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authorJeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>2017-07-06 07:02:24 -0400
committerJeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>2017-07-06 07:02:24 -0400
commit5e8fcc1a0ffa0fb794b3c0efa2c3c7612a771c36 (patch)
tree2df735706ee4006f12f2ab77fd24e7ae019310fe /scripts/recordmcount.c
parentcbeaf9510a8631e9bb0077a95fd8b0db0b3be200 (diff)
mm: don't TestClearPageError in __filemap_fdatawait_range
The -EIO returned here can end up overriding whatever error is marked in the address space, and be returned at fsync time, even when there is a more appropriate error stored in the mapping. Read errors are also sometimes tracked on a per-page level using PG_error. Suppose we have a read error on a page, and then that page is subsequently dirtied by overwriting the whole page. Writeback doesn't clear PG_error, so we can then end up successfully writing back that page and still return -EIO on fsync. Worse yet, PG_error is cleared during a sync() syscall, but the -EIO return from that is silently discarded. Any subsystem that is relying on PG_error to report errors during fsync can easily lose writeback errors due to this. All you need is a stray sync() call to wait for writeback to complete and you've lost the error. Since the handling of the PG_error flag is somewhat inconsistent across subsystems, let's just rely on marking the address space when there are writeback errors. Change the TestClearPageError call to ClearPageError, and make __filemap_fdatawait_range a void return function. Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'scripts/recordmcount.c')
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