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rxrpc and kafs between them try to use the receive timestamp on the first
data packet (ie. the one with sequence number 1) as a base from which to
calculate the time at which callback promise and lock expiration occurs.
However, we don't know how long it took for the server to send us the reply
from it having completed the basic part of the operation - it might then,
for instance, have to send a bunch of a callback breaks, depending on the
particular operation.
Fix this by using the time at which the operation is issued on the client
as a base instead. That should never be longer than the server's idea of
the expiry time.
Fixes: 781070551c ("afs: Fix calculation of callback expiry time")
Fixes: 2070a3e449 ("rxrpc: Allow the reply time to be obtained on a client call")
Suggested-by: Jeffrey E Altman <jaltman@auristor.com>
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
For operations that create vnodes on the server such as CreateFile,
MakeDir or Symlink, the server will store its own current time as
the mtime if the client doesn't pass in a time in the accompanying
StoreStatus structure.
If the server and client clocks are not well synchronized, the client
may see timestamps in the future or inconsistent dependency checks
with "make" for files that are not modified after creation:
make[2]: Warning: File 'arch/x86/kernel/apic/modules.order' has
modification time 0.14 s in the future
make[2]: warning: Clock skew detected. Your build may be incomplete.
This is already handled correctly for non yfs operations; also
set the mtime for the corresponding yfs operations.
Changes:
v3: Replace S_IRWXUGO with 0777, per checkpatch
v2: [dhowells] Merge the two xdr_encode_YFSStoreStatus*() functions together
Signed-off-by: Marc Dionne <marc.dionne@auristor.com>
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Link: http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-afs/2021-October/004395.html
When using the afs.yfs.acl xattr to change an AuriStor ACL, a warning
can be generated when the request is marshalled because the buffer
pointer isn't increased after adding the last element, thereby
triggering the check at the end if the ACL wasn't empty. This just
causes something like the following warning, but doesn't stop the call
from happening successfully:
kAFS: YFS.StoreOpaqueACL2: Request buffer underflow (36<108)
Fix this simply by increasing the count prior to the check.
Fixes: f5e4546347 ("afs: Implement YFS ACL setting")
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Fix yfs_fs_fetch_status() to honour the vnode selector in
op->fetch_status.which as does afs_fs_fetch_status() that allows
afs_do_lookup() to use this as an alternative to the InlineBulkStatus RPC
call if not implemented by the server.
This doesn't matter in the current code as YFS servers always implement
InlineBulkStatus, but a subsequent will call it on YFS servers too in some
circumstances.
Fixes: e49c7b2f6d ("afs: Build an abstraction around an "operation" concept")
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Reorganise afs_volume objects such that they're in a tree keyed on volume
ID, rooted at on an afs_cell object rather than being in multiple trees,
each of which is rooted on an afs_server object.
afs_server structs become per-cell and acquire a pointer to the cell.
The process of breaking a callback then starts with finding the server by
its network address, following that to the cell and then looking up each
volume ID in the volume tree.
This is simpler than the afs_vol_interest/afs_cb_interest N:M mapping web
and allows those structs and the code for maintaining them to be simplified
or removed.
It does make a couple of things a bit more tricky, though:
(1) Operations now start with a volume, not a server, so there can be more
than one answer as to whether or not the server we'll end up using
supports the FS.InlineBulkStatus RPC.
(2) CB RPC operations that specify the server UUID. There's still a tree
of servers by UUID on the afs_net struct, but the UUIDs in it aren't
guaranteed unique.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Turn the afs_operation struct into the main way that most fileserver
operations are managed. Various things are added to the struct, including
the following:
(1) All the parameters and results of the relevant operations are moved
into it, removing corresponding fields from the afs_call struct.
afs_call gets a pointer to the op.
(2) The target volume is made the main focus of the operation, rather than
the target vnode(s), and a bunch of op->vnode->volume are made
op->volume instead.
(3) Two vnode records are defined (op->file[]) for the vnode(s) involved
in most operations. The vnode record (struct afs_vnode_param)
contains:
- The vnode pointer.
