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Commit Graph

2751 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Linus Torvalds
5aaaedb0cb A few more miscellaneous ext4 bug fixes and cleanups including some
syzbot failures and fixing a stale file handing refeencing an inode
 previously used as a regular file, but which has been deleted and
 reused as an ea_inode would result in ext4 erroneously consider this a
 case of fs corrupotion.
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Merge tag 'ext4_for_linus-6.15-rc2' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tytso/ext4

Pull ext4 fixes from Ted Ts'o:
 "A few more miscellaneous ext4 bug fixes and cleanups including some
  syzbot failures and fixing a stale file handing refeencing an inode
  previously used as a regular file, but which has been deleted and
  reused as an ea_inode would result in ext4 erroneously considering
  this a case of fs corruption"

* tag 'ext4_for_linus-6.15-rc2' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tytso/ext4:
  ext4: fix off-by-one error in do_split
  ext4: make block validity check resistent to sb bh corruption
  ext4: avoid -Wflex-array-member-not-at-end warning
  Documentation: ext4: Add fields to ext4_super_block documentation
  ext4: don't treat fhandle lookup of ea_inode as FS corruption
2025-04-13 07:15:50 -07:00
Tom Vierjahn
ce7e8a65aa Documentation: ext4: Add fields to ext4_super_block documentation
Documentation and implementation of the ext4 super block have
slightly diverged: Padding has been removed in order to make room for
new fields that are still missing in the documentation.

Add the new fields s_encryption_level, s_first_error_errorcode,
s_last_error_errorcode to the documentation of the ext4 super block.

Fixes: f542fbe8d5 ("ext4 crypto: reserve codepoints used by the ext4 encryption feature")
Fixes: 878520ac45 ("ext4: save the error code which triggered an ext4_error() in the superblock")

Signed-off-by: Tom Vierjahn <tom.vierjahn@acm.org>
Reviewed-by: Ojaswin Mujoo <ojaswin@linux.ibm.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20250324221004.5268-1-tom.vierjahn@acm.org
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
2025-04-12 21:50:41 -04:00
Linus Torvalds
bdafff62ae 9p update for 6.15-rc1
- fix handling of bogus (negative/too long) replies
 - fix crash on mkdir with ACLs
 (... looks like nobody is using ACLs with semi-recent kernels...)
 - ipv6 support for trans=tcp
 - minor concurrency fix to make syzbot happy
 - minor cleanup
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Merge tag '9p-for-6.15-rc1' of https://github.com/martinetd/linux

Pull 9p updates from Dominique Martinet:

 - fix handling of bogus (negative/too long) replies

 - fix crash on mkdir with ACLs (... looks like nobody is using ACLs
   with semi-recent kernels...)

 - ipv6 support for trans=tcp

 - minor concurrency fix to make syzbot happy

 - minor cleanup

* tag '9p-for-6.15-rc1' of https://github.com/martinetd/linux:
  docs: fs/9p: Add missing "not" in cache documentation
  9p: Use hashtable.h for hash_errmap
  Documentation/fs/9p: fix broken link
  9p/trans_fd: mark concurrent read and writes to p9_conn->err
  9p/net: return error on bogus (longer than requested) replies
  9p/net: fix improper handling of bogus negative read/write replies
  fs/9p: fix NULL pointer dereference on mkdir
  net/9p/fd: support ipv6 for trans=tcp
2025-04-03 15:35:46 -07:00
Tingmao Wang
4210030d8b docs: fs/9p: Add missing "not" in cache documentation
A quick fix for what I assume is a typo.

Signed-off-by: Tingmao Wang <m@maowtm.org>
Reviewed-by: Christian Schoenebeck <linux_oss@crudebyte.com>
Message-ID: <20250330213443.98434-1-m@maowtm.org>
Signed-off-by: Dominique Martinet <asmadeus@codewreck.org>
2025-04-03 12:31:11 +09:00
Linus Torvalds
d6b02199cd - The 7 patch series "powerpc/crash: use generic crashkernel
reservation" from Sourabh Jain changes powerpc's kexec code to use more
   of the generic layers.
 
 - The 2 patch series "get_maintainer: report subsystem status
   separately" from Vlastimil Babka makes some long-requested improvements
   to the get_maintainer output.
 
 - The 4 patch series "ucount: Simplify refcounting with rcuref_t" from
   Sebastian Siewior cleans up and optimizing the refcounting in the ucount
   code.
 
 - The 12 patch series "reboot: support runtime configuration of
   emergency hw_protection action" from Ahmad Fatoum improves the ability
   for a driver to perform an emergency system shutdown or reboot.
 
 - The 16 patch series "Converge on using secs_to_jiffies() part two"
   from Easwar Hariharan performs further migrations from
   msecs_to_jiffies() to secs_to_jiffies().
 
 - The 7 patch series "lib/interval_tree: add some test cases and
   cleanup" from Wei Yang permits more userspace testing of kernel library
   code, adds some more tests and performs some cleanups.
 
 - The 2 patch series "hung_task: Dump the blocking task stacktrace" from
   Masami Hiramatsu arranges for the hung_task detector to dump the stack
   of the blocking task and not just that of the blocked task.
 
 - The 4 patch series "resource: Split and use DEFINE_RES*() macros" from
   Andy Shevchenko provides some cleanups to the resource definition
   macros.
 
 - Plus the usual shower of singleton patches - please see the individual
   changelogs for details.
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Merge tag 'mm-nonmm-stable-2025-03-30-18-23' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm

Pull non-MM updates from Andrew Morton:

 - The series "powerpc/crash: use generic crashkernel reservation" from
   Sourabh Jain changes powerpc's kexec code to use more of the generic
   layers.

 - The series "get_maintainer: report subsystem status separately" from
   Vlastimil Babka makes some long-requested improvements to the
   get_maintainer output.

 - The series "ucount: Simplify refcounting with rcuref_t" from
   Sebastian Siewior cleans up and optimizing the refcounting in the
   ucount code.

 - The series "reboot: support runtime configuration of emergency
   hw_protection action" from Ahmad Fatoum improves the ability for a
   driver to perform an emergency system shutdown or reboot.

 - The series "Converge on using secs_to_jiffies() part two" from Easwar
   Hariharan performs further migrations from msecs_to_jiffies() to
   secs_to_jiffies().

 - The series "lib/interval_tree: add some test cases and cleanup" from
   Wei Yang permits more userspace testing of kernel library code, adds
   some more tests and performs some cleanups.

