Commit 932befe3 authored by Darrick J. Wong's avatar Darrick J. Wong

xfs: fix s_maxbytes computation on 32-bit kernels

I observed a hang in generic/308 while running fstests on a i686 kernel.
The hang occurred when trying to purge the pagecache on a large sparse
file that had a page created past MAX_LFS_FILESIZE, which caused an
integer overflow in the pagecache xarray and resulted in an infinite
loop.

I then noticed that Linus changed the definition of MAX_LFS_FILESIZE in
commit 0cc3b0ec ("Clarify (and fix) MAX_LFS_FILESIZE macros") so
that it is now one page short of the maximum page index on 32-bit
kernels.  Because the XFS function to compute max offset open-codes the
2005-era MAX_LFS_FILESIZE computation and neither the vfs nor mm perform
any sanity checking of s_maxbytes, the code in generic/308 can create a
page above the pagecache's limit and kaboom.

Fix all this by setting s_maxbytes to MAX_LFS_FILESIZE directly and
aborting the mount with a warning if our assumptions ever break.  I have
no answer for why this seems to have been broken for years and nobody
noticed.
Signed-off-by: default avatarDarrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: default avatarChristoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
parent 4bbb04ab
......@@ -193,32 +193,6 @@ xfs_fs_show_options(
return 0;
}
static uint64_t
xfs_max_file_offset(
unsigned int blockshift)
{
unsigned int pagefactor = 1;
unsigned int bitshift = BITS_PER_LONG - 1;
/* Figure out maximum filesize, on Linux this can depend on
* the filesystem blocksize (on 32 bit platforms).
* __block_write_begin does this in an [unsigned] long long...
* page->index << (PAGE_SHIFT - bbits)
* So, for page sized blocks (4K on 32 bit platforms),
* this wraps at around 8Tb (hence MAX_LFS_FILESIZE which is
* (((u64)PAGE_SIZE << (BITS_PER_LONG-1))-1)
* but for smaller blocksizes it is less (bbits = log2 bsize).
*/
#if BITS_PER_LONG == 32
ASSERT(sizeof(sector_t) == 8);
pagefactor = PAGE_SIZE;
bitshift = BITS_PER_LONG;
#endif
return (((uint64_t)pagefactor) << bitshift) - 1;
}
/*
* Set parameters for inode allocation heuristics, taking into account
* filesystem size and inode32/inode64 mount options; i.e. specifically
......@@ -1424,6 +1398,26 @@ xfs_fc_fill_super(
if (error)
goto out_free_sb;
/*
* XFS block mappings use 54 bits to store the logical block offset.
* This should suffice to handle the maximum file size that the VFS
* supports (currently 2^63 bytes on 64-bit and ULONG_MAX << PAGE_SHIFT
* bytes on 32-bit), but as XFS and VFS have gotten the s_maxbytes
* calculation wrong on 32-bit kernels in the past, we'll add a WARN_ON
* to check this assertion.
*
* Avoid integer overflow by comparing the maximum bmbt offset to the
* maximum pagecache offset in units of fs blocks.
*/
if (XFS_B_TO_FSBT(mp, MAX_LFS_FILESIZE) > XFS_MAX_FILEOFF) {
xfs_warn(mp,
"MAX_LFS_FILESIZE block offset (%llu) exceeds extent map maximum (%llu)!",
XFS_B_TO_FSBT(mp, MAX_LFS_FILESIZE),
XFS_MAX_FILEOFF);
error = -EINVAL;
goto out_free_sb;
}
error = xfs_filestream_mount(mp);
if (error)
goto out_free_sb;
......@@ -1435,7 +1429,7 @@ xfs_fc_fill_super(
sb->s_magic = XFS_SUPER_MAGIC;
sb->s_blocksize = mp->m_sb.sb_blocksize;
sb->s_blocksize_bits = ffs(sb->s_blocksize) - 1;
sb->s_maxbytes = xfs_max_file_offset(sb->s_blocksize_bits);
sb->s_maxbytes = MAX_LFS_FILESIZE;
sb->s_max_links = XFS_MAXLINK;
sb->s_time_gran = 1;
sb->s_time_min = S32_MIN;
......
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