Commit 03aa3a49 authored by Jeff Layton's avatar Jeff Layton Committed by Steve French

cifs: fix sb->s_maxbytes so that it casts properly to a signed value

This off-by-one bug causes sendfile() to not work properly. When a task
calls sendfile() on a file on a CIFS filesystem, the syscall returns -1
and sets errno to EOVERFLOW.

do_sendfile uses s_maxbytes to verify the returned offset of the file.
The problem there is that this value is cast to a signed value (loff_t).
When this is done on the s_maxbytes value that cifs uses, it becomes
negative and the comparisons against it fail.

Even though s_maxbytes is an unsigned value, it seems that it's not OK
to set it in such a way that it'll end up negative when it's cast to a
signed value. These casts happen in other codepaths besides sendfile
too, but the VFS is a little hard to follow in this area and I can't
be sure if there are other bugs that this will fix.

It's not clear to me why s_maxbytes isn't just declared as loff_t in the
first place, but either way we still need to fix these values to make
sendfile work properly. This is also an opportunity to replace the magic
bit-shift values here with the standard #defines for this.

This fixes the reproducer program I have that does a sendfile and
will probably also fix the situation where apache is serving from a
CIFS share.
Acked-by: default avatarJohannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org>
Signed-off-by: default avatarJeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarSteve French <sfrench@us.ibm.com>
parent ce6e7fcd
......@@ -2452,10 +2452,10 @@ try_mount_again:
tcon->local_lease = volume_info->local_lease;
}
if (pSesInfo) {
if (pSesInfo->capabilities & CAP_LARGE_FILES) {
sb->s_maxbytes = (u64) 1 << 63;
} else
sb->s_maxbytes = (u64) 1 << 31; /* 2 GB */
if (pSesInfo->capabilities & CAP_LARGE_FILES)
sb->s_maxbytes = MAX_LFS_FILESIZE;
else
sb->s_maxbytes = MAX_NON_LFS;
}
/* BB FIXME fix time_gran to be larger for LANMAN sessions */
......
Markdown is supported
0%
or
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment