diff options
author | Mikhail Ramendik <mr@ramendik.ru> | 2014-02-02 10:47:52 +0100 |
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committer | David Faure <faure@kde.org> | 2014-02-02 10:47:52 +0100 |
commit | 41d01202368d5296da77cda72a0f18f3590e9ca9 (patch) | |
tree | f92ef889ff33f5eb171388c122b4524ada5bdab7 /trash/trashspec.html | |
parent | 4636efe0c39c332886b8ba704e2345eba1c2a7a3 (diff) | |
download | xdg-specs-41d01202368d5296da77cda72a0f18f3590e9ca9.tar.xz |
Style review of the language in the trash spec
Diffstat (limited to 'trash/trashspec.html')
-rw-r--r-- | trash/trashspec.html | 173 |
1 files changed, 87 insertions, 86 deletions
diff --git a/trash/trashspec.html b/trash/trashspec.html index 81c4954..fa270d3 100644 --- a/trash/trashspec.html +++ b/trash/trashspec.html @@ -49,17 +49,17 @@ when it gets cleaned!</P> <P>However, the benefits of this system are so great, and the user expectation for it so high, that it definitely should be implemented on a free desktop system. And in fact, several implementations -already exist — some as command line utilities, some as +existed before this specification — some as command line utilities, some as preloaded libraries, and some as parts of major desktop environments. -For example, both Gnome and KDE have their own trash mechanisms.</P> +For example, both Gnome and KDE had their own trash mechanisms.</P> <P>This Specification is to provide a common way in which all Trash -can implementations should store trashed files. By complying with +can implementations must store trashed files. By complying with this Specification, various Trash implementations will be able to work with the same devices and use the same Trash storage. </P> -<P>This is important, at least, for shared network resources, +<P>This ability is important, at least, for shared network resources, removable devices, and in cases when different implementations are -used on the same machine at different moments (i.e. some users prefer +used on the same machine at different moments (for example, some users prefer Gnome, others prefer KDE, and yet others are command-line fans).</P> <H2>Scope and limitations</H2> <P>This Specification only describes the Trash storage. It does <B>not</B> @@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ trash) had prior to getting trashed. <P>Top directory , $topdir — the directory where a file system is mounted. “/” is the top directory for the root file system, but not for the other mounted file systems. For example, -separate FSes can be mounted on “/home”, “/mnt/flash”, +separate file systems might be mounted on “/home”, “/media/flash”, etc. In this text, the designation “$topdir” is used for “any top directory”.</P> <P>User identifier , $uid — the numeric user identifier for a @@ -122,14 +122,14 @@ in this document are to be interpreted as described in <A HREF="http://www.faqs. any trash directory are to be compliant with the same standard, described below.</P> <P>For every user<A CLASS="sdfootnoteanc" NAME="sdfootnote2anc" HREF="#sdfootnote2sym"><SUP>2</SUP></A> -a “home trash” directory MUST be available<A CLASS="sdfootnoteanc" NAME="sdfootnote3anc" HREF="#sdfootnote3sym"><SUP>3</SUP></A>. -Its name and location are $XDG_DATA_HOME/Trash ; $XDG_DATA_HOME is +a “home trash” directory MUST be available. +Its name and location are $XDG_DATA_HOME/Trash <A CLASS="sdfootnoteanc" NAME="sdfootnote3anc" HREF="#sdfootnote3sym"><SUP>3</SUP></A>; $XDG_DATA_HOME is the base directory for user-specific data, as defined in the <A HREF="http://www.freedesktop.org/Standards/basedir-spec">Desktop Base Directory Specification</A> . </P> -<P>The “home trash” should function as the user's main +<P>The “home trash” SHOULD function as the user's main trash directory. Files that the user trashes from the same file -system (device/partition) should be stored here (see the next section +system (device/partition) SHOULD be stored here (see the next section for the storage details). A “home trash” directory SHOULD be automatically created for any new user. If this directory is needed for a trashing operation but does not exist, the @@ -146,10 +146,10 @@ security issues arise.</P> partitions, over the network, from a removable device, etc.) A delay instead of a quick “delete” operation can be unpleasant to users.</P> -<P>An implementation may choose not to support trashing in some of +<P>An implementation MAY choose not to support trashing in some of these cases (notably on network resources and removable devices). This is what some well known operating systems do.</P> -<P>It may also choose to provide trashing in the “top +<P>It MAY also choose to provide trashing in the “top directories” of some or all mounted resources. This trashing is done in two ways, described below as (1) and (2). </P> @@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ permissions must be set, if the file system supports it. <P>When trashing a file from a non-home partition/device<A CLASS="sdfootnoteanc" NAME="sdfootnote4anc" HREF="#sdfootnote4sym"><SUP>4</SUP></A> , an implementation (if it supports trashing in top directories) MUST check for the presence of $topdir/.Trash.