 - The series "hung_task: Dump the blocking task stacktrace" from Masami
   Hiramatsu arranges for the hung_task detector to dump the stack of
   the blocking task and not just that of the blocked task.

 - The series "resource: Split and use DEFINE_RES*() macros" from Andy
   Shevchenko provides some cleanups to the resource definition macros.

 - Plus the usual shower of singleton patches - please see the
   individual changelogs for details.

* tag 'mm-nonmm-stable-2025-03-30-18-23' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm: (77 commits)
  mailmap: consolidate email addresses of Alexander Sverdlin
  fs/procfs: fix the comment above proc_pid_wchan()
  relay: use kasprintf() instead of fixed buffer formatting
  resource: replace open coded variant of DEFINE_RES()
  resource: replace open coded variants of DEFINE_RES_*_NAMED()
  resource: replace open coded variant of DEFINE_RES_NAMED_DESC()
  resource: split DEFINE_RES_NAMED_DESC() out of DEFINE_RES_NAMED()
  samples: add hung_task detector mutex blocking sample
  hung_task: show the blocker task if the task is hung on mutex
  kexec_core: accept unaccepted kexec segments' destination addresses
  watchdog/perf: optimize bytes copied and remove manual NUL-termination
  lib/interval_tree: fix the comment of interval_tree_span_iter_next_gap()
  lib/interval_tree: skip the check before go to the right subtree
  lib/interval_tree: add test case for span iteration
  lib/interval_tree: add test case for interval_tree_iter_xxx() helpers
  lib/rbtree: add random seed
  lib/rbtree: split tests
  lib/rbtree: enable userland test suite for rbtree related data structure
  checkpatch: describe --min-conf-desc-length
  scripts/gdb/symbols: determine KASLR offset on s390
  ...
2025-04-01 10:06:52 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
eb0ece1602 - The 6 patch series "Enable strict percpu address space checks" from
Uros Bizjak uses x86 named address space qualifiers to provide
   compile-time checking of percpu area accesses.
 
   This has caused a small amount of fallout - two or three issues were
   reported.  In all cases the calling code was founf to be incorrect.
 
 - The 4 patch series "Some cleanup for memcg" from Chen Ridong
   implements some relatively monir cleanups for the memcontrol code.
 
 - The 17 patch series "mm: fixes for device-exclusive entries (hmm)"
   from David Hildenbrand fixes a boatload of issues which David found then
   using device-exclusive PTE entries when THP is enabled.  More work is
   needed, but this makes thins better - our own HMM selftests now succeed.
 
 - The 2 patch series "mm: zswap: remove z3fold and zbud" from Yosry
   Ahmed remove the z3fold and zbud implementations.  They have been
   deprecated for half a year and nobody has complained.
 
 - The 5 patch series "mm: further simplify VMA merge operation" from
   Lorenzo Stoakes implements numerous simplifications in this area.  No
   runtime effects are anticipated.
 
 - The 4 patch series "mm/madvise: remove redundant mmap_lock operations
   from process_madvise()" from SeongJae Park rationalizes the locking in
   the madvise() implementation.  Performance gains of 20-25% were observed
   in one MADV_DONTNEED microbenchmark.
 
 - The 12 patch series "Tiny cleanup and improvements about SWAP code"
   from Baoquan He contains a number of touchups to issues which Baoquan
   noticed when working on the swap code.
 
 - The 2 patch series "mm: kmemleak: Usability improvements" from Catalin
   Marinas implements a couple of improvements to the kmemleak user-visible
   output.
 
 - The 2 patch series "mm/damon/paddr: fix large folios access and
   schemes handling" from Usama Arif provides a couple of fixes for DAMON's
   handling of large folios.
 
 - The 3 patch series "mm/damon/core: fix wrong and/or useless
   damos_walk() behaviors" from SeongJae Park fixes a few issues with the
   accuracy of kdamond's walking of DAMON regions.
 
 - The 3 patch series "expose mapping wrprotect, fix fb_defio use" from
   Lorenzo Stoakes changes the interaction between framebuffer deferred-io
   and core MM.  No functional changes are anticipated - this is
   preparatory work for the future removal of page structure fields.
 
 - The 4 patch series "mm/damon: add support for hugepage_size DAMOS
   filter" from Usama Arif adds a DAMOS filter which permits the filtering
   by huge page sizes.
 
 - The 4 patch series "mm: permit guard regions for file-backed/shmem
   mappings" from Lorenzo Stoakes extends the guard region feature from its
   present "anon mappings only" state.  The feature now covers shmem and
   file-backed mappings.
 
 - The 4 patch series "mm: batched unmap lazyfree large folios during
   reclamation" from Barry Song cleans up and speeds up the unmapping for
   pte-mapped large folios.
 
 - The 18 patch series "reimplement per-vma lock as a refcount" from
   Suren Baghdasaryan puts the vm_lock back into the vma.  Our reasons for
   pulling it out were largely bogus and that change made the code more
   messy.  This patchset provides small (0-10%) improvements on one
   microbenchmark.
 
 - The 5 patch series "Docs/mm/damon: misc DAMOS filters documentation
   fixes and improves" from SeongJae Park does some maintenance work on the
   DAMON docs.
 
 - The 27 patch series "hugetlb/CMA improvements for large systems" from
   Frank van der Linden addresses a pile of issues which have been observed
   when using CMA on large machines.
 
 - The 2 patch series "mm/damon: introduce DAMOS filter type for unmapped
   pages" from SeongJae Park enables users of DMAON/DAMOS to filter my the
   page's mapped/unmapped status.
 
 - The 19 patch series "zsmalloc/zram: there be preemption" from Sergey
   Senozhatsky teaches zram to run its compression and decompression
   operations preemptibly.
 
 - The 12 patch series "selftests/mm: Some cleanups from trying to run
   them" from Brendan Jackman fixes a pile of unrelated issues which
   Brendan encountered while runnimg our selftests.
 
 - The 2 patch series "fs/proc/task_mmu: add guard region bit to pagemap"
   from Lorenzo Stoakes permits userspace to use /proc/pid/pagemap to
   determine whether a particular page is a guard page.
 
 - The 7 patch series "mm, swap: remove swap slot cache" from Kairui Song
   removes the swap slot cache from the allocation path - it simply wasn't
   being effective.
 
 - The 5 patch series "mm: cleanups for device-exclusive entries (hmm)"
   from David Hildenbrand implements a number of unrelated cleanups in this
   code.
 
 - The 5 patch series "mm: Rework generic PTDUMP configs" from Anshuman
   Khandual implements a number of preparatoty cleanups to the
   GENERIC_PTDUMP Kconfig logic.
 
 - The 8 patch series "mm/damon: auto-tune aggregation interval" from
   SeongJae Park implements a feedback-driven automatic tuning feature for
   DAMON's aggregation interval tuning.
 
 - The 5 patch series "Fix lazy mmu mode" from Ryan Roberts fixes some
   issues in powerpc, sparc and x86 lazy MMU implementations.  Ryan did
   this in preparation for implementing lazy mmu mode for arm64 to optimize
   vmalloc.
 
 - The 2 patch series "mm/page_alloc: Some clarifications for migratetype
   fallback" from Brendan Jackman reworks some commentary to make the code
   easier to follow.
 
 - The 3 patch series "page_counter cleanup and size reduction" from
   Shakeel Butt cleans up the page_counter code and fixes a size increase
   which we accidentally added late last year.
 
 - The 3 patch series "Add a command line option that enables control of
   how many threads should be used to allocate huge pages" from Thomas
   Prescher does that.  It allows the careful operator to significantly
   reduce boot time by tuning the parallalization of huge page
   initialization.
 
 - The 3 patch series "Fix calculations in trace_balance_dirty_pages()
   for cgwb" from Tang Yizhou fixes the tracing output from the dirty page
   balancing code.
 
 - The 9 patch series "mm/damon: make allow filters after reject filters
   useful and intuitive" from SeongJae Park improves the handling of allow
   and reject filters.  Behaviour is made more consistent and the
   documention is updated accordingly.
 
 - The 5 patch series "Switch zswap to object read/write APIs" from Yosry
   Ahmed updates zswap to the new object read/write APIs and thus permits
   the removal of some legacy code from zpool and zsmalloc.
 
 - The 6 patch series "Some trivial cleanups for shmem" from Baolin Wang
   does as it claims.
 
 - The 20 patch series "fs/dax: Fix ZONE_DEVICE page reference counts"
   from Alistair Popple regularizes the weird ZONE_DEVICE page refcount
   handling in DAX, permittig the removal of a number of special-case
   checks.
 
 - The 4 patch series "refactor mremap and fix bug" from Lorenzo Stoakes
   is a preparatoty refactoring and cleanup of the mremap() code.
 
 - The 20 patch series "mm: MM owner tracking for large folios (!hugetlb)
   + CONFIG_NO_PAGE_MAPCOUNT" from David Hildenbrand reworks the manner in
   which we determine whether a large folio is known to be mapped
   exclusively into a single MM.
 
 - The 8 patch series "mm/damon: add sysfs dirs for managing DAMOS
   filters based on handling layers" from SeongJae Park adds a couple of
   new sysfs directories to ease the management of DAMON/DAMOS filters.
 
 - The 13 patch series "arch, mm: reduce code duplication in mem_init()"
   from Mike Rapoport consolidates many per-arch implementations of
   mem_init() into code generic code, where that is practical.
 
 - The 13 patch series "mm/damon/sysfs: commit parameters online via
   damon_call()" from SeongJae Park continues the cleaning up of sysfs
   access to DAMON internal data.
 
 - The 3 patch series "mm: page_ext: Introduce new iteration API" from
   Luiz Capitulino reworks the page_ext initialization to fix a boot-time
   crash which was observed with an unusual combination of compile and
   cmdline options.
 
 - The 8 patch series "Buddy allocator like (or non-uniform) folio split"
   from Zi Yan reworks the code to split a folio into smaller folios.  The
   main benefit is lessened memory consumption: fewer post-split folios are
   generated.
 
 - The 2 patch series "Minimize xa_node allocation during xarry split"
   from Zi Yan reduces the number of xarray xa_nodes which are generated
   during an xarray split.
 
 - The 2 patch series "drivers/base/memory: Two cleanups" from Gavin Shan
   performs some maintenance work on the drivers/base/memory code.
 
 - The 3 patch series "Add tracepoints for lowmem reserves, watermarks
   and totalreserve_pages" from Martin Liu adds some more tracepoints to
   the page allocator code.
 
 - The 4 patch series "mm/madvise: cleanup requests validations and
   classifications" from SeongJae Park cleans up some warts which SeongJae
   observed during his earlier madvise work.
 
 - The 3 patch series "mm/hwpoison: Fix regressions in memory failure
   handling" from Shuai Xue addresses two quite serious regressions which
   Shuai has observed in the memory-failure implementation.
 
 - The 5 patch series "mm: reliable huge page allocator" from Johannes
   Weiner makes huge page allocations cheaper and more reliable by reducing
   fragmentation.
 
 - The 5 patch series "Minor memcg cleanups & prep for memdescs" from
   Matthew Wilcox is preparatory work for the future implementation of
   memdescs.
 
 - The 4 patch series "track memory used by balloon drivers" from Nico
   Pache introduces a way to track memory used by our various balloon
   drivers.
 
 - The 2 patch series "mm/damon: introduce DAMOS filter type for active
   pages" from Nhat Pham permits users to filter for active/inactive pages,
   separately for file and anon pages.
 
 - The 2 patch series "Adding Proactive Memory Reclaim Statistics" from
   Hao Jia separates the proactive reclaim statistics from the direct
   reclaim statistics.
 
 - The 2 patch series "mm/vmscan: don't try to reclaim hwpoison folio"
   from Jinjiang Tu fixes our handling of hwpoisoned pages within the
   reclaim code.
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Merge tag 'mm-stable-2025-03-30-16-52' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm

Pull MM updates from Andrew Morton:

 - The series "Enable strict percpu address space checks" from Uros
   Bizjak uses x86 named address space qualifiers to provide
   compile-time checking of percpu area accesses.

   This has caused a small amount of fallout - two or three issues were
   reported. In all cases the calling code was found to be incorrect.

 - The series "Some cleanup for memcg" from Chen Ridong implements some
   relatively monir cleanups for the memcontrol code.

 - The series "mm: fixes for device-exclusive entries (hmm)" from David
   Hildenbrand fixes a boatload of issues which David found then using
   device-exclusive PTE entries when THP is enabled. More work is
   needed, but this makes thins better - our own HMM selftests now
   succeed.

 - The series "mm: zswap: remove z3fold and zbud" from Yosry Ahmed
   remove the z3fold and zbud implementations. They have been deprecated
   for half a year and nobody has complained.

 - The series "mm: further simplify VMA merge operation" from Lorenzo
   Stoakes implements numerous simplifications in this area. No runtime
   effects are anticipated.

 - The series "mm/madvise: remove redundant mmap_lock operations from
   process_madvise()" from SeongJae Park rationalizes the locking in the
   madvise() implementation. Performance gains of 20-25% were observed
   in one MADV_DONTNEED microbenchmark.

 - The series "Tiny cleanup and improvements about SWAP code" from
   Baoquan He contains a number of touchups to issues which Baoquan
   noticed when working on the swap code.

 - The series "mm: kmemleak: Usability improvements" from Catalin
   Marinas implements a couple of improvements to the kmemleak
   user-visible output.

 - The series "mm/damon/paddr: fix large folios access and schemes
   handling" from Usama Arif provides a couple of fixes for DAMON's
   handling of large folios.

 - The series "mm/damon/core: fix wrong and/or useless damos_walk()
   behaviors" from SeongJae Park fixes a few issues with the accuracy of
   kdamond's walking of DAMON regions.

 - The series "expose mapping wrprotect, fix fb_defio use" from Lorenzo
   Stoakes changes the interaction between framebuffer deferred-io and
   core MM. No functional changes are anticipated - this is preparatory
   work for the future removal of page structure fields.

 - The series "mm/damon: add support for hugepage_size DAMOS filter"
   from Usama Arif adds a DAMOS filter which permits the filtering by
   huge page sizes.

 - The series "mm: permit guard regions for file-backed/shmem mappings"
   from Lorenzo Stoakes extends the guard region feature from its
   present "anon mappings only" state. The feature now covers shmem and
   file-backed mappings.

 - The series "mm: batched unmap lazyfree large folios during
   reclamation" from Barry Song cleans up and speeds up the unmapping
   for pte-mapped large folios.

 - The series "reimplement per-vma lock as a refcount" from Suren
   Baghdasaryan puts the vm_lock back into the vma. Our reasons for
   pulling it out were largely bogus and that change made the code more
   messy. This patchset provides small (0-10%) improvements on one
   microbenchmark.

 - The series "Docs/mm/damon: misc DAMOS filters documentation fixes and
   improves" from SeongJae Park does some maintenance work on the DAMON
   docs.

 - The series "hugetlb/CMA improvements for large systems" from Frank
   van der Linden addresses a pile of issues which have been observed
   when using CMA on large machines.

 - The series "mm/damon: introduce DAMOS filter type for unmapped pages"
   from SeongJae Park enables users of DMAON/DAMOS to filter my the
   page's mapped/unmapped status.

 - The series "zsmalloc/zram: there be preemption" from Sergey
   Senozhatsky teaches zram to run its compression and decompression
   operations preemptibly.

 - The series "selftests/mm: Some cleanups from trying to run them" from
   Brendan Jackman fixes a pile of unrelated issues which Brendan
   encountered while runnimg our selftests.

 - The series "fs/proc/task_mmu: add guard region bit to pagemap" from
   Lorenzo Stoakes permits userspace to use /proc/pid/pagemap to
   determine whether a particular page is a guard page.

 - The series "mm, swap: remove swap slot cache" from Kairui Song
   removes the swap slot cache from the allocation path - it simply
   wasn't being effective.

 - The series "mm: cleanups for device-exclusive entries (hmm)" from
   David Hildenbrand implements a number of unrelated cleanups in this
   code.

 - The series "mm: Rework generic PTDUMP configs" from Anshuman Khandual
   implements a number of preparatoty cleanups to the GENERIC_PTDUMP
   Kconfig logic.

 - The series "mm/damon: auto-tune aggregation interval" from SeongJae
   Park implements a feedback-driven automatic tuning feature for
   DAMON's aggregation interval tuning.

 - The series "Fix lazy mmu mode" from Ryan Roberts fixes some issues in
   powerpc, sparc and x86 lazy MMU implementations. Ryan did this in
   preparation for implementing lazy mmu mode for arm64 to optimize
   vmalloc.

 - The series "mm/page_alloc: Some clarifications for migratetype
   fallback" from Brendan Jackman reworks some commentary to make the
   code easier to follow.

 - The series "page_counter cleanup and size reduction" from Shakeel
   Butt cleans up the page_counter code and fixes a size increase which
   we accidentally added late last year.

 - The series "Add a command line option that enables control of how
   many threads should be used to allocate huge pages" from Thomas
   Prescher does that. It allows the careful operator to significantly
   reduce boot time by tuning the parallalization of huge page
   initialization.

 - The series "Fix calculations in trace_balance_dirty_pages() for cgwb"
   from Tang Yizhou fixes the tracing output from the dirty page
   balancing code.

 - The series "mm/damon: make allow filters after reject filters useful
   and intuitive" from SeongJae Park improves the handling of allow and
   reject filters. Behaviour is made more consistent and the documention
   is updated accordingly.

 - The series "Switch zswap to object read/write APIs" from Yosry Ahmed
   updates zswap to the new object read/write APIs and thus permits the
   removal of some legacy code from zpool and zsmalloc.

 - The series "Some trivial cleanups for shmem" from Baolin Wang does as
   it claims.

 - The series "fs/dax: Fix ZONE_DEVICE page reference counts" from
   Alistair Popple regularizes the weird ZONE_DEVICE page refcount
   handling in DAX, permittig the removal of a number of special-case
   checks.

 - The series "refactor mremap and fix bug" from Lorenzo Stoakes is a
   preparatoty refactoring and cleanup of the mremap() code.

 - The series "mm: MM owner tracking for large folios (!hugetlb) +
   CONFIG_NO_PAGE_MAPCOUNT" from David Hildenbrand reworks the manner in
   which we determine whether a large folio is known to be mapped
   exclusively into a single MM.

 - The series "mm/damon: add sysfs dirs for managing DAMOS filters based
   on handling layers" from SeongJae Park adds a couple of new sysfs
   directories to ease the management of DAMON/DAMOS filters.

 - The series "arch, mm: reduce code duplication in mem_init()" from
   Mike Rapoport consolidates many per-arch implementations of
   mem_init() into code generic code, where that is practical.

 - The series "mm/damon/sysfs: commit parameters online via
   damon_call()" from SeongJae Park continues the cleaning up of sysfs
   access to DAMON internal data.

 - The series "mm: page_ext: Introduce new iteration API" from Luiz
   Capitulino reworks the page_ext initialization to fix a boot-time
   crash which was observed with an unusual combination of compile and
   cmdline options.

 - The series "Buddy allocator like (or non-uniform) folio split" from
   Zi Yan reworks the code to split a folio into smaller folios. The
   main benefit is lessened memory consumption: fewer post-split folios
   are generated.

