v6.6-rc4.vfs.fixes

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Merge tag 'v6.6-rc4.vfs.fixes' of gitolite.kernel.org:pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs

Pull vfs fixes from Christian Brauner:
 "This contains the usual miscellaneous fixes and cleanups for vfs and
  individual fses:

  Fixes:
   - Revert ki_pos on error from buffered writes for direct io fallback
   - Add missing documentation for block device and superblock handling
     for changes merged this cycle
   - Fix reiserfs flexible array usage
   - Ensure that overlayfs sets ctime when setting mtime and atime
   - Disable deferred caller completions with overlayfs writes until
     proper support exists

  Cleanups:
   - Remove duplicate initialization in pipe code
   - Annotate aio kioctx_table with __counted_by"

* tag 'v6.6-rc4.vfs.fixes' of gitolite.kernel.org:pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs:
  overlayfs: set ctime when setting mtime and atime
  ntfs3: put resources during ntfs_fill_super()
  ovl: disable IOCB_DIO_CALLER_COMP
  porting: document superblock as block device holder
  porting: document new block device opening order
  fs/pipe: remove duplicate "offset" initializer
  fs-writeback: do not requeue a clean inode having skipped pages
  aio: Annotate struct kioctx_table with __counted_by
  direct_write_fallback(): on error revert the ->ki_pos update from buffered write
  reiserfs: Replace 1-element array with C99 style flex-array
This commit is contained in:
Linus Torvalds 2023-09-26 08:50:30 -07:00
commit 84422aee15
9 changed files with 117 additions and 9 deletions

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@ -949,3 +949,99 @@ mmap_lock held. All in-tree users have been audited and do not seem to
depend on the mmap_lock being held, but out of tree users should verify
for themselves. If they do need it, they can return VM_FAULT_RETRY to
be called with the mmap_lock held.
---
**mandatory**
The order of opening block devices and matching or creating superblocks has
changed.
The old logic opened block devices first and then tried to find a
suitable superblock to reuse based on the block device pointer.
The new logic tries to find a suitable superblock first based on the device
number, and opening the block device afterwards.
Since opening block devices cannot happen under s_umount because of lock
ordering requirements s_umount is now dropped while opening block devices and
reacquired before calling fill_super().
In the old logic concurrent mounters would find the superblock on the list of
superblocks for the filesystem type. Since the first opener of the block device
would hold s_umount they would wait until the superblock became either born or
was discarded due to initialization failure.
Since the new logic drops s_umount concurrent mounters could grab s_umount and
would spin. Instead they are now made to wait using an explicit wait-wake
mechanism without having to hold s_umount.
---
**mandatory**
The holder of a block device is now the superblock.
The holder of a block device used to be the file_system_type which wasn't
particularly useful. It wasn't possible to go from block device to owning
superblock without matching on the device pointer stored in the superblock.
This mechanism would only work for a single device so the block layer couldn't
find the owning superblock of any additional devices.
In the old mechanism reusing or creating a superblock for a racing mount(2) and
umount(2) relied on the file_system_type as the holder. This was severly
underdocumented however:
(1) Any concurrent mounter that managed to grab an active reference on an
existing superblock was made to wait until the superblock either became
ready or until the superblock was removed from the list of superblocks of
the filesystem type. If the superblock is ready the caller would simple
reuse it.
(2) If the mounter came after deactivate_locked_super() but before
the superblock had been removed from the list of superblocks of the
filesystem type the mounter would wait until the superblock was shutdown,
reuse the block device and allocate a new superblock.
(3) If the mounter came after deactivate_locked_super() and after
the superblock had been removed from the list of superblocks of the
filesystem type the mounter would reuse the block device and allocate a new
superblock (the bd_holder point may still be set to the filesystem type).
Because the holder of the block device was the file_system_type any concurrent
mounter could open the block devices of any superblock of the same
file_system_type without risking seeing EBUSY because the block device was
still in use by another superblock.
Making the superblock the owner of the block device changes this as the holder
is now a unique superblock and thus block devices associated with it cannot be
reused by concurrent mounters. So a concurrent mounter in (2) could suddenly
see EBUSY when trying to open a block device whose holder was a different
superblock.
The new logic thus waits until the superblock and the devices are shutdown in
->kill_sb(). Removal of the superblock from the list of superblocks of the
filesystem type is now moved to a later point when the devices are closed:
(1) Any concurrent mounter managing to grab an active reference on an existing
superblock is made to wait until the superblock is either ready or until
the superblock and all devices are shutdown in ->kill_sb(). If the
superblock is ready the caller will simply reuse it.
(2) If the mounter comes after deactivate_locked_super() but before
the superblock has been removed from the list of superblocks of the
filesystem type the mounter is made to wait until the superblock and the
devices are shut down in ->kill_sb() and the superblock is removed from the
list of superblocks of the filesystem type. The mounter will allocate a new
superblock and grab ownership of the block device (the bd_holder pointer of
the block device will be set to the newly allocated superblock).
(3) This case is now collapsed into (2) as the superblock is left on the list
of superblocks of the filesystem type until all devices are shutdown in
->kill_sb(). In other words, if the superblock isn't on the list of
superblock of the filesystem type anymore then it has given up ownership of
all associated block devices (the bd_holder pointer is NULL).
As this is a VFS level change it has no practical consequences for filesystems
other than that all of them must use one of the provided kill_litter_super(),
kill_anon_super(), or kill_block_super() helpers.