</P> -<P>When preparing a list of all trashed files (i.e. to show to the +<P>When preparing a list of all trashed files (for example, to show to the user), an implementation also MUST check for .Trash in all top directories that are known to it.</P> <P>If this directory is present, the implementation MUST, by default, @@ -174,7 +174,7 @@ this directory is not a symbolic link. </P> <P>If any of these checks fail, the implementation MUST NOT use this directory for either trashing or -undeleting files, even is an appropriate $uid directory (see below) +undeleting files, even if an appropriate $uid directory (see below) already exists in it. Besides, the implementation SHOULD report the failed check to the administrator, and MAY also report it to the user.</P> @@ -206,30 +206,30 @@ immediately create it, without any warnings or delays for the user.</P> <P><B>Notes.</B> If an implementation provides trashing in top directories at all, it MUST support both (1) and (2). </P> -<P>If an implementation does NOT provide such trashing, and does +<P>If an implementation does NOT provide trashing in top directories, and does provide the user with some interface to view and/or undelete trashed files, it SHOULD make a “best effort” to show files trashed in top directories (by both methods) to the user, among other trashed files or in a clearly accessible separate way.</P> <P>When trashing a file, if the method (1) fails at any point — -i.e. the $topdir/.Trash directory does not exist, or it fails the +that is, the $topdir/.Trash directory does not exist, or it fails the checks, or the system refuses to create an $uid directory in it — the implementation MUST, by default, fall back to method (2), described below. Except for the case when $topdir/.Trash fails the checks, the fallback must be immediate, without any warnings or -delays. The implementation MAY, however, a way for the administrator +delays. The implementation MAY, however, provide a way for the administrator to disable (2) completely.</P> -<P>If both (1) and (2) fail (i.e. no +<P>If both (1) and (2) fail (that is, no $topdir/.Trash directory exists, and an attempt to create $topdir/.Trash-$uid fails), the implementation MUST either trash the file into the user's “home trash” or refuse to trash it. The choice between these options can be pre-determined, or it can -depend on the particular situation (i.e. No trashing of very large -files). However, if an implementation refuses to trash a file after a +depend on the particular situation (for example, “no trashing of very large +files”). However, if an implementation refuses to trash a file after a user action that generally causes trashing, it MUST clearly warn the -user about this, and request confirmation for the action.</P> +user that the trashing has failed. It MUST NOT erase the file without user confirmation.</P> <P>For showing trashed files, implementations SHOULD support (1) and -(2) at the same time (i.e. if both $topdir/.Trash/$uid and +(2) at the same time (that is, if both $topdir/.Trash/$uid and $topdir/.Trash-$uid are present, it should list trashed files from both of them).</P> <H2>Contents of a trash directory</H2> @@ -277,15 +277,15 @@ key/value pairs as described in the Desktop Entry Specification:</P> absolute pathname (starting with the slash character “/”) or a relative pathname (starting with any other character). A relative pathname is to be from the directory in which the trash - directory resides (i.e., from $XDG_DATA_HOME for the “home + directory resides (for example, from $XDG_DATA_HOME for the “home trash” directory); it MUST not include a “..” directory, and for files not “under” that directory, - absolute pathnames must be used. The system SHOULD only support - absolute pathnames in the “home trash” directory, not in + absolute pathnames must be used. The system SHOULD support + absolute pathnames only in the “home trash” directory, not in the directories under $topdir. </P> <P>The value type for this key is - “string”; it should store the file name as the + “string”; it SHOULD store the file name as the sequence of bytes produced by the file system, with characters escaped as in URLs (as defined by <A HREF="http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2396.html">RFC 2396</A>, section 2).</P> @@ -312,55 +312,14 @@ directories within the directory MUST NOT be altered; the implementation also SHOULD preserve the access and modification time for them.</P> <P>When trashing a file or directory, the implementation MUST create -the corresponding file in $trash/info first. When trashing a file or -directory, the implementation MUST create thecorresponding file in -$trash/info first. Moreover, it MUST try to do this in an atomic -fashion, so that if two processes try trash files with the same +the corresponding file in $trash/info first. Moreover, it MUST try to do this in an atomic +fashion, so that if two processes try to trash files with the same filename this will result in two different trash files. On Unix-line systems this is done by generating a filename, and then opening with O_EXCL. If that succeeds the creation was atomic (at least on the same machine), if it fails you need to pick another filename.