- The fid of the vnode to be included in the parameters or that was
returned in the reply (eg. FS.MakeDir).
- The status and callback information that may be returned in the
reply about the vnode.
- Callback break and data version tracking for detecting
simultaneous third-parth changes.
(4) Pointers to dentries to be updated with new inodes.
(5) An operations table pointer. The table includes pointers to functions
for issuing AFS and YFS-variant RPCs, handling the success and abort
of an operation and handling post-I/O-lock local editing of a
directory.
To make this work, the following function restructuring is made:
(A) The rotation loop that issues calls to fileservers that can be found
in each function that wants to issue an RPC (such as afs_mkdir()) is
extracted out into common code, in a new file called fs_operation.c.
(B) The rotation loops, such as the one in afs_mkdir(), are replaced with
a much smaller piece of code that allocates an operation, sets the
parameters and then calls out to the common code to do the actual
work.
(C) The code for handling the success and failure of an operation are
moved into operation functions (as (5) above) and these are called
from the core code at appropriate times.
(D) The pseudo inode getting stuff used by the dynamic root code is moved
over into dynroot.c.
(E) struct afs_iget_data is absorbed into the operation struct and
afs_iget() expects to be given an op pointer and a vnode record.
(F) Point (E) doesn't work for the root dir of a volume, but we know the
FID in advance (it's always vnode 1, unique 1), so a separate inode
getter, afs_root_iget(), is provided to special-case that.
(G) The inode status init/update functions now also take an op and a vnode
record.
(H) The RPC marshalling functions now, for the most part, just take an
afs_operation struct as their only argument. All the data they need
is held there. The result delivery functions write their answers
there as well.
(I) The call is attached to the operation and then the operation core does
the waiting.
And then the new operation code is, for the moment, made to just initialise
the operation, get the appropriate vnode I/O locks and do the same rotation
loop as before.
This lays the foundation for the following changes in the future:
(*) Overhauling the rotation (again).
(*) Support for asynchronous I/O, where the fileserver rotation must be
done asynchronously also.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
As a prelude to implementing asynchronous fileserver operations in the afs
filesystem, rename struct afs_fs_cursor to afs_operation.
This struct is going to form the core of the operation management and is
going to acquire more members in later.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Set a flag in the call struct to indicate an unmarshalling error rather
than return and handle an error from the decoding of file statuses. This
flag is checked on a successful return from the delivery function.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Don't call req->page_done() on each page as we finish filling it with
the data coming from the network. Whilst this might speed up the
application a bit, it's a problem if there's a network failure and the
operation has to be reissued.
If this happens, an oops occurs because afs_readpages_page_done() clears
the pointer to each page it unlocks and when a retry happens, the
pointers to the pages it wants to fill are now NULL (and the pages have
been unlocked anyway).
Instead, wait till the operation completes successfully and only then
release all the pages after clearing any terminal gap (the server can
give us less data than we requested as we're allowed to ask for more
than is available).
KASAN produces a bug like the following, and even without KASAN, it can
oops and panic.
BUG: KASAN: wild-memory-access in _copy_to_iter+0x323/0x5f4
Write of size 1404 at addr 0005088000000000 by task md5sum/5235
CPU: 0 PID: 5235 Comm: md5sum Not tainted 5.7.0-rc3-fscache+ #250
Hardware name: ASUS All Series/H97-PLUS, BIOS 2306 10/09/2014
Call Trace:
memcpy+0x39/0x58
_copy_to_iter+0x323/0x5f4
__skb_datagram_iter+0x89/0x2a6
skb_copy_datagram_iter+0x129/0x135
rxrpc_recvmsg_data.isra.0+0x615/0xd42
rxrpc_kernel_recv_data+0x1e9/0x3ae
afs_extract_data+0x139/0x33a
yfs_deliver_fs_fetch_data64+0x47a/0x91b
afs_deliver_to_call+0x304/0x709
afs_wait_for_call_to_complete+0x1cc/0x4ad
yfs_fs_fetch_data+0x279/0x288
afs_fetch_data+0x1e1/0x38d
afs_readpages+0x593/0x72e
read_pages+0xf5/0x21e
__do_page_cache_readahead+0x128/0x23f
ondemand_readahead+0x36e/0x37f
generic_file_buffered_read+0x234/0x680
new_sync_read+0x109/0x17e
vfs_read+0xe6/0x138
ksys_read+0xd8/0x14d
do_syscall_64+0x6e/0x8a
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x49/0xb3
Fixes: 196ee9cd2d ("afs: Make afs_fs_fetch_data() take a list of pages")
Fixes: 30062bd13e ("afs: Implement YFS support in the fs client")
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Wilcox (Oracle) <willy@infradead.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Fix the length of the dump of a bad YFSFetchStatus record. The function
was copied from the AFS version, but the YFS variant contains bigger fields
and extra information, so expand the dump to match.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
The afs_deliver_fs_rename() and yfs_deliver_fs_rename() functions both only
decode the second file status returned unless the parent directories are
different - unfortunately, this means that the xdr pointer isn't advanced
and the volsync record will be read incorrectly in such an instance.