 - The series "Minimize xa_node allocation during xarry split" from Zi
   Yan reduces the number of xarray xa_nodes which are generated during
   an xarray split.

 - The series "drivers/base/memory: Two cleanups" from Gavin Shan
   performs some maintenance work on the drivers/base/memory code.

 - The series "Add tracepoints for lowmem reserves, watermarks and
   totalreserve_pages" from Martin Liu adds some more tracepoints to the
   page allocator code.

 - The series "mm/madvise: cleanup requests validations and
   classifications" from SeongJae Park cleans up some warts which
   SeongJae observed during his earlier madvise work.

 - The series "mm/hwpoison: Fix regressions in memory failure handling"
   from Shuai Xue addresses two quite serious regressions which Shuai
   has observed in the memory-failure implementation.

 - The series "mm: reliable huge page allocator" from Johannes Weiner
   makes huge page allocations cheaper and more reliable by reducing
   fragmentation.

 - The series "Minor memcg cleanups & prep for memdescs" from Matthew
   Wilcox is preparatory work for the future implementation of memdescs.

 - The series "track memory used by balloon drivers" from Nico Pache
   introduces a way to track memory used by our various balloon drivers.

 - The series "mm/damon: introduce DAMOS filter type for active pages"
   from Nhat Pham permits users to filter for active/inactive pages,
   separately for file and anon pages.

 - The series "Adding Proactive Memory Reclaim Statistics" from Hao Jia
   separates the proactive reclaim statistics from the direct reclaim
   statistics.

 - The series "mm/vmscan: don't try to reclaim hwpoison folio" from
   Jinjiang Tu fixes our handling of hwpoisoned pages within the reclaim
   code.

* tag 'mm-stable-2025-03-30-16-52' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm: (431 commits)
  mm/page_alloc: remove unnecessary __maybe_unused in order_to_pindex()
  x86/mm: restore early initialization of high_memory for 32-bits
  mm/vmscan: don't try to reclaim hwpoison folio
  mm/hwpoison: introduce folio_contain_hwpoisoned_page() helper
  cgroup: docs: add pswpin and pswpout items in cgroup v2 doc
  mm: vmscan: split proactive reclaim statistics from direct reclaim statistics
  selftests/mm: speed up split_huge_page_test
  selftests/mm: uffd-unit-tests support for hugepages > 2M
  docs/mm/damon/design: document active DAMOS filter type
  mm/damon: implement a new DAMOS filter type for active pages
  fs/dax: don't disassociate zero page entries
  MM documentation: add "Unaccepted" meminfo entry
  selftests/mm: add commentary about 9pfs bugs
  fork: use __vmalloc_node() for stack allocation
  docs/mm: Physical Memory: Populate the "Zones" section
  xen: balloon: update the NR_BALLOON_PAGES state
  hv_balloon: update the NR_BALLOON_PAGES state
  balloon_compaction: update the NR_BALLOON_PAGES state
  meminfo: add a per node counter for balloon drivers
  mm: remove references to folio in __memcg_kmem_uncharge_page()
  ...
2025-04-01 09:29:18 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
b6dde1e527 NFSD 6.15 Release Notes
Neil Brown contributed more scalability improvements to NFSD's
 open file cache, and Jeff Layton contributed a menagerie of
 repairs to NFSD's NFSv4 callback / backchannel implementation.
 
 Mike Snitzer contributed a change to NFS re-export support that
 disables support for file locking on a re-exported NFSv4 mount.
 This is because NFSv4 state recovery is currently difficult if
 not impossible for re-exported NFS mounts. The change aims to
 prevent data integrity exposures after the re-export server
 crashes.
 
 Work continues on the evolving NFSD netlink administrative API.
 
 Many thanks to the contributors, reviewers, testers, and bug
 reporters who participated during the v6.15 development cycle.
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Merge tag 'nfsd-6.15' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/cel/linux

Pull nfsd updates from Chuck Lever:
 "Neil Brown contributed more scalability improvements to NFSD's open
  file cache, and Jeff Layton contributed a menagerie of repairs to
  NFSD's NFSv4 callback / backchannel implementation.

  Mike Snitzer contributed a change to NFS re-export support that
  disables support for file locking on a re-exported NFSv4 mount. This
  is because NFSv4 state recovery is currently difficult if not
  impossible for re-exported NFS mounts. The change aims to prevent data
  integrity exposures after the re-export server crashes.

  Work continues on the evolving NFSD netlink administrative API.

  Many thanks to the contributors, reviewers, testers, and bug reporters
  who participated during the v6.15 development cycle"

* tag 'nfsd-6.15' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/cel/linux: (45 commits)
  NFSD: Add a Kconfig setting to enable delegated timestamps
  sysctl: Fixes nsm_local_state bounds
  nfsd: use a long for the count in nfsd4_state_shrinker_count()
  nfsd: remove obsolete comment from nfs4_alloc_stid
  nfsd: remove unneeded forward declaration of nfsd4_mark_cb_fault()
  nfsd: reorganize struct nfs4_delegation for better packing
  nfsd: handle errors from rpc_call_async()
  nfsd: move cb_need_restart flag into cb_flags
  nfsd: replace CB_GETATTR_BUSY with NFSD4_CALLBACK_RUNNING
  nfsd: eliminate cl_ra_cblist and NFSD4_CLIENT_CB_RECALL_ANY
  nfsd: prevent callback tasks running concurrently
  nfsd: disallow file locking and delegations for NFSv4 reexport
  nfsd: filecache: drop the list_lru lock during lock gc scans
  nfsd: filecache: don't repeatedly add/remove files on the lru list
  nfsd: filecache: introduce NFSD_FILE_RECENT
  nfsd: filecache: use list_lru_walk_node() in nfsd_file_gc()
  nfsd: filecache: use nfsd_file_dispose_list() in nfsd_file_close_inode_sync()
  NFSD: Re-organize nfsd_file_gc_worker()
  nfsd: filecache: remove race handling.
  fs: nfs: acl: Avoid -Wflex-array-member-not-at-end warning
  ...
2025-03-31 17:28:17 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
5c2a430e85 Ext4 bug fixes and cleanups, including:
* hardening against maliciously fuzzed file systems
   * backwards compatibility for the brief period when we attempted to
      ignore zero-width characters
   * avoid potentially BUG'ing if there is a file system corruption found
     during the file system unmount
   * fix free space reporting by statfs when project quotas are enabled
     and the free space is less than the remaining project quota
 
