Does that mean that all Fuse filesystems automatically gets this huge boost ?
In the beginning, only privileged ones will be allowed to run in pass-through mode. But goal/roadmap calls for all FUSE filesystems eventually to have this near-native performance.
I feel I should know this in my bones after so many years, but does 'privileged' in kernel context also include 'sudo/sudo su' elevated users ? I wonder if the kernel distinguish between pure root, and elevated user ..or if it even matters here ?
Anyway, this is cool. There's a ton of crazy file systems that just didn't pan out bc of speed issues. I'll just leave these links to filesystems.
https://github.com/libfuse/libfuse/wiki/Filesystems A ton of cool ideas!.. I need my AI to have access via fuse. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem_in_Userspace?lang=en less crazy systems but probably stable projects
Thanks for sharing the info!
How would the update affect stuff like a GoCryptFS volume which I mount and use periodically but not all the time? Would those files be processed much faster than previously?
Note: Android kernel has had this since 12 because FUSE is used to enforce permissions and to emulate legacy storage types.
https://source.android.com/docs/core/storage/fuse-passthrough
From the patch back in 2016:
There is also a significant cpu/power savings that is achieved which is really important on embedded systems that use fuse for I/O.
The website doesn't open with cookies disabled. That's kinda sus. Also the kernel version number is sus. I suppose the OP is an imp
Not sure what called for this blatant personal attack. My post history speaks for itself, quite in comparison to yours. And Phoronix is well-known Linux website, and its test suite is in fact even referenced in various regression tests/patches in LKML (also not sure what/if any kind of kernel development you have done).
Mister, I was joking. The website is indeed sus (and the popularity is not a good defense for it) but it doesn't mean you are. It's just an interesting coincidence of a sus website and a sus number. That's it
Well, if you have a constructive suggestion which site to link instead regarding kernel developments, I am all ears:
- Not sure that raw commits are readable or have sufficient context for non kernel development readers here
- LWN, particularly timely/kernel development news there, has gone mostly paywall, and there will be (legitimate) complaint if I link articles needing a LWN subscription
Well since kernel development is one of the harder topics in the whole IT industry, it's understandable that the websites that make news about it do need to use privacy invasive ways to earn money (whether it's a paywall or an extremely invasive data collection) because the audience is stable and extremely small. But it does not make them safe in any way. They're still sus in terms of privacy (which is what I meant). I'm far far away from anything like kernel development so I can't suggest anything related to it unfortunately. I think it will be the best choice to admit that my sense of humour, as well as my communication abilities, is far from being decent enough not to create misunderstandings, suspicions and double meanings like in this case, and end this discussion. Almost all the arguments on the internet only spread hate and aggression anyways and I don't want that (you were not aggressive though)