of a lower file, if the source file has
424fs-verity enabled and overlay verity support is enabled, then the
425digest of the lower file is added to the "trusted.overlay.metacopy"
426xattr. This is then used to verify the content of the lower file
427each the time the metacopy file is opened.
428
429When a layer containing verity xattrs is used, it means that any such
430metacopy file in the upper layer is guaranteed to match the content
431that was in the lower at the time of the copy-up. If at any time
432(during a mount, after a remount, etc) such a file in the lower is
433replaced or modified in any way, access to the corresponding file in
434overlayfs will result in EIO errors (either on open, due to overlayfs
435digest check, or from a later read due to fs-verity) and a detailed
436error is printed to the kernel logs. For more details of how fs-verity
437file access works, see :ref:`Documentation/filesystems/fsverity.rst
438<accessing_verity_files>`.
439
440Verity can be used as a general robustness check to detect accidental
441changes in the overlayfs directories in use. But, with additional care
442it can also give more powerful guarantees. For example, if the upper
443layer is fully trusted (by using dm-verity or something similar), then
444an untrusted lower layer can be used to supply validated file content
445for all metacopy files.  If additionally the untrusted lower
446directories are specified as "Data-only", then they can only supply
447such file content, and the entire mount can be trusted to match the
448upper layer.
449
450This feature is controlled by the "verity" mount option, which
451supports these values:
452
453- "off":
454    The metacopy digest is never generated or used. This is the
455    default if verity option is not specified.
456- "on":
457    Whenever a metacopy files specifies an expected digest, the
458    corresponding data file must match the specified digest. When
459    generating a metacopy file the verity digest will be set in it
460    based on the source file (if it has one).
461- "require":
462    Same as "on", but additionally all metacopy files must specify a
463    digest (or EIO is returned on open). This means metadata copy up
464    will only be used if the data file has fs-verity enabled,
465    otherwise a full copy-up is used.
466
467Sharing and copying layers
468--------------------------
469
470Lower layers may be shared among several overlay mounts and that is indeed
471a very common practice.  An overlay mount may use the same lower layer
472path as another overlay mount and it may use a lower layer path that is
473beneath or above the path of another overlay lower layer path.
474
475Using an upper layer path and/or a workdir path that are already used by
476another overlay mount is not allowed and may fail with EBUSY.  Using
477partially overlapping paths is not allowed and may fail with EBUSY.
478If files are accessed from two overlayfs mounts which share or overlap the
479upper layer and/or workdir path the behavior of the overlay is undefined,
480though it will not result in a crash or deadlock.
481
482Mounting an overlay using an upper layer path, where the upper layer path
483was previously used by another mounted overlay in combination with a
484different lower layer path, is allowed, unless the "inodes index" feature
485or "metadata only copy up" feature is enabled.
486
487With the "inodes index" feature, on the first time mount, an NFS file
488handle of the lower layer root directory, along with the UUID of the lower
489filesystem, are encoded and stored in the "trusted.overlay.origin" extended
490attribute on the upper layer root directory.  On subsequent mount attempts,
491the lower root directory file handle and lower filesystem UUID are compared
492to the stored origin in upper root directory.  On failure to verify the
493lower root origin, mount will fail with ESTALE.  An overlayfs mount with
494"inodes index" enabled will fail with EOPNOTSUPP if the lower filesystem
495does not support NFS export, lower filesystem does not have a valid UUID or
496if the upper filesystem does not support extended attributes.
497
498For "metadata only copy up" feature there is no verification mechanism at
499mount time. So if same upper is mounted with different set of lower, mount
500probably will succeed but expect the unexpected later on. So don't do it.
501
502It is quite a common practice to copy overlay layers to a different
503directory tree on the same or different underlying filesystem, and even
504to a different machine.  With the "inodes index" feature, trying to mount
505the copied layers will fail the verification of the lower root file handle.
506
507
508Non-standard behavior
509---------------------
510
511Current version of overlayfs can act as a mostly POSIX compliant
512filesystem.
513
514This is the list of cases that overlayfs doesn't currently handle:
515
516a) POSIX mandates updating st_atime for reads.  This is currently not
517done in the case when the file resides on a lower layer.
518
519b) If a file residing on a lower layer is opened for read-only and then
520memory mapped with MAP_SHARED, then subsequent changes to the file are not
521reflected in the memory mapping.
522
523c) If a file residing on a lower layer is being executed, then opening that
524file for write or truncating the file will not be denied with ETXTBSY.
