From: Josef Bacik josef@toxicpanda.com
[ Upstream commit 03ddb19d2ea745228879b9334f3b550c88acb10a ]
We can either fail to find a csum entry at all and return -ENOENT, or we can find a range that is close, but return -EFBIG. In essence these both mean the same thing when we are doing a lookup for a csum in an existing range, we didn't find a csum. We want to treat both of these errors the same way, complain loudly that there wasn't a csum. This currently happens anyway because we do
count = search_csum_tree(); if (count <= 0) { // reloc and error handling }
However it forces us to incorrectly treat EIO or ENOMEM errors as on disk corruption. Fix this by returning 0 if we get either -ENOENT or -EFBIG from btrfs_lookup_csum() so we can do proper error handling.
Reviewed-by: Boris Burkov boris@bur.io Reviewed-by: Johannes Thumshirn johannes.thumshirn@wdc.com Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik josef@toxicpanda.com Reviewed-by: David Sterba dsterba@suse.com Signed-off-by: David Sterba dsterba@suse.com Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin sashal@kernel.org --- fs/btrfs/file-item.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/fs/btrfs/file-item.c b/fs/btrfs/file-item.c index 42c1073a4e13..f9813853eaf8 100644 --- a/fs/btrfs/file-item.c +++ b/fs/btrfs/file-item.c @@ -305,7 +305,7 @@ static int search_csum_tree(struct btrfs_fs_info *fs_info, read_extent_buffer(path->nodes[0], dst, (unsigned long)item, ret * csum_size); out: - if (ret == -ENOENT) + if (ret == -ENOENT || ret == -EFBIG) ret = 0; return ret; }