Fix this by always decoding the second status into the second
status/callback block which wasn't being used if the dirs were the same.
The afs_update_dentry_version() calls that update the directory data
version numbers on the dentries can then unconditionally use the second
status record as this will always reflect the state of the destination dir
(the two records will be identical if the destination dir is the same as
the source dir)
Fixes: 260a980317 ("[AFS]: Add "directory write" support.")
Fixes: 30062bd13e ("afs: Implement YFS support in the fs client")
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
If we receive a status record that has VNOVNODE set in the abort field,
xdr_decode_AFSFetchStatus() and xdr_decode_YFSFetchStatus() don't advance
the XDR pointer, thereby corrupting anything subsequent decodes from the
same block of data.
This has the potential to affect AFS.InlineBulkStatus and
YFS.InlineBulkStatus operation, but probably doesn't since the status
records are extracted as individual blocks of data and the buffer pointer
is reset between blocks.
It does affect YFS.RemoveFile2 operation, corrupting the volsync record -
though that is not currently used.
Other operations abort the entire operation rather than returning an error
inline, in which case there is no decoding to be done.
Fix this by unconditionally advancing the xdr pointer.
Fixes: 684b0f68cf ("afs: Fix AFSFetchStatus decoder to provide OpenAFS compatibility")
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
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Merge tag 'afs-next-20191121' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/dhowells/linux-fs
Pull AFS updates from David Howells:
"Minor cleanups and fix:
- Minor fix to make some debugging statements display information
from the correct iov_iter.
- Rename some members and variables to make things more obvious or
consistent.
- Provide a helper to wrap increments of the usage count on the
afs_read struct.
- Use scnprintf() to print into a stack buffer rather than sprintf().
- Remove some set but unused variables"
* tag 'afs-next-20191121' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/dhowells/linux-fs:
afs: Remove set but not used variable 'ret'
afs: Remove set but not used variables 'before', 'after'
afs: xattr: use scnprintf
afs: Introduce an afs_get_read() refcount helper
afs: Rename desc -> req in afs_fetch_data()
afs: Switch the naming of call->iter and call->_iter
afs: Use call->_iter not &call->iter in debugging statements
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Merge tag 'printk-for-5.5' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/pmladek/printk
Pull printk updates from Petr Mladek:
- Allow to print symbolic error names via new %pe modifier.
- Use pr_warn() instead of the remaining pr_warning() calls. Fix
formatting of the related lines.
- Add VSPRINTF entry to MAINTAINERS.
* tag 'printk-for-5.5' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/pmladek/printk: (32 commits)
checkpatch: don't warn about new vsprintf pointer extension '%pe'
MAINTAINERS: Add VSPRINTF
tools lib api: Renaming pr_warning to pr_warn
ASoC: samsung: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
lib: cpu_rmap: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
trace: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
dma-debug: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
vgacon: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
fs: afs: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
sh/intc: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
scsi: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
platform/x86: intel_oaktrail: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
platform/x86: asus-laptop: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
platform/x86: eeepc-laptop: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
oprofile: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
of: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
macintosh: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
idsn: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
ide: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
crypto: n2: Use pr_warn instead of pr_warning
...