525
526The following options allow overlayfs to act more like a standards
527compliant filesystem:
528
5291) "redirect_dir"
530
531Enabled with the mount option or module option: "redirect_dir=on" or with
532the kernel config option CONFIG_OVERLAY_FS_REDIRECT_DIR=y.
533
534If this feature is disabled, then rename(2) on a lower or merged directory
535will fail with EXDEV ("Invalid cross-device link").
536
5372) "inode index"
538
539Enabled with the mount option or module option "index=on" or with the
540kernel config option CONFIG_OVERLAY_FS_INDEX=y.
541
542If this feature is disabled and a file with multiple hard links is copied
543up, then this will "break" the link.  Changes will not be propagated to
544other names referring to the same inode.
545
5463) "xino"
547
548Enabled with the mount option "xino=auto" or "xino=on", with the module
549option "xino_auto=on" or with the kernel config option
550CONFIG_OVERLAY_FS_XINO_AUTO=y.  Also implicitly enabled by using the same
551underlying filesystem for all layers making up the overlay.
552
553If this feature is disabled or the underlying filesystem doesn't have
554enough free bits in the inode number, then overlayfs will not be able to
555guarantee that the values of st_ino and st_dev returned by stat(2) and the
556value of d_ino returned by readdir(3) will act like on a normal filesystem.
557E.g. the value of st_dev may be different for two objects in the same
558overlay filesystem and the value of st_ino for filesystem objects may not be
559persistent and could change even while the overlay filesystem is mounted, as
560summarized in the `Inode properties`_ table above.
561
562
563Changes to underlying filesystems
564---------------------------------
565
566Changes to the underlying filesystems while part of a mounted overlay
567filesystem are not allowed.  If the underlying filesystem is changed,
568the behavior of the overlay is undefined, though it will not result in
569a crash or deadlock.
570
571Offline changes, when the overlay is not mounted, are allowed to the
572upper tree.  Offline changes to the lower tree are only allowed if the
573"metadata only copy up", "inode index", "xino" and "redirect_dir" features
574have not been used.  If the lower tree is modified and any of these
575features has been used, the behavior of the overlay is undefined,
576though it will not result in a crash or deadlock.
577
578When the overlay NFS export feature is enabled, overlay filesystems
579behavior on offline changes of the underlying lower layer is different
580than the behavior when NFS export is disabled.
581
582On every copy_up, an NFS file handle of the lower inode, along with the
583UUID of the lower filesystem, are encoded and stored in an extended
584attribute "trusted.overlay.origin" on the upper inode.
585
586When the NFS export feature is enabled, a lookup of a merged directory,
587that found a lower directory at the lookup path or at the path pointed
588to by the "trusted.overlay.redirect" extended attribute, will verify
589that the found lower directory file handle and lower filesystem UUID
590match the origin file handle that was stored at copy_up time.  If a
591found lower directory does not match the stored origin, that directory
592will not be merged with the upper directory.
593
594
595
596NFS export
597----------
598
599When the underlying filesystems supports NFS export and the "nfs_export"
600feature is enabled, an overlay filesystem may be exported to NFS.
601
602With the "nfs_export" feature, on copy_up of any lower object, an index
603entry is created under the index directory.  The index entry name is the
604hexadecimal representation of the copy up origin file handle.  For a
605non-directory object, the index entry is a hard link to the upper inode.
606For a directory object, the index entry has an extended attribute
607"trusted.overlay.upper" with an encoded file handle of the upper
608directory inode.
609
610When encoding a file handle from an overlay filesystem object, the
611following rules apply:
612
6131. For a non-upper object, encode a lower file handle from lower inode
6142. For an indexed object, encode a lower file handle from copy_up origin
6153. For a pure-upper object and for an existing non-indexed upper object,
616   encode an upper file handle from upper inode
617
618The encoded overlay file handle includes:
619 - Header including path type information (e.g. lower/upper)
620 - UUID of the underlying filesystem
621 - Underlying filesystem encoding of underlying inode
622
623This encoding format is identical to the encoding format file handles that
624are stored in extended attribute "trusted.overlay.origin".
625
626When decoding an overlay file handle, the following steps are followed:
627
6281. Find underlying layer by UUID and path type information.
6292. Decode the underlying filesystem file handle to underlying dentry.
6303. For a lower file handle, lookup the handle in index directory by name.
6314. If a whiteout is found in index, return ESTALE. This represents an
632   overlay object that was deleted after its file handle was encoded.
6335. For a non-directory, instantiate a disconnected overlay dentry from the
634   decoded underlying dentry, the path type and index inode, if found.
