diff options
| author | Jan Kara <jack@suse.com> | 2016-02-19 00:18:25 -0500 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Luis Henriques <luis.henriques@canonical.com> | 2016-03-04 10:26:43 +0000 |
| commit | 6d4048ac27fd3a641d368943ea6deb13de3e6051 (patch) | |
| tree | 2c268cc47b9ed1ef93f08937b4101c6fa4af6e05 /kernel | |
| parent | 14aa81c8a236c657fbd1a0be4b6b07c02560dfe3 (diff) | |
ext4: fix bh->b_state corruption
commit ed8ad83808f009ade97ebbf6519bc3a97fefbc0c upstream.
ext4 can update bh->b_state non-atomically in _ext4_get_block() and
ext4_da_get_block_prep(). Usually this is fine since bh is just a
temporary storage for mapping information on stack but in some cases it
can be fully living bh attached to a page. In such case non-atomic
update of bh->b_state can race with an atomic update which then gets
lost. Usually when we are mapping bh and thus updating bh->b_state
non-atomically, nobody else touches the bh and so things work out fine
but there is one case to especially worry about: ext4_finish_bio() uses
BH_Uptodate_Lock on the first bh in the page to synchronize handling of
PageWriteback state. So when blocksize < pagesize, we can be atomically
modifying bh->b_state of a buffer that actually isn't under IO and thus
can race e.g. with delalloc trying to map that buffer. The result is
that we can mistakenly set / clear BH_Uptodate_Lock bit resulting in the
corruption of PageWriteback state or missed unlock of BH_Uptodate_Lock.
Fix the problem by always updating bh->b_state bits atomically.
Reported-by: Nikolay Borisov <kernel@kyup.com>
Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
[ luis: backported to 3.16:
- replaced READ_ONCE() by ACCESS_ONCE() ]
Signed-off-by: Luis Henriques <luis.henriques@canonical.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'kernel')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions
