Jaroslav Sykora wrote:If I understand your problem, you wish to treat an archive file as if it was a directory. Thus, in the ideal situation, you could do the following: cat hello.zip/hello.c gcc hello.zip/hello.c -o hello etc.. Rather than complicate matters with a second tree, use FUSE with an explicit directory. For example, ~/expand could be your shadow, thus to compile hello.c from ~/hello.zip: gcc ~/expand/hello.zip^/hello.c -o hello I think no kernel change would be required. I'm not keen on the caret. One of the early claims made in http://lwn.net/Articles/100148/ is: The claim is wrong. UNIX systems have traditionally allowed the superuser to create hard links to directories. See link(2) for 2.10BSD <http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=link&sektion=2&manpath=2.10+BSD>. Having got that wrong throws doubt on the argument; perhaps a path can simultaneously be a file and a directory. -
| Greg KH | [RFC] sample kobject implementation |
| Greg Kroah-Hartman | [PATCH 001/196] Chinese: Add the known_regression URI to the HOWTO |
| Paul E. McKenney | [PATCH RFC 2/9] RCU: Fix barriers |
| Joe Perches | [PATCH 011/148] include/asm-x86/bug.h: checkpatch cleanups - formatting only |
git: | |
| Jarek Poplawski | [PATCH] pkt_sched: Destroy gen estimators under rtnl_lock(). |
| Gerrit Renker | [PATCH 15/37] dccp: Set per-connection CCIDs via socket options |
| Linus Torvalds | Re: [GIT]: Networking |
| Jeff Garzik | Re: [PATCH] drivers/net: remove network drivers' last few uses of IRQF_SAMPLE_RANDOM |
