extern struct xattr_handler ocfs2_xattr_user_handler;
extern struct xattr_handler ocfs2_xattr_trusted_handler;
extern struct xattr_handler ocfs2_xattr_security_handler;
+#ifdef CONFIG_OCFS2_FS_POSIX_ACL
+extern struct xattr_handler ocfs2_xattr_acl_access_handler;
+extern struct xattr_handler ocfs2_xattr_acl_default_handler;
+#endif
extern struct xattr_handler *ocfs2_xattr_handlers[];
ssize_t ocfs2_listxattr(struct dentry *, char *, size_t);
+int ocfs2_xattr_get_nolock(struct inode *, struct buffer_head *, int,
+ const char *, void *, size_t);
int ocfs2_xattr_set(struct inode *, int, const char *, const void *,
size_t, int);
int ocfs2_xattr_set_handle(handle_t *, struct inode *, struct buffer_head *,
int ocfs2_calc_security_init(struct inode *,
struct ocfs2_security_xattr_info *,
int *, int *, struct ocfs2_alloc_context **);
+int ocfs2_calc_xattr_init(struct inode *, struct buffer_head *,
+ int, struct ocfs2_security_xattr_info *,
+ int *, int *, struct ocfs2_alloc_context **);
+
+/*
+ * xattrs can live inside an inode, as part of an external xattr block,
+ * or inside an xattr bucket, which is the leaf of a tree rooted in an
+ * xattr block. Some of the xattr calls, especially the value setting
+ * functions, want to treat each of these locations as equal. Let's wrap
+ * them in a structure that we can pass around instead of raw buffer_heads.
+ */
+struct ocfs2_xattr_value_buf {
+ struct buffer_head *vb_bh;
+ ocfs2_journal_access_func vb_access;
+ struct ocfs2_xattr_value_root *vb_xv;
+};
+
#endif /* OCFS2_XATTR_H */