</P> -<H2>Implementation notes</H2> -<P>The names of the files/directories in $trash/info SHOULD be -somehow related to original file names. This can help manual recovery -in emergency cases (for example, if the corresponding info file is -lost).</P> -<P>When trashing a file or directory, the implementation should check -whether the user has the necessary permissions to delete it, before -starting the trashing operation itself.</P> -<P>When copying, rather than moving, a file into the trash (i.e. When -trashing to the “home trash” from a different partition), -exact preservation of permissions might be impossible. Notably, a -file.directory that was owned by another user will now be owned by -this user (changing owners is usually only available to root). This -should not cause the trashing operation to fail.</P> -<P>In this same situation, setting the permissions should be done -<I>after</I> writing the copied file, as they may make it -unwriteable..</P> -<P>A trashing operation might be refused because of insufficient -permissions, even when the user does have the right to delete a file -or directory. This may happen when the user has the right to delete a -file/directory, but not to read it (or, in the case of a directory, -to list it). In this case, the best solution is probably to warn the -user, offering options to delete the file/directory or leave it -alone.</P> -<P>Automatic trash cleaning may, and probably eventually should, be -implemented. But the implementation should be somehow known to the -user.</P> -<P>If a directory was trashed in its entirety, it is easiest to -undelete it or remove it from the trash only in its entirety as well, -not as separate files. The user might not have the permissions to -delete some files in it even while he does have the permission to -delete the directory!</P> -<P><B>Important note on scope</B>. This specification currently does -NOT define trashing on remote machines where multiuser permissions -are implemented but the numeric user ID is not supported, like FTP -sites and CIFS shares. In systems implementing this specification, -trashing of files from such machines is to be done only to the user's -home trash directory (if at all). A future version may address this -limitation.</P> <H2>Directory size cache</H2> -<P>In order to speed up the calculation of the total size of a given trash directory, +<P>In order to speed up the calculation of the total size of a particular trash directory, implementations (since version 1.0 of this specification) SHOULD create or update the <B>$trash/directorysizes</B> file, which is a cache of the sizes of the directories that were trashed into this trash directory. @@ -368,10 +327,10 @@ Individual trashed files are not present in this cache, since their size can be with a call to stat().</P> <P>Each entry contains the name and size of the trashed directory, as well as the modification time of the corresponding <B>trashinfo file</B> (IMPORTANT: not the modification time of the directory itself)<A CLASS="sdfootnoteanc" NAME="sdfootnote9anc" HREF="#sdfootnote9sym"><SUP>9</SUP></A>.</P> -<P>The size is calculated to be the disk space used by the directory and its -contents, i.e. the size of the blocks, in bytes (like `du -B1` would calculate).</P> -<P>The modification time is stored as an integer, the number of seconds since Epoch. Implementations should use at least 64 bits for this number in memory.</P> -<P>The format of the “directorysizes” file is a simple text-based format, where each line is:</P> +<P>The size is calculated as the disk space used by the directory and its +contents, that is, the size of the blocks, in bytes (in the same way as the `du -B1` command calculates).</P> +<P>The modification time is stored as an integer, the number of seconds since Epoch. Implementations SHOULD use at least 64 bits for this number in memory.</P> +<P>The “directorysizes” file has a simple text-based format, where each line is:</P> <PRE> [size] [mtime] [percent-encoded-directory-name] </PRE> @@ -384,19 +343,19 @@ contents, i.e. the size of the blocks, in bytes (like `du -B1` would calculate). sequence of bytes produced by the file system, with characters escaped as in URLs (as defined by <A HREF="http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2396.html">RFC 2396</A>, section 2). Strictly speaking, percent-encoding is really only necessary for the newline character and for '%' itself. -Encoding all control characters or fully applying RFC 2396 for consistency with trashinfo files -is perfectly valid, however.</P> +However, encoding all control characters or fully applying RFC 2396 for consistency with trashinfo files +is perfectly valid, and even if an implementation does not use such encoding. it MUST be able to read names encoded with it.</P> <P>The character '/' is not allowed in the directory name (even as %2F), since all these -directories must be direct children of the "files" directory, and absolute paths are not allowed.</P> -<P>Implementations MUST use a temporary file followed by an atomic rename() operation in order +directories must be direct children of the "files" directory. Absolute paths are not allowed for the same reason.