int i;
for (i = 0, hash = 0; i < name->len; i++)
- hash = tolower(name->name[i]) ^ rol32(hash, 7);
+ hash = xfs_ascii_ci_xfrm(name->name[i]) ^ rol32(hash, 7);
return hash;
}
for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
if (args->name[i] == name[i])
continue;
- if (tolower(args->name[i]) != tolower(name[i]))
+ if (xfs_ascii_ci_xfrm(args->name[i]) !=
+ xfs_ascii_ci_xfrm(name[i]))
return XFS_CMP_DIFFERENT;
result = XFS_CMP_CASE;
}
struct xfs_dir2_data_hdr *hdr);
bool xfs_dir2_namecheck(const void *name, size_t length);
+/*
+ * The "ascii-ci" feature was created to speed up case-insensitive lookups for
+ * a Samba product. Because of the inherent problems with CI and UTF-8
+ * encoding, etc, it was decided that Samba would be configured to export
+ * latin1/iso 8859-1 encodings as that covered >90% of the target markets for
+ * the product. Hence the "ascii-ci" casefolding code could be encoded into
+ * the XFS directory operations and remove all the overhead of casefolding from
+ * Samba.
+ *
+ * To provide consistent hashing behavior between the userspace and kernel,
+ * these functions prepare names for hashing by transforming specific bytes
+ * to other bytes. Robustness with other encodings is not guaranteed.
+ */
+static inline bool xfs_ascii_ci_need_xfrm(unsigned char c)
+{
+ if (c >= 0x41 && c <= 0x5a) /* A-Z */
+ return true;
+ if (c >= 0xc0 && c <= 0xd6) /* latin A-O with accents */
+ return true;
+ if (c >= 0xd8 && c <= 0xde) /* latin O-Y with accents */
+ return true;
+ return false;
+}
+
+static inline unsigned char xfs_ascii_ci_xfrm(unsigned char c)
+{
+ if (xfs_ascii_ci_need_xfrm(c))
+ c -= 'A' - 'a';
+ return c;
+}
+
#endif /* __XFS_DIR2_H__ */