Change the name of call->iter to call->def_iter to represent the default
iterator.
Change the name of call->_iter to call->iter to represent the iterator
actually being used.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Use call->_iter not &call->iter in debugging statements as the latter is a
convenience iter whereas the former represents we're actually doing at the
moment.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Use afs_extract_discard() rather than iov_iter_discard() as the former is a
wrapper for the latter, providing a place to put tracepoints.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
It seems that 'yfs_RXYFSStoreOpaqueACL2' should be use in
yfs_fs_store_opaque_acl2().
Fixes: f5e4546347 ("afs: Implement YFS ACL setting")
Signed-off-by: YueHaibing <yuehaibing@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
In preparation to enabling -Wimplicit-fallthrough, mark switch
cases where we are expecting to fall through.
This patch fixes the following warnings:
fs/afs/yfsclient.c: In function ‘yfs_deliver_fs_fetch_opaque_acl’:
fs/afs/yfsclient.c:1984:19: warning: this statement may fall through [-Wimplicit-fallthrough=]
call->unmarshall++;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~
fs/afs/yfsclient.c:1987:2: note: here
case 1:
^~~~
fs/afs/yfsclient.c:2005:19: warning: this statement may fall through [-Wimplicit-fallthrough=]
call->unmarshall++;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~
fs/afs/yfsclient.c:2008:2: note: here
case 2:
^~~~
fs/afs/yfsclient.c:2014:19: warning: this statement may fall through [-Wimplicit-fallthrough=]
call->unmarshall++;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~
fs/afs/yfsclient.c:2017:2: note: here
case 3:
^~~~
fs/afs/yfsclient.c:2035:19: warning: this statement may fall through [-Wimplicit-fallthrough=]
call->unmarshall++;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~
fs/afs/yfsclient.c:2038:2: note: here
case 4:
^~~~
fs/afs/yfsclient.c:2047:19: warning: this statement may fall through [-Wimplicit-fallthrough=]
call->unmarshall++;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~
fs/afs/yfsclient.c:2050:2: note: here
case 5:
^~~~
Warning level 3 was used: -Wimplicit-fallthrough=3
Also, fix some commenting style issues.
This patch is part of the ongoing efforts to enable
-Wimplicit-fallthrough.
Signed-off-by: Gustavo A. R. Silva <gustavo@embeddedor.com>
Based on 1 normalized pattern(s):
this program is free software you can redistribute it and or modify
it under the terms of the gnu general public licence as published by
the free software foundation either version 2 of the licence or at
your option any later version
extracted by the scancode license scanner the SPDX license identifier
GPL-2.0-or-later
has been chosen to replace the boilerplate/reference in 114 file(s).
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Reviewed-by: Allison Randal <allison@lohutok.net>
Reviewed-by: Kate Stewart <kstewart@linuxfoundation.org>
Cc: linux-spdx@vger.kernel.org
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20190520170857.552531963@linutronix.de
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Make use of the status update for the target file that the YFS.RemoveFile2
RPC op returns to correctly update the vnode as to whether the file was
actually deleted or just had nlink reduced.
Fixes: 30062bd13e ("afs: Implement YFS support in the fs client")
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Don't save callback version and type fields as the version is about the
format of the callback information and the type is relative to the
particular RPC call.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
When applying the status and callback in the response of an operation,
apply them in the same critical section so that there's no race between
checking the callback state and checking status-dependent state (such as
the data version).
Fix this by:
(1) Allocating a joint {status,callback} record (afs_status_cb) before
calling the RPC function for each vnode for which the RPC reply
contains a status or a status plus a callback. A flag is set in the
record to indicate if a callback was actually received.
(2) These records are passed into the RPC functions to be filled in. The
afs_decode_status() and yfs_decode_status() functions are removed and
the cb_lock is no longer taken.
(3) xdr_decode_AFSFetchStatus() and xdr_decode_YFSFetchStatus() no longer
update the vnode.
(4) xdr_decode_AFSCallBack() and xdr_decode_YFSCallBack() no longer update
the vnode.
