Note that items with (!) have high priority. lscpu ----- - detect more hypervisors, see 'virt-what' shell script http://people.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-what/ losetup ------- - add new option --list and --output to print details about one or all (-a) devices by lib/tt.c output. For example people hate the hex devno in the default output. dmesg ----- - add --color to colorize err and panic messages hwclock ------- - (!!!) add "hwclock -c|--compare" to provide info about RTC frequency offset like "adjtimex -c", shell version: #!/bin/bash date > /dev/null hwdate=$(hwclock -r) time1_sys=$(date +'%s.%N') time1_hw=$(date -d "${hwdate% -*}" +'%s') while sleep 10; do hwdate=$(hwclock -r) time2_sys=$(date +'%s.%N') time2_hw=$(date -d "${hwdate% -*}" +'%s') awk "END { x = (($time1_hw - $time1_sys) - ($time2_hw - $time2_sys)) / ($time2_hw - $time1_hw); printf \"sysclock/RTC frequency offset: %.0f ppm (%.0f ticks)\n\", x * 1e6, x * 1e4}" < /dev/null done minix (fsck, mkfs) ------------------ - clean up types -- use ino_t, size_t and ssize_t libmount (mount/umount) ----------------------- Note that the old mount/[u]mount.c code is in MAINTENANCE MODE only. All new features should be implemented to libmount or to the new sys-utils/{mount,umount}.c utils. - add options to control fstab/mtab mount options usage, something like: --options-mode={ignore,append,prepend,replace} MNT_OMODE_{IGNORE, ...} --options-source={fstab,mtab,disable} MNT_OMODE_{FSTAB,MTAB,NOTAB} --options-source-force MNT_OMODE_FORCE (all this already supported by libmount) - add x-mount-mkdir mount option to libmount to allow "mkdir /mountpoint" - support MS_PROPAGATION flags in fstab -- note that kernel assumes that these flags are not mixed with another mount flags, it means that: /dev/sda1 /mnt/foo auto ro,shared has be implemented by two syscalls: mount("/dev/sda1", "/mnt/foo", "ext4", MS_RDONLY, NULL); mount(NULL, "/mnt/foo", "none", MS_REMOUNT|MS_SHARED, NULL); yeah, there is race ;-( - (!) on systems with regular mtab file it is impossible to umount by "umount /dev/loop0" if the loop device has been created by "mount -o loop", because there is backing file in the mtab (instead of the device name). Now we have all necessary information in /sysfs so it should be possible to translate the device name to backing file and then search in mtab for the filename. See loopdev_get_loopfile(). - add ---target-prefix option to specify prefix for mountpoints so then you can mount --fstab=/etc/fstab.sandbox -a --target-prefix=/mnt/sandbox to create a new hierarchy of filesystems at sandbox - umount by label: # mount LABEL=mylabel # umount LABEL=mylabel libblkd and libmount -------------------- - use __attribute__((notnull)) and __attribute__((warn_unused_result)) Note that the code has to be useful for non-gcc compilers too. partx ----- - support mapping by device-mapper if argv[0] is "kpartx" or --dm option is used. - (!) add regression tests for partx, addpart and delpart docs ---- - (!) use something better than gtk-doc for libmount and libblkid (doxyden?) - (!) add API documentation to libuuid lib/tt.c -------- - allows to sort columns, for example sort lsblk(8) output by SIZE login-utils: ----------- - (!) merge newgrp from shadow-utils libblkid -------- - improve DBG() debug macro, see new imeplemntation in libmount/src/mountP.h - (!) don't use internally blkid_loff_t, rather use off_t, size_t, ssize_t, stdint.h types and so on... - add FSSIZE value -- filesystem size (klibc requirement) - (!) add support for dasd PT (used for example on s390) fdisk(s) -------- - add to "First sector" dialog a line with information about available gaps (free areas) to make it more user friendly if you want to skip any useless (small) areas between existing partitions. See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=715114 - add "move end" command to move end of the last primary/extended partition. This feature seems very attractive to users who resizing their disks (for example in virtual machines). - sfdisk rounds to cylinders is -uM (megabyte units) is specified, this is pretty stupid feature. It has to round to sectors if -uS or -uM is specified. - Sun label support is completely useless for large disks, it uses number of cylinders from on-disk-label where the geometry is stored by int16 values. It seems better to completely ignore this stuff from the label and always use geometry + BLKGETSIZE64 from kernel. - use off_t instead "long long" - catch SIGINT (Ctrl-C) and return to main menu. From Red Hat bugzilla #545488: While using fdisk normally, if you accidentally pressed the wrong button (to start a sequence of questions for some operation, e.g. 'c' to create partition). The tool tries too hard to keep asking you for valid input. You can't provide a blank or invalid input to get it to break out of the current dialog sequence and get back to the main menu. - fdisk/* refactoring (probably implement libfdisk ???) - add GPT support (probably implement libfdisk ???) misc ---- - switch_root: - move all mountpoints to the newroot (there are hardcoded /proc /sys and /dev paths now) - add --dont-move[=] options - use TZ=UTC - add mllockall() and SCHED_FIFO to hwclock, see http://lkml.org/lkml/2008/10/12/132 - (!) rewrite ipcs to use /proc/sys/kernel rather than unreliable syscalls (there are problems with 32bit userspace on 64bit kernel) --------------- exotic requests --------------- - mount -a -- reorder fstab entries by paths before mount (just idea only) - mount -a (just idea only) Date: Sun, 3 Jun 2007 18:04:24 +0300 (MET DST) From: Szabolcs Szakacsits In the past the right record order could be figured out easily by just checking out fstab (if one knew what to look for) but considering the fastly increasing number of user space file systems and their usage, with their path, library, etc dependencies, it's getting trickier and is a black magic for most users because they simply expect drives to be mounted independently of their order in fstab. One typical, wrongly edited fstab example is: /dev/hda2 / ext3 defaults 1 1 /dev/hda1 /mnt/windows ntfs-3g defaults 0 0 /dev/hda3 /usr ext3 defaults 0 0 The events: mount -> /sbin/mount.ntfs-3g -> -> resolves to /ntfs-3g via a symlink -> -> ntfs-3g requires at least /libfuse* There are many potential solutions. For example installing everything on the root file system which may be needed for successful mount. But this is not always feasible or practical since we could end up putting almost everything on the root file system in the end. Another idea is an improved mount strategy: do { try to mount all unmounted entries } while (not all mounted && at least one new was successfully mounted) - add SELinux security contexts support to the 'ipcs' utility http://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=225342 Would be great to list the current system IPC Objects with their respective security labels (where allowed) with something like 'ipcs -Z' - following the way other tools reports those.