| David Howells | 9ae326a | 2009-04-03 16:42:41 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | 	       =============================================== | 
 | 2 | 	       CacheFiles: CACHE ON ALREADY MOUNTED FILESYSTEM | 
 | 3 | 	       =============================================== | 
 | 4 |  | 
 | 5 | Contents: | 
 | 6 |  | 
 | 7 |  (*) Overview. | 
 | 8 |  | 
 | 9 |  (*) Requirements. | 
 | 10 |  | 
 | 11 |  (*) Configuration. | 
 | 12 |  | 
 | 13 |  (*) Starting the cache. | 
 | 14 |  | 
 | 15 |  (*) Things to avoid. | 
 | 16 |  | 
 | 17 |  (*) Cache culling. | 
 | 18 |  | 
 | 19 |  (*) Cache structure. | 
 | 20 |  | 
 | 21 |  (*) Security model and SELinux. | 
 | 22 |  | 
 | 23 |  (*) A note on security. | 
 | 24 |  | 
 | 25 |  (*) Statistical information. | 
 | 26 |  | 
 | 27 |  (*) Debugging. | 
 | 28 |  | 
 | 29 |  | 
 | 30 | ======== | 
 | 31 | OVERVIEW | 
 | 32 | ======== | 
 | 33 |  | 
 | 34 | CacheFiles is a caching backend that's meant to use as a cache a directory on | 
 | 35 | an already mounted filesystem of a local type (such as Ext3). | 
 | 36 |  | 
 | 37 | CacheFiles uses a userspace daemon to do some of the cache management - such as | 
 | 38 | reaping stale nodes and culling.  This is called cachefilesd and lives in | 
 | 39 | /sbin. | 
 | 40 |  | 
 | 41 | The filesystem and data integrity of the cache are only as good as those of the | 
 | 42 | filesystem providing the backing services.  Note that CacheFiles does not | 
 | 43 | attempt to journal anything since the journalling interfaces of the various | 
 | 44 | filesystems are very specific in nature. | 
 | 45 |  | 
 | 46 | CacheFiles creates a misc character device - "/dev/cachefiles" - that is used | 
 | 47 | to communication with the daemon.  Only one thing may have this open at once, | 
 | 48 | and whilst it is open, a cache is at least partially in existence.  The daemon | 
 | 49 | opens this and sends commands down it to control the cache. | 
 | 50 |  | 
 | 51 | CacheFiles is currently limited to a single cache. | 
 | 52 |  | 
 | 53 | CacheFiles attempts to maintain at least a certain percentage of free space on | 
 | 54 | the filesystem, shrinking the cache by culling the objects it contains to make | 
 | 55 | space if necessary - see the "Cache Culling" section.  This means it can be | 
 | 56 | placed on the same medium as a live set of data, and will expand to make use of | 
 | 57 | spare space and automatically contract when the set of data requires more | 
 | 58 | space. | 
 | 59 |  | 
 | 60 |  | 
 | 61 | ============ | 
 | 62 | REQUIREMENTS | 
 | 63 | ============ | 
 | 64 |  | 
 | 65 | The use of CacheFiles and its daemon requires the following features to be | 
 | 66 | available in the system and in the cache filesystem: | 
 | 67 |  | 
 | 68 | 	- dnotify. | 
 | 69 |  | 
 | 70 | 	- extended attributes (xattrs). | 
 | 71 |  | 
 | 72 | 	- openat() and friends. | 
 | 73 |  | 
 | 74 | 	- bmap() support on files in the filesystem (FIBMAP ioctl). | 
 | 75 |  | 
 | 76 | 	- The use of bmap() to detect a partial page at the end of the file. | 
 | 77 |  | 
 | 78 | It is strongly recommended that the "dir_index" option is enabled on Ext3 | 
 | 79 | filesystems being used as a cache. | 
 | 80 |  | 
 | 81 |  | 
 | 82 | ============= | 
 | 83 | CONFIGURATION | 
 | 84 | ============= | 
 | 85 |  | 
 | 86 | The cache is configured by a script in /etc/cachefilesd.conf.  These commands | 
 | 87 | set up cache ready for use.  The following script commands are available: | 
 | 88 |  | 
 | 89 |  (*) brun <N>% | 
 | 90 |  (*) bcull <N>% | 
 | 91 |  (*) bstop <N>% | 
 | 92 |  (*) frun <N>% | 
 | 93 |  (*) fcull <N>% | 
 | 94 |  (*) fstop <N>% | 
 | 95 |  | 
 | 96 | 	Configure the culling limits.  Optional.  See the section on culling | 
 | 97 | 	The defaults are 7% (run), 5% (cull) and 1% (stop) respectively. | 
 | 98 |  | 
 | 99 | 	The commands beginning with a 'b' are file space (block) limits, those | 