6356. For a directory, use the connected underlying decoded dentry, path type
636   and index, to lookup a connected overlay dentry.
637
638Decoding a non-directory file handle may return a disconnected dentry.
639copy_up of that disconnected dentry will create an upper index entry with
640no upper alias.
641
642When overlay filesystem has multiple lower layers, a middle layer
643directory may have a "redirect" to lower directory.  Because middle layer
644"redirects" are not indexed, a lower file handle that was encoded from the
645"redirect" origin directory, cannot be used to find the middle or upper
646layer directory.  Similarly, a lower file handle that was encoded from a
647descendant of the "redirect" origin directory, cannot be used to
648reconstruct a connected overlay path.  To mitigate the cases of
649directories that cannot be decoded from a lower file handle, these
650directories are copied up on encode and encoded as an upper file handle.
651On an overlay filesystem with no upper layer this mitigation cannot be
652used NFS export in this setup requires turning off redirect follow (e.g.
653"redirect_dir=nofollow").
654
655The overlay filesystem does not support non-directory connectable file
656handles, so exporting with the 'subtree_check' exportfs configuration will
657cause failures to lookup files over NFS.
658
659When the NFS export feature is enabled, all directory index entries are
660verified on mount time to check that upper file handles are not stale.
661This verification may cause significant overhead in some cases.
662
663Note: the mount options index=off,nfs_export=on are conflicting for a
664read-write mount and will result in an error.
665
666Note: the mount option uuid=off can be used to replace UUID of the underlying
667filesystem in file handles with null, and effectively disable UUID checks. This
668can be useful in case the underlying disk is copied and the UUID of this copy
669is changed. This is only applicable if all lower/upper/work directories are on
670the same filesystem, otherwise it will fallback to normal behaviour.
671
672
673UUID and fsid
674-------------
675
676The UUID of overlayfs instance itself and the fsid reported by statfs(2) are
677controlled by the "uuid" mount option, which supports these values:
678
679- "null":
680    UUID of overlayfs is null. fsid is taken from upper most filesystem.
681- "off":
682    UUID of overlayfs is null. fsid is taken from upper most filesystem.
683    UUID of underlying layers is ignored.
684- "on":
685    UUID of overlayfs is generated and used to report a unique fsid.
686    UUID is stored in xattr "trusted.overlay.uuid", making overlayfs fsid
687    unique and persistent.  This option requires an overlayfs with upper
688    filesystem that supports xattrs.
689- "auto": (default)
690    UUID is taken from xattr "trusted.overlay.uuid" if it exists.
691    Upgrade to "uuid=on" on first time mount of new overlay filesystem that
692    meets the prerequites.
693    Downgrade to "uuid=null" for existing overlay filesystems that were never
694    mounted with "uuid=on".
695
696
697Volatile mount
698--------------
699
700This is enabled with the "volatile" mount option.  Volatile mounts are not
701guaranteed to survive a crash.  It is strongly recommended that volatile
702mounts are only used if data written to the overlay can be recreated
703without significant effort.
704
705The advantage of mounting with the "volatile" option is that all forms of
706sync calls to the upper filesystem are omitted.
707
708In order to avoid a giving a false sense of safety, the syncfs (and fsync)
709semantics of volatile mounts are slightly different than that of the rest of
710VFS.  If any writeback error occurs on the upperdir's filesystem after a
711volatile mount takes place, all sync functions will return an error.  Once this
712condition is reached, the filesystem will not recover, and every subsequent sync
713call will return an error, even if the upperdir has not experience a new error
714since the last sync call.
715
716When overlay is mounted with "volatile" option, the directory
717"$workdir/work/incompat/volatile" is created.  During next mount, overlay
718checks for this directory and refuses to mount if present. This is a strong
719indicator that user should throw away upper and work directories and create
720fresh one. In very limited cases where the user knows that the system has
721not crashed and contents of upperdir are intact, The "volatile" directory
722can be removed.
723
724
725User xattr
726----------
727
728The "-o userxattr" mount option forces overlayfs to use the
729"user.overlay." xattr namespace instead of "trusted.overlay.".  This is
730useful for unprivileged mounting of overlayfs.
731
732
733Testsuite
734---------
735
736There's a testsuite originally developed by David Howells and currently
737maintained by Amir Goldstein at:
738
739  https://github.com/amir73il/unionmount-testsuite.git
740
741Run as root:
742
743  # cd unionmount-testsuite
744  # ./run --ov --verify
745