 Also improve performance when replaying a journal with a very large
 number of revoke records (applicable for Lustre volumes).
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Merge tag 'ext4-for_linus-6.15-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tytso/ext4

Pull ext4 updates from Ted Ts'o:
 "Ext4 bug fixes and cleanups, including:

   - hardening against maliciously fuzzed file systems

   - backwards compatibility for the brief period when we attempted to
     ignore zero-width characters

   - avoid potentially BUG'ing if there is a file system corruption
     found during the file system unmount

   - fix free space reporting by statfs when project quotas are enabled
     and the free space is less than the remaining project quota

  Also improve performance when replaying a journal with a very large
  number of revoke records (applicable for Lustre volumes)"

* tag 'ext4-for_linus-6.15-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tytso/ext4: (71 commits)
  ext4: fix OOB read when checking dotdot dir
  ext4: on a remount, only log the ro or r/w state when it has changed
  ext4: correct the error handle in ext4_fallocate()
  ext4: Make sb update interval tunable
  ext4: avoid journaling sb update on error if journal is destroying
  ext4: define ext4_journal_destroy wrapper
  ext4: hash: simplify kzalloc(n * 1, ...) to kzalloc(n, ...)
  jbd2: add a missing data flush during file and fs synchronization
  ext4: don't over-report free space or inodes in statvfs
  ext4: clear DISCARD flag if device does not support discard
  jbd2: remove jbd2_journal_unfile_buffer()
  ext4: reorder capability check last
  ext4: update the comment about mb_optimize_scan
  jbd2: fix off-by-one while erasing journal
  ext4: remove references to bh->b_page
  ext4: goto right label 'out_mmap_sem' in ext4_setattr()
  ext4: fix out-of-bound read in ext4_xattr_inode_dec_ref_all()
  ext4: introduce ITAIL helper
  jbd2: remove redundant function jbd2_journal_has_csum_v2or3_feature
  ext4: remove redundant function ext4_has_metadata_csum
  ...
2025-03-27 13:27:08 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
4a4b30ea80 bcachefs updates for 6.15
On disk format is now soft frozen: no more required/automatic are
 anticipated before taking off the experimental label.
 
 Major changes/features since 6.14:
 
 - Scrub
 
 - Blocksize greater than page size support
 
 - A number of "rebalance spinning and doing no work" issues have been
   fixed; we now check if the write allocation will succeed in
   bch2_data_update_init(), before kicking off the read.
 
   There's still more work to do in this area. Later we may want to add
   another bitset btree, like rebalance_work, to track "extents that
   rebalance was requested to move but couldn't", e.g. due to destination
   target having insufficient online devices.
 
 - We can now support scaling well into the petabyte range: latest
   bcachefs-tools will pick an appropriate bucket size at format time to
   ensure fsck can run in available memory (e.g. a server with 256GB of
   ram and 100PB of storage would want 16MB buckets).
 
 On disk format changes:
 
 - 1.21: cached backpointers (scalability improvement)
 
   Cached replicas now get backpointers, which means we no longer rely on
   incrementing bucket generation numbers to invalidate cached data: this
   lets us get rid of the bucket generation number garbage collection,
   which had to periodically rescan all extents to recompute bucket
   oldest_gen.
 
   Bucket generation numbers are now only used as a consistency check,
   but they're quite useful for that.
 
 - 1.22: stripe backpointers
 
   Stripes now have backpointers: erasure coded stripes have their own
   checksums, separate from the checksums for the extents they contain
   (and stripe checksums also cover the parity blocks). This is required
   for implementing scrub for stripes.
 
 - 1.23: stripe lru (scalability improvement)
 
   Persistent lru for stripes, ordered by "number of empty blocks". This
   is used by the stripe creation path, which depending on free space
   may create a new stripe out of a partially empty existing stripe
   instead of starting a brand new stripe.
 
   This replaces an in-memory heap, and means we no longer have to read
   in the stripes btree at startup.
 
 - 1.24: casefolding
 
   Case insensitive directory support, courtesy of Valve.
 
   This is an incompatible feature, to enable mount with
     -o version_upgrade=incompatible
 
 - 1.25: extent_flags
 
   Another incompatible feature requiring explicit opt-in to enable.
 
   This adds a flags entry to extents, and a flag bit that marks extents
   as poisoned.
 
   A poisoned extent is an extent that was unreadable due to checksum
   errors. We can't move such extents without giving them a new checksum,
   and we may have to move them (for e.g. copygc or device evacuate).
   We also don't want to delete them: in the future we'll have an API
   that lets userspace ignore checksum errors and attempt to deal with
   simple bitrot itself. Marking them as poisoned lets us continue to
   return the correct error to userspace on normal read calls.
 
 Other changes/features:
 
 - BCH_IOCTL_QUERY_COUNTERS: this is used by the new 'bcachefs fs top'
   command, which shows a live view of all internal filesystem counters.
 
 - Improved journal pipelining: we can now have 16 journal writes in
   flight concurrently, up from 4. We're logging significantly more to
   the journal than we used to with all the recent disk accounting
   changes and additions, so some users should see a performance
   increase on some workloads.
 
 - BCH_MEMBER_STATE_failed: previously, we would do no IO at all to
   devices marked as failed. Now we will attempt to read from them, but
   only if we have no better options.
 
 - New option, write_error_timeout: devices will be kicked out of the
   filesystem if all writes have been failing for x number of seconds.
 
   We now also kick devices out when notified by blk_holder_ops that
   they've gone offline.
 
 - Device option handling improvements: the discard option should now be
   working as expected (additionally, in -tools, all device options that
   can be set at format time can now be set at device add time, i.e.
   data_allowed, state).
 
 - We now try harder to read data after a checksum error: we'll do
   additional retries if necessary to a device after after it gave us
   data with a checksum error.
 
 - More self healing work: the full inode <-> dirent consistency checks
   that are currently run by fsck are now also run every time we do a
   lookup, meaning we'll be able to correct errors at runtime. Runtime
   self healing will be flipped on after the new changes have seen more
   testing, currently they're just checking for consistency.
 
 - KMSAN fixes: our KMSAN builds should be nearly clean now, which will
   put a massive dent in the syzbot dashboard.
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Merge tag 'bcachefs-2025-03-24' of git://evilpiepirate.org/bcachefs

Pull bcachefs updates from Kent Overstreet:
 "On disk format is now soft frozen: no more required/automatic are
  anticipated before taking off the experimental label.