 | 100 | 	beginning with an 'f' are file count limits. | 
 | 101 |  | 
 | 102 |  (*) dir <path> | 
 | 103 |  | 
 | 104 | 	Specify the directory containing the root of the cache.  Mandatory. | 
 | 105 |  | 
 | 106 |  (*) tag <name> | 
 | 107 |  | 
 | 108 | 	Specify a tag to FS-Cache to use in distinguishing multiple caches. | 
 | 109 | 	Optional.  The default is "CacheFiles". | 
 | 110 |  | 
 | 111 |  (*) debug <mask> | 
 | 112 |  | 
 | 113 | 	Specify a numeric bitmask to control debugging in the kernel module. | 
 | 114 | 	Optional.  The default is zero (all off).  The following values can be | 
 | 115 | 	OR'd into the mask to collect various information: | 
 | 116 |  | 
 | 117 | 		1	Turn on trace of function entry (_enter() macros) | 
 | 118 | 		2	Turn on trace of function exit (_leave() macros) | 
 | 119 | 		4	Turn on trace of internal debug points (_debug()) | 
 | 120 |  | 
 | 121 | 	This mask can also be set through sysfs, eg: | 
 | 122 |  | 
 | 123 | 		echo 5 >/sys/modules/cachefiles/parameters/debug | 
 | 124 |  | 
 | 125 |  | 
 | 126 | ================== | 
 | 127 | STARTING THE CACHE | 
 | 128 | ================== | 
 | 129 |  | 
 | 130 | The cache is started by running the daemon.  The daemon opens the cache device, | 
 | 131 | configures the cache and tells it to begin caching.  At that point the cache | 
 | 132 | binds to fscache and the cache becomes live. | 
 | 133 |  | 
 | 134 | The daemon is run as follows: | 
 | 135 |  | 
 | 136 | 	/sbin/cachefilesd [-d]* [-s] [-n] [-f <configfile>] | 
 | 137 |  | 
 | 138 | The flags are: | 
 | 139 |  | 
 | 140 |  (*) -d | 
 | 141 |  | 
 | 142 | 	Increase the debugging level.  This can be specified multiple times and | 
 | 143 | 	is cumulative with itself. | 
 | 144 |  | 
 | 145 |  (*) -s | 
 | 146 |  | 
 | 147 | 	Send messages to stderr instead of syslog. | 
 | 148 |  | 
 | 149 |  (*) -n | 
 | 150 |  | 
 | 151 | 	Don't daemonise and go into background. | 
 | 152 |  | 
 | 153 |  (*) -f <configfile> | 
 | 154 |  | 
 | 155 | 	Use an alternative configuration file rather than the default one. | 
 | 156 |  | 
 | 157 |  | 
 | 158 | =============== | 
 | 159 | THINGS TO AVOID | 
 | 160 | =============== | 
 | 161 |  | 
 | 162 | Do not mount other things within the cache as this will cause problems.  The | 
 | 163 | kernel module contains its own very cut-down path walking facility that ignores | 
 | 164 | mountpoints, but the daemon can't avoid them. | 
 | 165 |  | 
 | 166 | Do not create, rename or unlink files and directories in the cache whilst the | 
 | 167 | cache is active, as this may cause the state to become uncertain. | 
 | 168 |  | 
 | 169 | Renaming files in the cache might make objects appear to be other objects (the | 
 | 170 | filename is part of the lookup key). | 
 | 171 |  | 
 | 172 | Do not change or remove the extended attributes attached to cache files by the | 
 | 173 | cache as this will cause the cache state management to get confused. | 
 | 174 |  | 
 | 175 | Do not create files or directories in the cache, lest the cache get confused or | 
 | 176 | serve incorrect data. | 
 | 177 |  | 
 | 178 | Do not chmod files in the cache.  The module creates things with minimal | 
 | 179 | permissions to prevent random users being able to access them directly. | 
 | 180 |  | 
 | 181 |  | 
 | 182 | ============= | 
 | 183 | CACHE CULLING | 
 | 184 | ============= | 
 | 185 |  | 
 | 186 | The cache may need culling occasionally to make space.  This involves | 
 | 187 | discarding objects from the cache that have been used less recently than | 
 | 188 | anything else.  Culling is based on the access time of data objects.  Empty | 
 | 189 | directories are culled if not in use. | 
 | 190 |  | 
 | 191 | Cache culling is done on the basis of the percentage of blocks and the | 
 | 192 | percentage of files available in the underlying filesystem.  There are six | 
