This inserts sanity check that refuses to mount a filesystem with
unsupported block size.
Previously, kernel code of nilfs was looking only limitation of
devices though mkfs.nilfs2 limits the range of block sizes; there was
no check that prevents rec_len overflow with larger block sizes.
With this change, block sizes larger than 64KB or smaller than 1KB
will get rejected explicitly by kernel.
Signed-off-by: Ryusuke Konishi <konishi.ryusuke@lab.ntt.co.jp>
goto out;
}
- blocksize = sb_min_blocksize(sb, BLOCK_SIZE);
+ blocksize = sb_min_blocksize(sb, NILFS_MIN_BLOCK_SIZE);
if (!blocksize) {
printk(KERN_ERR "NILFS: unable to set blocksize\n");
err = -EINVAL;
goto failed_sbh;
blocksize = BLOCK_SIZE << le32_to_cpu(sbp->s_log_block_size);
+ if (blocksize < NILFS_MIN_BLOCK_SIZE ||
+ blocksize > NILFS_MAX_BLOCK_SIZE) {
+ printk(KERN_ERR "NILFS: couldn't mount because of unsupported "
+ "filesystem blocksize %d\n", blocksize);
+ err = -EINVAL;
+ goto failed_sbh;
+ }
if (sb->s_blocksize != blocksize) {
int hw_blocksize = bdev_logical_block_size(sb->s_bdev);
#define NILFS_NAME_LEN 255
+/*
+ * Block size limitations
+ */
+#define NILFS_MIN_BLOCK_SIZE 1024
+#define NILFS_MAX_BLOCK_SIZE 65536
+
/*
* The new version of the directory entry. Since V0 structures are
* stored in intel byte order, and the name_len field could never be