  Major changes/features since 6.14:

   - Scrub

   - Blocksize greater than page size support

   - A number of "rebalance spinning and doing no work" issues have been
     fixed; we now check if the write allocation will succeed in
     bch2_data_update_init(), before kicking off the read.

     There's still more work to do in this area. Later we may want to
     add another bitset btree, like rebalance_work, to track "extents
     that rebalance was requested to move but couldn't", e.g. due to
     destination target having insufficient online devices.

   - We can now support scaling well into the petabyte range: latest
     bcachefs-tools will pick an appropriate bucket size at format time
     to ensure fsck can run in available memory (e.g. a server with
     256GB of ram and 100PB of storage would want 16MB buckets).

  On disk format changes:

   - 1.21: cached backpointers (scalability improvement)

     Cached replicas now get backpointers, which means we no longer rely
     on incrementing bucket generation numbers to invalidate cached
     data: this lets us get rid of the bucket generation number garbage
     collection, which had to periodically rescan all extents to
     recompute bucket oldest_gen.

     Bucket generation numbers are now only used as a consistency check,
     but they're quite useful for that.

   - 1.22: stripe backpointers

     Stripes now have backpointers: erasure coded stripes have their own
     checksums, separate from the checksums for the extents they contain
     (and stripe checksums also cover the parity blocks). This is
     required for implementing scrub for stripes.

   - 1.23: stripe lru (scalability improvement)

     Persistent lru for stripes, ordered by "number of empty blocks".
     This is used by the stripe creation path, which depending on free
     space may create a new stripe out of a partially empty existing
     stripe instead of starting a brand new stripe.

     This replaces an in-memory heap, and means we no longer have to
     read in the stripes btree at startup.

   - 1.24: casefolding

     Case insensitive directory support, courtesy of Valve.

     This is an incompatible feature, to enable mount with
       -o version_upgrade=incompatible

   - 1.25: extent_flags

     Another incompatible feature requiring explicit opt-in to enable.

     This adds a flags entry to extents, and a flag bit that marks
     extents as poisoned.

     A poisoned extent is an extent that was unreadable due to checksum
     errors. We can't move such extents without giving them a new
     checksum, and we may have to move them (for e.g. copygc or device
     evacuate). We also don't want to delete them: in the future we'll
     have an API that lets userspace ignore checksum errors and attempt
     to deal with simple bitrot itself. Marking them as poisoned lets us
     continue to return the correct error to userspace on normal read
     calls.

  Other changes/features:

   - BCH_IOCTL_QUERY_COUNTERS: this is used by the new 'bcachefs fs top'
     command, which shows a live view of all internal filesystem
     counters.

   - Improved journal pipelining: we can now have 16 journal writes in
     flight concurrently, up from 4. We're logging significantly more to
     the journal than we used to with all the recent disk accounting
     changes and additions, so some users should see a performance
     increase on some workloads.

   - BCH_MEMBER_STATE_failed: previously, we would do no IO at all to
     devices marked as failed. Now we will attempt to read from them,
     but only if we have no better options.

   - New option, write_error_timeout: devices will be kicked out of the
     filesystem if all writes have been failing for x number of seconds.

     We now also kick devices out when notified by blk_holder_ops that
     they've gone offline.

   - Device option handling improvements: the discard option should now
     be working as expected (additionally, in -tools, all device options
     that can be set at format time can now be set at device add time,
     i.e. data_allowed, state).

   - We now try harder to read data after a checksum error: we'll do
     additional retries if necessary to a device after after it gave us
     data with a checksum error.

   - More self healing work: the full inode <-> dirent consistency
     checks that are currently run by fsck are now also run every time
     we do a lookup, meaning we'll be able to correct errors at runtime.
     Runtime self healing will be flipped on after the new changes have
     seen more testing, currently they're just checking for consistency.

   - KMSAN fixes: our KMSAN builds should be nearly clean now, which
     will put a massive dent in the syzbot dashboard"

* tag 'bcachefs-2025-03-24' of git://evilpiepirate.org/bcachefs: (180 commits)
  bcachefs: Kill unnecessary bch2_dev_usage_read()
  bcachefs: btree node write errors now print btree node
  bcachefs: Fix race in print_chain()
  bcachefs: btree_trans_restart_foreign_task()
  bcachefs: bch2_disk_accounting_mod2()
  bcachefs: zero init journal bios
  bcachefs: Eliminate padding in move_bucket_key
  bcachefs: Fix a KMSAN splat in btree_update_nodes_written()
  bcachefs: kmsan asserts
  bcachefs: Fix kmsan warnings in bch2_extent_crc_pack()
  bcachefs: Disable asm memcpys when kmsan enabled
  bcachefs: Handle backpointers with unknown data types
  bcachefs: Count BCH_DATA_parity backpointers correctly
  bcachefs: Run bch2_check_dirent_target() at lookup time
  bcachefs: Refactor bch2_check_dirent_target()
  bcachefs: Move bch2_check_dirent_target() to namei.c
  bcachefs: fs-common.c -> namei.c
  bcachefs: EIO cleanup
  bcachefs: bch2_write_prep_encoded_data() now returns errcode
  bcachefs: Simplify bch2_write_op_error()
  ...
2025-03-27 13:20:07 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
81d8e5e213 f2fs-for-6.15-rc1
In this round, there are three major updates: 1) folio conversion, 2) refactor
 for mount API conversion, 3) some performance improvement such as direct IO,
 checkpoint speed, and IO priority hints. For stability, there are patches
 which add more sanity checks and fixes some major issues like i_size in
 atomic write operations and write pointer recovery in zoned devices.
 
 Enhancement:
  - huge folio converion work by Matthew Wilcox
  - clean up for mount API conversion by Eric Sandeen
  - improve direct IO speed in the overwrite case
  - add some sanity check on node consistency
  - set highest IO priority for checkpoint thread
  - keep POSIX_FADV_NOREUSE ranges and add sysfs entry to reclaim pages
  - add ioctl to get IO priority hint
  - add carve_out sysfs node for fsstat
 
 Bug fix:
  - disable nat_bits during umount to avoid potential nat entry corruption
  - fix missing i_size update on atomic writes
  - fix missing discard for active segments
  - fix running out of free segments
  - fix out-of-bounds access in f2fs_truncate_inode_blocks()
  - call f2fs_recover_quota_end() correctly
  - fix potential deadloop in prepare_compress_overwrite()
  - fix the missing write pointer correction for zoned device
  - fix to avoid panic once fallocation fails for pinfile
  - don't retry IO for corrupted data scenario
 
 There are many other clean up patches and minor bug fixes as usual.
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Merge tag 'f2fs-for-6.15-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jaegeuk/f2fs

Pull f2fs updates from Jaegeuk Kim:
 "In this round, there are three major updates: (1) folio conversion,
  (2) refactoring for mount API conversion, (3) some performance
  improvement such as direct IO, checkpoint speed, and IO priority
  hints.

