xfs: fallocate() should call file_modified()

In XFS, we always update the inode change and modification time when
any fallocate() operation succeeds.  Furthermore, as various
fallocate modes can change the file contents (extending EOF,
punching holes, zeroing things, shifting extents), we should drop
file privileges like suid just like we do for a regular write().
There's already a VFS helper that figures all this out for us, so
use that.

The net effect of this is that we no longer drop suid/sgid if the
caller is root, but we also now drop file capabilities.

We also move the xfs_update_prealloc_flags() function so that it now
is only called by the scope that needs to set the the prealloc flag.

Based on a patch from Darrick Wong.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
This commit is contained in:
Dave Chinner 2022-01-31 13:20:09 -08:00 committed by Darrick J. Wong
parent 472c6e46f5
commit fbe7e52003

View File

@ -953,6 +953,10 @@ xfs_file_fallocate(
goto out_unlock;
}
error = file_modified(file);
if (error)
goto out_unlock;
if (mode & FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE) {
error = xfs_free_file_space(ip, offset, len);
if (error)
@ -1053,11 +1057,12 @@ xfs_file_fallocate(
if (error)
goto out_unlock;
}
}
error = xfs_update_prealloc_flags(ip, flags);
if (error)
goto out_unlock;
error = xfs_update_prealloc_flags(ip, XFS_PREALLOC_SET);
if (error)
goto out_unlock;
}
/* Change file size if needed */
if (new_size) {