I discovered this in userspace, but the same change applies
to the kernel.
If we xfs_mdrestore an image from a non-crc filesystem, lo
and behold the restored image has gained a CRC:
# db/xfs_metadump.sh -o /dev/sdc1 - | xfs_mdrestore - test.img
# xfs_db -c "sb 0" -c "p crc" /dev/sdc1
crc = 0 (correct)
# xfs_db -c "sb 0" -c "p crc" test.img
crc = 0xb6f8d6a0 (correct)
This is because xfs_sb_from_disk doesn't fill in sb_crc,
but xfs_sb_to_disk(XFS_SB_ALL_BITS) does write the in-memory
CRC to disk - so we get uninitialized memory on disk.
Fix this by always initializing sb_crc to 0 when we read
the superblock, and masking out the CRC bit from ALL_BITS
when we write it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
to->sb_features_incompat = be32_to_cpu(from->sb_features_incompat);
to->sb_features_log_incompat =
be32_to_cpu(from->sb_features_log_incompat);
+ /* crc is only used on disk, not in memory; just init to 0 here. */
+ to->sb_crc = 0;
to->sb_pad = 0;
to->sb_pquotino = be64_to_cpu(from->sb_pquotino);
to->sb_lsn = be64_to_cpu(from->sb_lsn);
if (!fields)
return;
+ /* We should never write the crc here, it's updated in the IO path */
+ fields &= ~XFS_SB_CRC;
+
xfs_sb_quota_to_disk(to, from, &fields);
while (fields) {
f = (xfs_sb_field_t)xfs_lowbit64((__uint64_t)fields);