(5) vnodes, expected data-version numbers and callback break counters
(cb_break) no longer need to be passed to the reply delivery
functions.
Note that, for the moment, the file locking functions still need
access to both the call and the vnode at the same time.
(6) afs_vnode_commit_status() is now given the cb_break value and the
expected data_version and the task of applying the status and the
callback to the vnode are now done here.
This is done under a single taking of vnode->cb_lock.
(7) afs_pages_written_back() is now called by afs_store_data() rather than
by the reply delivery function.
afs_pages_written_back() has been moved to before the call point and
is now given the first and last page numbers rather than a pointer to
the call.
(8) The indicator from YFS.RemoveFile2 as to whether the target file
actually got removed (status.abort_code == VNOVNODE) rather than
merely dropping a link is now checked in afs_unlink rather than in
xdr_decode_YFSFetchStatus().
Supplementary fixes:
(*) afs_cache_permit() now gets the caller_access mask from the
afs_status_cb object rather than picking it out of the vnode's status
record. afs_fetch_status() returns caller_access through its argument
list for this purpose also.
(*) afs_inode_init_from_status() now uses a write lock on cb_lock rather
than a read lock and now sets the callback inside the same critical
section.
Fixes: c435ee3455 ("afs: Overhaul the callback handling")
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Always ask for the reply time from AF_RXRPC as it's used to calculate the
callback expiry time and lock expiry times, so it's needed by most FS
operations.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
afs_do_lookup() will do an order-1 allocation to allocate status records if
there are more than 39 vnodes to stat.
Fix this by allocating an array of {status,callback} records for each vnode
we want to examine using vmalloc() if larger than a page.
This not only gets rid of the order-1 allocation, but makes it easier to
grow beyond 50 records for YFS servers. It also allows us to move to
{status,callback} tuples for other calls too and makes it easier to lock
across the application of the status and the callback to the vnode.
Fixes: 5cf9dd55a0 ("afs: Prospectively look up extra files when doing a single lookup")
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Replace the afs_call::reply[] array with a bunch of typed members so that
the compiler can use type-checking on them. It's also easier for the eye
to see what's going on.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Don't pass the vnode pointer through into the inline bulk status op. We
want to process the status records outside of it anyway.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Fix the calculation of the expiry time of a callback promise, as obtained
from operations like FS.FetchStatus and FS.FetchData.
The time should be based on the timestamp of the first DATA packet in the
reply and the calculation needs to turn the ktime_t timestamp into a
time64_t.
Fixes: c435ee3455 ("afs: Overhaul the callback handling")
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Make certain RPC operations non-interruptible, including:
(*) Set attributes
(*) Store data
We don't want to get interrupted during a flush on close, flush on
unlock, writeback or an inode update, leaving us in a state where we
still need to do the writeback or update.
(*) Extend lock
(*) Release lock
We don't want to get lock extension interrupted as the file locks on
the server are time-limited. Interruption during lock release is less
of an issue since the lock is time-limited, but it's better to
complete the release to avoid a several-minute wait to recover it.
*Setting* the lock isn't a problem if it's interrupted since we can
just return to the user and tell them they were interrupted - at
which point they can elect to retry.
(*) Silly unlink
We want to remove silly unlink files if we can, rather than leaving
them for the salvager to clear up.
Note that whilst these calls are no longer interruptible, they do have
timeouts on them, so if the server stops responding the call will fail with
something like ETIME or ECONNRESET.
Without this, the following:
kAFS: Unexpected error from FS.StoreData -512
appears in dmesg when a pending store data gets interrupted and some
processes may just hang.
Additionally, make the code that checks/updates the server record ignore
failure due to interruption if the main call is uninterruptible and if the
server has an address list. The next op will check it again since the
expiration time on the old list has past.
Fixes: d2ddc776a4 ("afs: Overhaul volume and server record caching and fileserver rotation")
Reported-by: Jonathan Billings <jsbillings@jsbillings.org>
Reported-by: Marc Dionne <marc.dionne@auristor.com>
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
afs_xattr_get_yfs() tries to free yacl, which may hold an error value (say
if yfs_fs_fetch_opaque_acl() failed and returned an error).
