xfs: fix remote symlinks on V5/CRC filesystems
authorEric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com>
Sun, 21 Jun 2015 23:42:48 +0000 (09:42 +1000)
committerDanny Wood <danwood76@gmail.com>
Tue, 29 Jan 2019 13:09:22 +0000 (13:09 +0000)
commit 2ac56d3d4bd625450a54d4c3f9292d58f6b88232 upstream.

If we create a CRC filesystem, mount it, and create a symlink with
a path long enough that it can't live in the inode, we get a very
strange result upon remount:

# ls -l mnt
total 4
lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 929 Jun 15 16:58 link -> XSLM

XSLM is the V5 symlink block header magic (which happens to be
followed by a NUL, so the string looks terminated).

xfs_readlink_bmap() advanced cur_chunk by the size of the header
for CRC filesystems, but never actually used that pointer; it
kept reading from bp->b_addr, which is the start of the block,
rather than the start of the symlink data after the header.

Looks like this problem goes back to v3.10.

Fixing this gets us reading the proper link target, again.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
fs/xfs/xfs_symlink.c

index 195a403e1522bbed00cb0f843b1d53c885db0e0d..61dbe1958a30f0a3330e870b384adb659f5f00d7 100644 (file)
@@ -272,7 +272,7 @@ xfs_readlink_bmap(
                        cur_chunk += sizeof(struct xfs_dsymlink_hdr);
                }
 
-               memcpy(link + offset, bp->b_addr, byte_cnt);
+               memcpy(link + offset, cur_chunk, byte_cnt);
 
                pathlen -= byte_cnt;
                offset += byte_cnt;