On 11/11/2016 12:00 PM, Deepa Dinamani wrote:
jfs uses nanosecond granularity for filesystem timestamps. Only this assignment is not using nanosecond granularity. Use current_time() to get the right granularity.
I had thought these were being handled as a group. I'll push this one through the jfs tree.
Thanks, Shaggy
Signed-off-by: Deepa Dinamani deepa.kernel@gmail.com Acked-by: Dave Kleikamp dave.kleikamp@oracle.com Reviewed-by: Arnd Bergmann arnd@arndb.de
fs/jfs/ioctl.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/fs/jfs/ioctl.c b/fs/jfs/ioctl.c index 8653cac..b6fd1ff 100644 --- a/fs/jfs/ioctl.c +++ b/fs/jfs/ioctl.c @@ -121,7 +121,7 @@ long jfs_ioctl(struct file *filp, unsigned int cmd, unsigned long arg) jfs_set_inode_flags(inode); inode_unlock(inode);
inode->i_ctime = CURRENT_TIME_SEC;
mark_inode_dirty(inode);inode->i_ctime = current_time(inode);
setflags_out: mnt_drop_write_file(filp);