Fix this by allocating yacl up front (since it's a fixed-length struct,
unlike afs_acl) and passing it in to the RPC function. This also allows
the flags to be placed in the object rather than passing them through to
the RPC function.
Fixes: ae46578b96 ("afs: Get YFS ACLs and information through xattrs")
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
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Merge tag 'afs-next-20190507' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/dhowells/linux-fs
Pull AFS updates from David Howells:
"A set of fix and development patches for AFS for 5.2.
Summary:
- Fix the AFS file locking so that sqlite can run on an AFS mount and
also so that firefox and gnome can use a homedir that's mounted
through AFS.
This required emulation of fine-grained locking when the server
will only support whole-file locks and no upgrade/downgrade. Four
modes are provided, settable by mount parameter:
"flock=local" - No reference to the server
"flock=openafs" - Fine-grained locks are local-only, whole-file
locks require sufficient server locks
"flock=strict" - All locks require sufficient server locks
"flock=write" - Always get an exclusive server lock
If the volume is a read-only or backup volume, then flock=local for
that volume.
- Log extra information for a couple of cases where the client mucks
up somehow: AFS vnode with undefined type and dir check failure -
in both cases we seem to end up with unfilled data, but the issues
happen infrequently and are difficult to reproduce at will.
- Implement silly rename for unlink() and rename().
- Set i_blocks so that du can get some information about usage.
- Fix xattr handlers to return the right amount of data and to not
overflow buffers.
- Implement getting/setting raw AFS and YFS ACLs as xattrs"
* tag 'afs-next-20190507' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/dhowells/linux-fs:
afs: Implement YFS ACL setting
afs: Get YFS ACLs and information through xattrs
afs: implement acl setting
afs: Get an AFS3 ACL as an xattr
afs: Fix getting the afs.fid xattr
afs: Fix the afs.cell and afs.volume xattr handlers
afs: Calculate i_blocks based on file size
afs: Log more information for "kAFS: AFS vnode with undefined type\n"
afs: Provide mount-time configurable byte-range file locking emulation
afs: Add more tracepoints
afs: Implement sillyrename for unlink and rename
afs: Add directory reload tracepoint
afs: Handle lock rpc ops failing on a file that got deleted
afs: Improve dir check failure reports
afs: Add file locking tracepoints
afs: Further fix file locking
afs: Fix AFS file locking to allow fine grained locks
afs: Calculate lock extend timer from set/extend reply reception
afs: Split wait from afs_make_call()
Hi Linus,
This is my very first pull-request. I've been working full-time as
a kernel developer for more than two years now. During this time I've
been fixing bugs reported by Coverity all over the tree and, as part
of my work, I'm also contributing to the KSPP. My work in the kernel
community has been supervised by Greg KH and Kees Cook.
OK. So, after the quick introduction above, please, pull the following
patches that mark switch cases where we are expecting to fall through.
These patches are part of the ongoing efforts to enable -Wimplicit-fallthrough.
They have been ignored for a long time (most of them more than 3 months,
even after pinging multiple times), which is the reason why I've created
this tree. Most of them have been baking in linux-next for a whole development
cycle. And with Stephen Rothwell's help, we've had linux-next nag-emails
going out for newly introduced code that triggers -Wimplicit-fallthrough
to avoid gaining more of these cases while we work to remove the ones
that are already present.
I'm happy to let you know that we are getting close to completing this
work. Currently, there are only 32 of 2311 of these cases left to be
addressed in linux-next. I'm auditing every case; I take a look into
the code and analyze it in order to determine if I'm dealing with an
actual bug or a false positive, as explained here:
https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/c2fad584-1705-a5f2-d63c-824e9b96cf50@embeddedor.com/
While working on this, I've found and fixed the following missing
break/return bugs, some of them introduced more than 5 years ago:
84242b82d87850b51b6c5e420fe63509186e5034b5be8531817264235ee7cc5034a5d2479826cc865340f23df8df997abeeb2f10d82373307b00c5e65d25ff7a54a7ed5b3e7dc24bfa8f21ad0eaee6199ba8376ce1dc586a60a1a8e9b186f14e57562b4860747828eac5b974bee9cc44ba91162c930e3d0a
Once this work is finish, we'll be able to universally enable
"-Wimplicit-fallthrough" to avoid any of these kinds of bugs from
entering the kernel again.
Thanks
Signed-off-by: Gustavo A. R. Silva <gustavo@embeddedor.com>
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Merge tag 'Wimplicit-fallthrough-5.2-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gustavoars/linux
Pull Wimplicit-fallthrough updates from Gustavo A. R. Silva:
"Mark switch cases where we are expecting to fall through.
This is part of the ongoing efforts to enable -Wimplicit-fallthrough.
Most of them have been baking in linux-next for a whole development
cycle. And with Stephen Rothwell's help, we've had linux-next
nag-emails going out for newly introduced code that triggers
-Wimplicit-fallthrough to avoid gaining more of these cases while we
work to remove the ones that are already present.
We are getting close to completing this work. Currently, there are
only 32 of 2311 of these cases left to be addressed in linux-next. I'm
auditing every case; I take a look into the code and analyze it in
order to determine if I'm dealing with an actual bug or a false
positive, as explained here:
https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/c2fad584-1705-a5f2-d63c-824e9b96cf50@embeddedor.com/
While working on this, I've found and fixed the several missing
break/return bugs, some of them introduced more than 5 years ago.
Once this work is finished, we'll be able to universally enable
"-Wimplicit-fallthrough" to avoid any of these kinds of bugs from
entering the kernel again"
* tag 'Wimplicit-fallthrough-5.2-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gustavoars/linux: (27 commits)
memstick: mark expected switch fall-throughs
drm/nouveau/nvkm: mark expected switch fall-throughs
NFC: st21nfca: Fix fall-through warnings
NFC: pn533: mark expected switch fall-throughs
block: Mark expected switch fall-throughs
ASN.1: mark expected switch fall-through
lib/cmdline.c: mark expected switch fall-throughs
lib: zstd: Mark expected switch fall-throughs
scsi: sym53c8xx_2: sym_nvram: Mark expected switch fall-through
scsi: sym53c8xx_2: sym_hipd: mark expected switch fall-throughs
scsi: ppa: mark expected switch fall-through
scsi: osst: mark expected switch fall-throughs
scsi: lpfc: lpfc_scsi: Mark expected switch fall-throughs
scsi: lpfc: lpfc_nvme: Mark expected switch fall-through
scsi: lpfc: lpfc_nportdisc: Mark expected switch fall-through
scsi: lpfc: lpfc_hbadisc: Mark expected switch fall-throughs
scsi: lpfc: lpfc_els: Mark expected switch fall-throughs
scsi: lpfc: lpfc_ct: Mark expected switch fall-throughs
scsi: imm: mark expected switch fall-throughs
scsi: csiostor: csio_wr: mark expected switch fall-through
...
Implement the setting of YFS ACLs in AFS through the interface of setting
the afs.yfs.acl extended attribute on the file.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
The YFS/AuriStor variant of AFS provides more capable ACLs and provides
per-volume ACLs and per-file ACLs as well as per-directory ACLs. It also
provides some extra information that can be retrieved through four ACLs:
(1) afs.yfs.acl
The YFS file ACL (not the same format as afs.acl).
(2) afs.yfs.vol_acl
The YFS volume ACL.
(3) afs.yfs.acl_inherited
"1" if a file's ACL is inherited from its parent directory, "0"
otherwise.
(4) afs.yfs.acl_num_cleaned
The number of of ACEs removed from the ACL by the server because the
PT entries were removed from the PTS database (ie. the subject is no
longer known).
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Provide byte-range file locking emulation that can be configured at mount
time to one of four modes:
(1) flock=local. Locking is done locally only and no reference is made to
the server.
(2) flock=openafs. Byte-range locking is done locally only; whole-file
locking is done with reference to the server. Whole-file locks cannot
be upgraded unless the client holds an exclusive lock.
