From: John Haxby Date: Thu, 14 Jan 2016 23:17:12 +0000 (-0800) Subject: ocfs2: return non-zero st_blocks for inline data X-Git-Url: https://git.stricted.de/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=d6364627eff4c9a2035cebb3aec7415705ba117b;p=GitHub%2Fmoto-9609%2Fandroid_kernel_motorola_exynos9610.git ocfs2: return non-zero st_blocks for inline data Some versions of tar assume that files with st_blocks == 0 do not contain any data and will skip reading them entirely. See also commit 9206c561554c ("ext4: return non-zero st_blocks for inline data"). Signed-off-by: John Haxby Reviewed-by: Mark Fasheh Cc: Joel Becker Acked-by: Gang He Reviewed-by: Junxiao Bi Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds --- diff --git a/fs/ocfs2/file.c b/fs/ocfs2/file.c index 0e5b4515f92e..d63127932509 100644 --- a/fs/ocfs2/file.c +++ b/fs/ocfs2/file.c @@ -1302,6 +1302,14 @@ int ocfs2_getattr(struct vfsmount *mnt, } generic_fillattr(inode, stat); + /* + * If there is inline data in the inode, the inode will normally not + * have data blocks allocated (it may have an external xattr block). + * Report at least one sector for such files, so tools like tar, rsync, + * others don't incorrectly think the file is completely sparse. + */ + if (unlikely(OCFS2_I(inode)->ip_dyn_features & OCFS2_INLINE_DATA_FL)) + stat->blocks += (stat->size + 511)>>9; /* We set the blksize from the cluster size for performance */ stat->blksize = osb->s_clustersize;