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ext2: clear uptodate flag on super block I/O error

This fixes a WARN backtrace in mark_buffer_dirty() that occurs during
unmount when a USB or floppy device is removed. I reported this a kernel
regression, but looks like it might have been there for longer
than that.

The super block update from a previous operation has marked the buffer
as in error, and the flag has to be cleared before doing the update.
(Similar code already exists in ext4).

Signed-off-by: Stephen Hemminger <shemminger@vyatta.com>
Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
hifive-unleashed-5.1
Stephen Hemminger 2009-11-16 16:04:49 -08:00 committed by Jan Kara
parent 2314b07cb4
commit 2074abfeb8
1 changed files with 16 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -1137,8 +1137,24 @@ static void ext2_sync_super(struct super_block *sb, struct ext2_super_block *es)
static int ext2_sync_fs(struct super_block *sb, int wait)
{
struct ext2_super_block *es = EXT2_SB(sb)->s_es;
struct buffer_head *sbh = EXT2_SB(sb)->s_sbh;
lock_kernel();
if (buffer_write_io_error(sbh)) {
/*
* Oh, dear. A previous attempt to write the
* superblock failed. This could happen because the
* USB device was yanked out. Or it could happen to
* be a transient write error and maybe the block will
* be remapped. Nothing we can do but to retry the
* write and hope for the best.
*/
ext2_msg(sb, KERN_ERR,
"previous I/O error to superblock detected\n");
clear_buffer_write_io_error(sbh);
set_buffer_uptodate(sbh);
}
if (es->s_state & cpu_to_le16(EXT2_VALID_FS)) {
ext2_debug("setting valid to 0\n");
es->s_state &= cpu_to_le16(~EXT2_VALID_FS);