(3) flock=strict. Byte-range and whole-file locking both require a
sufficient whole-file lock on the server.
(4) flock=write. As strict, but the client always gets an exclusive
whole-file lock on the server.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Add four more tracepoints:
(1) afs_make_fs_call1 - Split from afs_make_fs_call but takes a filename
to log also.
(2) afs_make_fs_call2 - Like the above but takes two filenames to log.
(3) afs_lookup - Log the result of doing a successful lookup, including a
negative result (fid 0:0).
(4) afs_get_tree - Log the set up of a volume for mounting.
It also extends the name buffer on the afs_edit_dir tracepoint to 24 chars
and puts quotes around the filename in the text representation.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Record the timestamp on the first reply DATA packet received in response to
a set- or extend-lock operation, then use this to calculate the time
remaining till the lock expires rather than using whatever time the
requesting process wakes up and finishes processing the operation as a
base.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Split the call to afs_wait_for_call_to_complete() from afs_make_call() to
make it easier to handle asynchronous calls and to make it easier to
convert a synchronous call to an asynchronous one in future, for instance
when someone tries to interrupt an operation by pressing Ctrl-C.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
In preparation to enabling -Wimplicit-fallthrough, mark switch cases
where we are expecting to fall through.
Notice that in many cases I placed a /* Fall through */ comment
at the bottom of the case, which what GCC is expecting to find.
In other cases I had to tweak a bit the format of the comments.
This patch suppresses ALL missing-break-in-switch false positives
in fs/afs
Addresses-Coverity-ID: 115042 ("Missing break in switch")
Addresses-Coverity-ID: 115043 ("Missing break in switch")
Addresses-Coverity-ID: 115045 ("Missing break in switch")
Addresses-Coverity-ID: 1357430 ("Missing break in switch")
Addresses-Coverity-ID: 115047 ("Missing break in switch")
Addresses-Coverity-ID: 115050 ("Missing break in switch")
Addresses-Coverity-ID: 115051 ("Missing break in switch")
Addresses-Coverity-ID: 1467806 ("Missing break in switch")
Addresses-Coverity-ID: 1467807 ("Missing break in switch")
Addresses-Coverity-ID: 1467811 ("Missing break in switch")
Addresses-Coverity-ID: 115041 ("Missing break in switch")
Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Gustavo A. R. Silva <gustavo@embeddedor.com>
The marshalling of AFS.StoreData, AFS.StoreData64 and YFS.StoreData64 calls
generated by ->setattr() ops for the purpose of expanding a file is
incorrect due to older documentation incorrectly describing the way the RPC
'FileLength' parameter is meant to work.
The older documentation says that this is the length the file is meant to
end up at the end of the operation; however, it was never implemented this
way in any of the servers, but rather the file is truncated down to this
before the write operation is effected, and never expanded to it (and,
indeed, it was renamed to 'TruncPos' in 2014).
Fix this by setting the position parameter to the new file length and doing
a zero-lengh write there.
The bug causes Xwayland to SIGBUS due to unexpected non-expansion of a file
it then mmaps. This can be tested by giving the following test program a
filename in an AFS directory:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
char *p;
int fd;
if (argc != 2) {
fprintf(stderr,
"Format: test-trunc-mmap <file>\n");
exit(2);
}
fd = open(argv[1], O_RDWR | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC);
if (fd < 0) {
perror(argv[1]);
exit(1);
}
if (ftruncate(fd, 0x140008) == -1) {
perror("ftruncate");
exit(1);
}
p = mmap(NULL, 4096, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE,
MAP_SHARED, fd, 0);
if (p == MAP_FAILED) {
perror("mmap");
exit(1);
}
p[0] = 'a';
if (munmap(p, 4096) < 0) {
perror("munmap");
exit(1);
}
if (close(fd) < 0) {
perror("close");
exit(1);
}
exit(0);
}
Fixes: 31143d5d51 ("AFS: implement basic file write support")
Reported-by: Jonathan Billings <jsbillin@umich.edu>
Tested-by: Jonathan Billings <jsbillin@umich.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>