 | 193 | "limits": | 
 | 194 |  | 
 | 195 |  (*) brun | 
 | 196 |  (*) frun | 
 | 197 |  | 
 | 198 |      If the amount of free space and the number of available files in the cache | 
 | 199 |      rises above both these limits, then culling is turned off. | 
 | 200 |  | 
 | 201 |  (*) bcull | 
 | 202 |  (*) fcull | 
 | 203 |  | 
 | 204 |      If the amount of available space or the number of available files in the | 
 | 205 |      cache falls below either of these limits, then culling is started. | 
 | 206 |  | 
 | 207 |  (*) bstop | 
 | 208 |  (*) fstop | 
 | 209 |  | 
 | 210 |      If the amount of available space or the number of available files in the | 
 | 211 |      cache falls below either of these limits, then no further allocation of | 
 | 212 |      disk space or files is permitted until culling has raised things above | 
 | 213 |      these limits again. | 
 | 214 |  | 
 | 215 | These must be configured thusly: | 
 | 216 |  | 
 | 217 | 	0 <= bstop < bcull < brun < 100 | 
 | 218 | 	0 <= fstop < fcull < frun < 100 | 
 | 219 |  | 
 | 220 | Note that these are percentages of available space and available files, and do | 
 | 221 | _not_ appear as 100 minus the percentage displayed by the "df" program. | 
 | 222 |  | 
 | 223 | The userspace daemon scans the cache to build up a table of cullable objects. | 
 | 224 | These are then culled in least recently used order.  A new scan of the cache is | 
 | 225 | started as soon as space is made in the table.  Objects will be skipped if | 
 | 226 | their atimes have changed or if the kernel module says it is still using them. | 
 | 227 |  | 
 | 228 |  | 
 | 229 | =============== | 
 | 230 | CACHE STRUCTURE | 
 | 231 | =============== | 
 | 232 |  | 
 | 233 | The CacheFiles module will create two directories in the directory it was | 
 | 234 | given: | 
 | 235 |  | 
 | 236 |  (*) cache/ | 
 | 237 |  | 
 | 238 |  (*) graveyard/ | 
 | 239 |  | 
 | 240 | The active cache objects all reside in the first directory.  The CacheFiles | 
 | 241 | kernel module moves any retired or culled objects that it can't simply unlink | 
 | 242 | to the graveyard from which the daemon will actually delete them. | 
 | 243 |  | 
 | 244 | The daemon uses dnotify to monitor the graveyard directory, and will delete | 
 | 245 | anything that appears therein. | 
 | 246 |  | 
 | 247 |  | 
 | 248 | The module represents index objects as directories with the filename "I..." or | 
 | 249 | "J...".  Note that the "cache/" directory is itself a special index. | 
 | 250 |  | 
 | 251 | Data objects are represented as files if they have no children, or directories | 
 | 252 | if they do.  Their filenames all begin "D..." or "E...".  If represented as a | 
 | 253 | directory, data objects will have a file in the directory called "data" that | 
 | 254 | actually holds the data. | 
 | 255 |  | 
 | 256 | Special objects are similar to data objects, except their filenames begin | 
 | 257 | "S..." or "T...". | 
 | 258 |  | 
 | 259 |  | 
 | 260 | If an object has children, then it will be represented as a directory. | 
 | 261 | Immediately in the representative directory are a collection of directories | 
 | 262 | named for hash values of the child object keys with an '@' prepended.  Into | 
 | 263 | this directory, if possible, will be placed the representations of the child | 
 | 264 | objects: | 
 | 265 |  | 
 | 266 | 	INDEX     INDEX      INDEX                             DATA FILES | 
 | 267 | 	========= ========== ================================= ================ | 
 | 268 | 	cache/@4a/I03nfs/@30/Ji000000000000000--fHg8hi8400 | 
 | 269 | 	cache/@4a/I03nfs/@30/Ji000000000000000--fHg8hi8400/@75/Es0g000w...DB1ry | 
 | 270 | 	cache/@4a/I03nfs/@30/Ji000000000000000--fHg8hi8400/@75/Es0g000w...N22ry | 
 | 271 | 	cache/@4a/I03nfs/@30/Ji000000000000000--fHg8hi8400/@75/Es0g000w...FP1ry | 
 | 272 |  | 
 | 273 |  | 
 | 274 | If the key is so long that it exceeds NAME_MAX with the decorations added on to | 
 | 275 | it, then it will be cut into pieces, the first few of which will be used to | 
 | 276 | make a nest of directories, and the last one of which will be the objects | 
 | 277 | inside the last directory.  The names of the intermediate directories will have | 
 | 278 | '+' prepended: | 
 | 279 |  | 
 | 280 | 	J1223/@23/+xy...z/+kl...m/Epqr | 
 | 281 |  | 
 | 282 |  | 
 | 283 | Note that keys are raw data, and not only may they exceed NAME_MAX in size, | 
 | 284 | they may also contain things like '/' and NUL characters, and so they may not | 
 | 285 | be suitable for turning directly into a filename. | 
 | 286 |  | 
 | 287 | To handle this, CacheFiles will use a suitably printable filename directly and | 
 | 288 | "base-64" encode ones that aren't directly suitable.  The two versions of | 
 | 289 | object filenames indicate the encoding: | 
 | 290 |  | 
 | 291 | 	OBJECT TYPE	PRINTABLE	ENCODED | 
 | 292 | 	===============	===============	=============== | 
 | 293 | 	Index		"I..."		"J..." | 
 | 294 | 	Data		"D..."		"E..." | 
 | 295 | 	Special		"S..."		"T..." | 
 | 296 |  | 
 | 297 | Intermediate directories are always "@" or "+" as appropriate. | 
 | 298 |  | 
 | 299 |  | 
 | 300 | Each object in the cache has an extended attribute label that holds the object | 
 | 301 | type ID (required to distinguish special objects) and the auxiliary data from | 
 | 302 | the netfs.  The latter is used to detect stale objects in the cache and update | 
 | 303 | or retire them. | 
 | 304 |  | 
 | 305 |  | 
 | 306 | Note that CacheFiles will erase from the cache any file it doesn't recognise or | 
 | 307 | any file of an incorrect type (such as a FIFO file or a device file). | 
 | 308 |  | 
 | 309 |  | 
 | 310 | ========================== | 
 | 311 | SECURITY MODEL AND SELINUX | 
 | 312 | ========================== | 
 | 313 |  | 
 | 314 | CacheFiles is implemented to deal properly with the LSM security features of | 
 | 315 | the Linux kernel and the SELinux facility. | 
 | 316 |  | 
 | 317 | One of the problems that CacheFiles faces is that it is generally acting on | 
 | 318 | behalf of a process, and running in that process's context, and that includes a | 
 | 319 | security context that is not appropriate for accessing the cache - either | 
 | 320 | because the files in the cache are inaccessible to that process, or because if | 
 | 321 | the process creates a file in the cache, that file may be inaccessible to other | 
 | 322 | processes. | 
 | 323 |  | 
 | 324 | The way CacheFiles works is to temporarily change the security context (fsuid, | 
 | 325 | fsgid and actor security label) that the process acts as - without changing the | 
 | 326 | security context of the process when it the target of an operation performed by | 
 | 327 | some other process (so signalling and suchlike still work correctly). | 
 | 328 |  | 
 | 329 |  | 
 | 330 | When the CacheFiles module is asked to bind to its cache, it: | 
 | 331 |  | 
 | 332 |  (1) Finds the security label attached to the root cache directory and uses | 
 | 333 |      that as the security label with which it will create files.  By default, | 
 | 334 |      this is: | 
 | 335 |  | 
 | 336 | 	cachefiles_var_t | 
 | 337 |  | 
 | 338 |  (2) Finds the security label of the process which issued the bind request | 
 | 339 |      (presumed to be the cachefilesd daemon), which by default will be: | 
 | 340 |  | 
 | 341 | 	cachefilesd_t | 
 | 342 |  | 
 | 343 |      and asks LSM to supply a security ID as which it should act given the | 
 | 344 |      daemon's label.  By default, this will be: | 
 | 345 |  | 
 | 346 | 	cachefiles_kernel_t | 
 | 347 |  | 
 | 348 |      SELinux transitions the daemon's security ID to the module's security ID | 
 | 349 |      based on a rule of this form in the policy. | 
 | 350 |  | 
 | 351 | 	type_transition <daemon's-ID> kernel_t : process <module's-ID>; | 
