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authorNeilBrown <neilb@suse.com>2018-02-15 20:00:15 +1100
committerMike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>2018-02-16 10:46:35 -0500
commit8dd601fa8317243be887458c49f6c29c2f3d719f (patch)
tree0a354a696fd0f12ef5a405fe130a3349abd88217
parent7928b2cbe55b2a410a0f5c1f154610059c57b1b2 (diff)
dm: correctly handle chained bios in dec_pending()
dec_pending() is given an error status (possibly 0) to be recorded against a bio. It can be called several times on the one 'struct dm_io', and it is careful to only assign a non-zero error to io->status. However when it then assigned io->status to bio->bi_status, it is not careful and could overwrite a genuine error status with 0. This can happen when chained bios are in use. If a bio is chained beneath the bio that this dm_io is handling, the child bio might complete and set bio->bi_status before the dm_io completes. This has been possible since chained bios were introduced in 3.14, and has become a lot easier to trigger with commit 18a25da84354 ("dm: ensure bio submission follows a depth-first tree walk") as that commit caused dm to start using chained bios itself. A particular failure mode is that if a bio spans an 'error' target and a working target, the 'error' fragment will complete instantly and set the ->bi_status, and the other fragment will normally complete a little later, and will clear ->bi_status. The fix is simply to only assign io_error to bio->bi_status when io_error is not zero. Reported-and-tested-by: Milan Broz <gmazyland@gmail.com> Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org (v3.14+) Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
-rw-r--r--drivers/md/dm.c3
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/md/dm.c b/drivers/md/dm.c
index d6de00f367ef..68136806d365 100644
--- a/drivers/md/dm.c
+++ b/drivers/md/dm.c
@@ -903,7 +903,8 @@ static void dec_pending(struct dm_io *io, blk_status_t error)
queue_io(md, bio);
} else {
/* done with normal IO or empty flush */
- bio->bi_status = io_error;
+ if (io_error)
+ bio->bi_status = io_error;
bio_endio(bio);
}
}