</P> +<P>To update the directorysizes file, implementations MUST use a temporary file followed by an atomic rename() operation, in order to avoid corruption due to two implementations writing to the file at the same time. The fact -that the changes from one of the writers could get lost isn't an issue, the cache can be updated again +that the changes from one of the writers could get lost isn't an issue, as the cache can be updated again later on to add that entry.</P> <H2>Non-normative: suggested algorithm for calculating the size of a trash directory</H2> <PRE> -load directorysizes file into memory, e.g. a hash directory_name -> (size, mtime, seen=false) +load directorysizes file into memory as a hash directory_name -> (size, mtime, seen=false) totalsize = 0 list "files" directory, and for each item: stat the item @@ -417,9 +376,52 @@ remove entries from hash which have (seen == false) write out hash back to directorysizes file </PRE> + +<H2>Implementation notes</H2> +<P>The names of the files/directories in $trash/info SHOULD be +somehow related to original file names. This can help manual recovery +in emergency cases (for example, if the corresponding info file is +lost).</P> +<P>When trashing a file or directory, the implementation SHOULD check +whether the user has the necessary permissions to delete it, before +starting the trashing operation itself.</P> +<P>When copying, rather than moving, a file into the trash (when +trashing to the “home trash” from a different partition), +exact preservation of permissions might be impossible. Notably, a +file/directory that was owned by another user will now be owned by +this user (changing owners is usually only available to root). This +SHOULD NOT cause the trashing operation to fail.</P> +<P>In this same situation, setting the permissions should be done +<I>after</I> writing the copied file, as they might make it +unwriteable..</P> +<P>A trashing operation might be refused because of insufficient +permissions, even when the user does have the right to delete a file +or directory. This may happen when the user has the right to delete a +file/directory, but not to read it (or, in the case of a directory, +to list it). In this case, the best solution is probably to warn the +user, offering options to delete the file/directory or leave it +alone. As noted earlier, when the user reasonably expects a file to be +trashed, the implementation MUST NOT delete it without warning the user. +</P> +<P>Automatic trash cleaning may, and probably eventually should, be +implemented. But the implementation should be somehow known to the +user.</P> +<P>If a directory was trashed in its entirety, it is easiest to +undelete it or remove it from the trash only in its entirety as well, +not as separate files. The user might not have the permissions to +delete some files in it even while he does have the permission to +delete the directory!</P> +<P><B>Important note on scope</B>. This specification currently does +NOT define trashing on remote machines where multiuser permissions +are implemented but the numeric user ID is not supported, like FTP +sites and CIFS shares. In systems implementing this specification, +trashing of files from such machines is to be done only to the user's +home trash directory (if at all). A future version may address this +limitation.</P> + <H2>Administrativia</H2> <H3>Copyright and License</H3> -<P>Copyright (C) 2004 Mikhail Ramendik , <A HREF="mailto:mr@ramendik.ru">mr@ramendik.ru</A> +<P>Copyright (C) 2004-2014 Mikhail Ramendik , <A HREF="mailto:mr@ramendik.ru">mr@ramendik.ru</A> . </P> <P>The originators of the ideas that are described here did not @@ -456,7 +458,7 @@ document on the freedesktop.org standards page</P> <P>0.7 April 12, 2005. Added URL-style encoding for the name of the deleted file, as implemented in KDE 3.4</P> <P>0.8 March 14, 2012. Update David Faure's email address, fix permanent URL for this spec.</P> -<P>1.0 April 16, 2013. Add directorysizes cache.</p> +<P>1.0 January 2, 2014. Add directorysizes cache; style review.</p> <P><BR><BR> </P> <DIV ID="sdfootnote1"> @@ -474,9 +476,8 @@ as implemented in KDE 3.4</P> </P> </DIV> <DIV ID="sdfootnote3"> - <P CLASS="sdfootnote" STYLE="margin-bottom: 0.5cm"><A CLASS="sdfootnotesym" NAME="sdfootnote3sym" HREF="#sdfootnote3anc">3</A>Note - the dot in the beginning, and for case sensitive file systems, note - the case.</P> + <P CLASS="sdfootnote" STYLE="margin-bottom: 0.5cm"><A CLASS="sdfootnotesym" NAME="sdfootnote3sym" HREF="#sdfootnote3anc">3</A>For + case sensitive file systems, note the case.</P> </DIV> <DIV ID="sdfootnote4"> <P CLASS="sdfootnote" STYLE="margin-bottom: 0.5cm"><A CLASS="sdfootnotesym" NAME="sdfootnote4sym" HREF="#sdfootnote4anc">4</A>To @@ -497,7 +498,7 @@ as implemented in KDE 3.4</P> <DIV ID="sdfootnote7"> <P CLASS="sdfootnote" STYLE="margin-bottom: 0.5cm"><A CLASS="sdfootnotesym" NAME="sdfootnote7sym" HREF="#sdfootnote7anc">7</A>For example, if the file in $trash/files is named foo.bar , the - corresponding file in $trash/info must be named foo.bar.trashinfo</P> + corresponding file in $trash/info MUST be named foo.bar.trashinfo</P> </DIV> <DIV ID="sdfootnote8"> <P CLASS="sdfootnote" STYLE="margin-bottom: 0.5cm"><A CLASS="sdfootnotesym" NAME="sdfootnote8sym" HREF="#sdfootnote8anc">8</A>This |