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@ -80,7 +80,7 @@ struct aio_ring {
struct kioctx_table {
struct rcu_head rcu;
unsigned nr;
struct kioctx __rcu *table[];
struct kioctx __rcu *table[] __counted_by(nr);
};
struct kioctx_cpu {

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@ -1535,10 +1535,15 @@ static void requeue_inode(struct inode *inode, struct bdi_writeback *wb,
if (wbc->pages_skipped) {
/*
* writeback is not making progress due to locked
* buffers. Skip this inode for now.
* Writeback is not making progress due to locked buffers.
* Skip this inode for now. Although having skipped pages
* is odd for clean inodes, it can happen for some
* filesystems so handle that gracefully.
*/
redirty_tail_locked(inode, wb);
if (inode->i_state & I_DIRTY_ALL)
redirty_tail_locked(inode, wb);
else
inode_cgwb_move_to_attached(inode, wb);
return;
}

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@ -1903,6 +1903,7 @@ ssize_t direct_write_fallback(struct kiocb *iocb, struct iov_iter *iter,
* We don't know how much we wrote, so just return the number of
* bytes which were direct-written
*/
iocb->ki_pos -= buffered_written;
if (direct_written)
return direct_written;
return err;

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@ -1562,6 +1562,7 @@ load_root:
put_inode_out:
iput(inode);
out:
ntfs3_put_sbi(sbi);
kfree(boot2);
return err;
}

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@ -337,7 +337,7 @@ static int ovl_set_timestamps(struct ovl_fs *ofs, struct dentry *upperdentry,
{
struct iattr attr = {
.ia_valid =
ATTR_ATIME | ATTR_MTIME | ATTR_ATIME_SET | ATTR_MTIME_SET,
ATTR_ATIME | ATTR_MTIME | ATTR_ATIME_SET | ATTR_MTIME_SET | ATTR_CTIME,
.ia_atime = stat->atime,
.ia_mtime = stat->mtime,
};

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@ -391,6 +391,12 @@ static ssize_t ovl_write_iter(struct kiocb *iocb, struct iov_iter *iter)
if (!ovl_should_sync(OVL_FS(inode->i_sb)))
ifl &= ~(IOCB_DSYNC | IOCB_SYNC);
/*
* Overlayfs doesn't support deferred completions, don't copy
* this property in case it is set by the issuer.
*/
ifl &= ~IOCB_DIO_CALLER_COMP;
old_cred = ovl_override_creds(file_inode(file)->i_sb);
if (is_sync_kiocb(iocb)) {
file_start_write(real.file);

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@ -537,7 +537,6 @@ pipe_write(struct kiocb *iocb, struct iov_iter *from)
break;
}
ret += copied;
buf->offset = 0;
buf->len = copied;
if (!iov_iter_count(from))

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@ -2699,7 +2699,7 @@ struct reiserfs_iget_args {
#define get_journal_desc_magic(bh) (bh->b_data + bh->b_size - 12)
#define journal_trans_half(blocksize) \
((blocksize - sizeof (struct reiserfs_journal_desc) + sizeof (__u32) - 12) / sizeof (__u32))
((blocksize - sizeof(struct reiserfs_journal_desc) - 12) / sizeof(__u32))
/* journal.c see journal.c for all the comments here */
@ -2711,7 +2711,7 @@ struct reiserfs_journal_desc {
__le32 j_len;
__le32 j_mount_id; /* mount id of this trans */
__le32 j_realblock[1]; /* real locations for each block */
__le32 j_realblock[]; /* real locations for each block */
};
#define get_desc_trans_id(d) le32_to_cpu((d)->j_trans_id)
@ -2726,7 +2726,7 @@ struct reiserfs_journal_desc {
struct reiserfs_journal_commit {
__le32 j_trans_id; /* must match j_trans_id from the desc block */
__le32 j_len; /* ditto */
__le32 j_realblock[1]; /* real locations for each block */
__le32 j_realblock[]; /* real locations for each block */
};
#define get_commit_trans_id(c) le32_to_cpu((c)->j_trans_id)