 | 352 |  | 
 | 353 |      For instance: | 
 | 354 |  | 
 | 355 | 	type_transition cachefilesd_t kernel_t : process cachefiles_kernel_t; | 
 | 356 |  | 
 | 357 |  | 
 | 358 | The module's security ID gives it permission to create, move and remove files | 
 | 359 | and directories in the cache, to find and access directories and files in the | 
 | 360 | cache, to set and access extended attributes on cache objects, and to read and | 
 | 361 | write files in the cache. | 
 | 362 |  | 
 | 363 | The daemon's security ID gives it only a very restricted set of permissions: it | 
 | 364 | may scan directories, stat files and erase files and directories.  It may | 
 | 365 | not read or write files in the cache, and so it is precluded from accessing the | 
 | 366 | data cached therein; nor is it permitted to create new files in the cache. | 
 | 367 |  | 
 | 368 |  | 
 | 369 | There are policy source files available in: | 
 | 370 |  | 
 | 371 | 	http://people.redhat.com/~dhowells/fscache/cachefilesd-0.8.tar.bz2 | 
 | 372 |  | 
 | 373 | and later versions.  In that tarball, see the files: | 
 | 374 |  | 
 | 375 | 	cachefilesd.te | 
 | 376 | 	cachefilesd.fc | 
 | 377 | 	cachefilesd.if | 
 | 378 |  | 
 | 379 | They are built and installed directly by the RPM. | 
 | 380 |  | 
 | 381 | If a non-RPM based system is being used, then copy the above files to their own | 
 | 382 | directory and run: | 
 | 383 |  | 
 | 384 | 	make -f /usr/share/selinux/devel/Makefile | 
 | 385 | 	semodule -i cachefilesd.pp | 
 | 386 |  | 
 | 387 | You will need checkpolicy and selinux-policy-devel installed prior to the | 
 | 388 | build. | 
 | 389 |  | 
 | 390 |  | 
 | 391 | By default, the cache is located in /var/fscache, but if it is desirable that | 
 | 392 | it should be elsewhere, than either the above policy files must be altered, or | 
 | 393 | an auxiliary policy must be installed to label the alternate location of the | 
 | 394 | cache. | 
 | 395 |  | 
 | 396 | For instructions on how to add an auxiliary policy to enable the cache to be | 
 | 397 | located elsewhere when SELinux is in enforcing mode, please see: | 
 | 398 |  | 
 | 399 | 	/usr/share/doc/cachefilesd-*/move-cache.txt | 
 | 400 |  | 
 | 401 | When the cachefilesd rpm is installed; alternatively, the document can be found | 
 | 402 | in the sources. | 
 | 403 |  | 
 | 404 |  | 
 | 405 | ================== | 
 | 406 | A NOTE ON SECURITY | 
 | 407 | ================== | 
 | 408 |  | 
 | 409 | CacheFiles makes use of the split security in the task_struct.  It allocates | 
| Marc Dionne | 91ac033 | 2009-04-23 11:21:55 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 410 | its own task_security structure, and redirects current->cred to point to it | 
| David Howells | 9ae326a | 2009-04-03 16:42:41 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 411 | when it acts on behalf of another process, in that process's context. | 
 | 412 |  | 
 | 413 | The reason it does this is that it calls vfs_mkdir() and suchlike rather than | 
 | 414 | bypassing security and calling inode ops directly.  Therefore the VFS and LSM | 
 | 415 | may deny the CacheFiles access to the cache data because under some | 
 | 416 | circumstances the caching code is running in the security context of whatever | 
 | 417 | process issued the original syscall on the netfs. | 
 | 418 |  | 
 | 419 | Furthermore, should CacheFiles create a file or directory, the security | 
 | 420 | parameters with that object is created (UID, GID, security label) would be | 
 | 421 | derived from that process that issued the system call, thus potentially | 
 | 422 | preventing other processes from accessing the cache - including CacheFiles's | 
 | 423 | cache management daemon (cachefilesd). | 
 | 424 |  | 
 | 425 | What is required is to temporarily override the security of the process that | 
 | 426 | issued the system call.  We can't, however, just do an in-place change of the | 
 | 427 | security data as that affects the process as an object, not just as a subject. | 
 | 428 | This means it may lose signals or ptrace events for example, and affects what | 
 | 429 | the process looks like in /proc. | 
 | 430 |  | 
 | 431 | So CacheFiles makes use of a logical split in the security between the | 
| Marc Dionne | 91ac033 | 2009-04-23 11:21:55 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 432 | objective security (task->real_cred) and the subjective security (task->cred). | 
 | 433 | The objective security holds the intrinsic security properties of a process and | 
 | 434 | is never overridden.  This is what appears in /proc, and is what is used when a | 
| David Howells | 9ae326a | 2009-04-03 16:42:41 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 435 | process is the target of an operation by some other process (SIGKILL for | 
 | 436 | example). | 
 | 437 |  | 
 | 438 | The subjective security holds the active security properties of a process, and | 
 | 439 | may be overridden.  This is not seen externally, and is used whan a process | 
 | 440 | acts upon another object, for example SIGKILLing another process or opening a | 
 | 441 | file. | 
 | 442 |  | 
 | 443 | LSM hooks exist that allow SELinux (or Smack or whatever) to reject a request | 
 | 444 | for CacheFiles to run in a context of a specific security label, or to create | 
 | 445 | files and directories with another security label. | 
 | 446 |  | 
 | 447 |  | 
 | 448 | ======================= | 
 | 449 | STATISTICAL INFORMATION | 
 | 450 | ======================= | 
 | 451 |  | 
 | 452 | If FS-Cache is compiled with the following option enabled: | 
 | 453 |  | 
 | 454 | 	CONFIG_CACHEFILES_HISTOGRAM=y | 
 | 455 |  | 
 | 456 | then it will gather certain statistics and display them through a proc file. | 
 | 457 |  | 
 | 458 |  (*) /proc/fs/cachefiles/histogram | 
 | 459 |  | 
 | 460 | 	cat /proc/fs/cachefiles/histogram | 
 | 461 | 	JIFS  SECS  LOOKUPS   MKDIRS    CREATES | 
 | 462 | 	===== ===== ========= ========= ========= | 
 | 463 |  | 
 | 464 |      This shows the breakdown of the number of times each amount of time | 
 | 465 |      between 0 jiffies and HZ-1 jiffies a variety of tasks took to run.  The | 
 | 466 |      columns are as follows: | 
 | 467 |  | 
 | 468 | 	COLUMN		TIME MEASUREMENT | 
 | 469 | 	=======		======================================================= | 
 | 470 | 	LOOKUPS		Length of time to perform a lookup on the backing fs | 
 | 471 | 	MKDIRS		Length of time to perform a mkdir on the backing fs | 
 | 472 | 	CREATES		Length of time to perform a create on the backing fs | 
 | 473 |  | 
 | 474 |      Each row shows the number of events that took a particular range of times. | 
 | 475 |      Each step is 1 jiffy in size.  The JIFS column indicates the particular | 
 | 476 |      jiffy range covered, and the SECS field the equivalent number of seconds. | 
 | 477 |  | 
 | 478 |  | 
 | 479 | ========= | 
 | 480 | DEBUGGING | 
 | 481 | ========= | 
 | 482 |  | 
 | 483 | If CONFIG_CACHEFILES_DEBUG is enabled, the CacheFiles facility can have runtime | 
 | 484 | debugging enabled by adjusting the value in: | 
 | 485 |  | 
 | 486 | 	/sys/module/cachefiles/parameters/debug | 
 | 487 |  | 
 | 488 | This is a bitmask of debugging streams to enable: | 
 | 489 |  | 
 | 490 | 	BIT	VALUE	STREAM				POINT | 
 | 491 | 	=======	=======	===============================	======================= | 
 | 492 | 	0	1	General				Function entry trace | 
 | 493 | 	1	2					Function exit trace | 
 | 494 | 	2	4					General | 
 | 495 |  | 
 | 496 | The appropriate set of values should be OR'd together and the result written to | 
 | 497 | the control file.  For example: | 
 | 498 |  | 
 | 499 | 	echo $((1|4|8)) >/sys/module/cachefiles/parameters/debug | 
 | 500 |  | 
 | 501 | will turn on all function entry debugging. |