Commit
8f4d8558391: "ext4: fix lazytime optimization" was not a
complete fix. In the case where the inode number is a multiple of 16,
and we could still end up updating an inode with dirty timestamps
written to the wrong inode on disk. Oops.
This can be easily reproduced by using generic/005 with a file system
with metadata_csum and lazytime enabled.
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
int inode_size = EXT4_INODE_SIZE(sb);
oi.orig_ino = orig_ino;
- ino = (orig_ino & ~(inodes_per_block - 1)) + 1;
+ /*
+ * Calculate the first inode in the inode table block. Inode
+ * numbers are one-based. That is, the first inode in a block
+ * (assuming 4k blocks and 256 byte inodes) is (n*16 + 1).
+ */
+ ino = ((orig_ino - 1) & ~(inodes_per_block - 1)) + 1;
for (i = 0; i < inodes_per_block; i++, ino++, buf += inode_size) {
if (ino == orig_ino)
continue;