  For stability, there are patches which add more sanity checks and
  fixes some major issues like i_size in atomic write operations and
  write pointer recovery in zoned devices.

  Enhancements:
   - huge folio converion work by Matthew Wilcox
   - clean up for mount API conversion by Eric Sandeen
   - improve direct IO speed in the overwrite case
   - add some sanity check on node consistency
   - set highest IO priority for checkpoint thread
   - keep POSIX_FADV_NOREUSE ranges and add sysfs entry to reclaim pages
   - add ioctl to get IO priority hint
   - add carve_out sysfs node for fsstat

  Bug fixes:
   - disable nat_bits during umount to avoid potential nat entry corruption
   - fix missing i_size update on atomic writes
   - fix missing discard for active segments
   - fix running out of free segments
   - fix out-of-bounds access in f2fs_truncate_inode_blocks()
   - call f2fs_recover_quota_end() correctly
   - fix potential deadloop in prepare_compress_overwrite()
   - fix the missing write pointer correction for zoned device
   - fix to avoid panic once fallocation fails for pinfile
   - don't retry IO for corrupted data scenario

  There are many other clean up patches and minor bug fixes as usual"

* tag 'f2fs-for-6.15-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jaegeuk/f2fs: (68 commits)
  f2fs: fix missing discard for active segments
  f2fs: optimize f2fs DIO overwrites
  f2fs: fix to avoid atomicity corruption of atomic file
  f2fs: pass sbi rather than sb to parse_options()
  f2fs: pass sbi rather than sb to quota qf_name helpers
  f2fs: defer readonly check vs norecovery
  f2fs: Pass sbi rather than sb to f2fs_set_test_dummy_encryption
  f2fs: make LAZYTIME a mount option flag
  f2fs: make INLINECRYPT a mount option flag
  f2fs: factor out an f2fs_default_check function
  f2fs: consolidate unsupported option handling errors
  f2fs: use f2fs_sb_has_device_alias during option parsing
  f2fs: add carve_out sysfs node
  f2fs: fix to avoid running out of free segments
  f2fs: Remove f2fs_write_node_page()
  f2fs: Remove f2fs_write_meta_page()
  f2fs: Remove f2fs_write_data_page()
  f2fs: Remove check for ->writepage
  Revert "f2fs: rebuild nat_bits during umount"
  f2fs: fix to avoid accessing uninitialized curseg
  ...
2025-03-27 12:55:54 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
a86c6d0b2a fscrypt updates for 6.15
A fix for an issue where CONFIG_FS_ENCRYPTION could be enabled without
 some of its dependencies, and a small documentation update.
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Merge tag 'fscrypt-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/fscrypt/linux

Pull fscrypt updates from Eric Biggers:
 "A fix for an issue where CONFIG_FS_ENCRYPTION could be enabled without
  some of its dependencies, and a small documentation update"

* tag 'fscrypt-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/fscrypt/linux:
  fscrypt: mention init_on_free instead of page poisoning
  fscrypt: drop obsolete recommendation to enable optimized ChaCha20
  Revert "fscrypt: relax Kconfig dependencies for crypto API algorithms"
2025-03-25 18:31:38 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
bdab2977e4 fsverity updates for 6.15
A fix for an issue where CONFIG_FS_VERITY could be enabled without some
 of its dependencies, and a small documentation update.
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Merge tag 'fsverity-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/fsverity/linux

Pull fsverity updates from Eric Biggers:
 "A fix for an issue where CONFIG_FS_VERITY could be enabled without
  some of its dependencies, and a small documentation update"

* tag 'fsverity-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/fsverity/linux:
  Revert "fsverity: relax build time dependency on CRYPTO_SHA256"
  Documentation: add a usecase for FS_IOC_READ_VERITY_METADATA
2025-03-25 18:30:23 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
f81c2b8150 It has been a reasonably busy cycle for docs...
- Significant changes throughout the tree to bring Python code up to
   current standards and raise the minimum Python required to 3.9.  Much of
   this is preparatory to replacing the ancient Perl scripts/kernel-doc
   horror with a slightly less horrifying Python implementation, expected
   for 6.16.
 
 - Update the minimum Sphinx required to 3.4.3, allowing us to remove a
   bunch of older compatibility code.
 
 - Rework and improve the generation of the ABI documentation.
 
   (All of the above done by Mauro)
 
 - Lots of translation updates.  Alex Shi and Yanteng Si are taking on
   responsibility for the Chinese translations going forward; that work will
   still get to you via docs-next
 
 - Try to standardize the format for indicating a developer's affiliation in
   commit tags.
 
 - Clarify the TAB's role in CoC enforcement actions.
 
 - Try to spell out the rules for when a commit tag can name another
   developer without their explicit permission.
 
 Plus lots of other typo fixes and updates.
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Merge tag 'docs-6.15' of git://git.lwn.net/linux

Pull documentation updates from Jonathan Corbet:
 "It has been a reasonably busy cycle for docs...

   - Significant changes throughout the tree to bring Python code up to
     current standards and raise the minimum Python required to 3.9

     Much of this is preparatory to replacing the ancient Perl
     scripts/kernel-doc horror with a slightly less horrifying Python
     implementation, expected for 6.16

   - Update the minimum Sphinx required to 3.4.3, allowing us to remove
     a bunch of older compatibility code

   - Rework and improve the generation of the ABI documentation

  (All of the above done by Mauro)

   - Lots of translation updates. Alex Shi and Yanteng Si are taking on
     responsibility for the Chinese translations going forward; that
     work will still get to you via docs-next

   - Try to standardize the format for indicating a developer's
     affiliation in commit tags

   - Clarify the TAB's role in CoC enforcement actions

   - Try to spell out the rules for when a commit tag can name another
     developer without their explicit permission

  Plus lots of other typo fixes and updates"

* tag 'docs-6.15' of git://git.lwn.net/linux: (98 commits)
  docs/zh_CN: fix spelling mistake
  docs/Chinese: change the disclaimer words
  docs/zh_CN: Add snp-tdx-threat-model index Chinese translation
  docs: driver-api: firmware: clarify userspace requirements
  docs: clarify rules wrt tagging other people
  docs: Remove outdated highuid.rst documentation
  Documentation: dma-buf: heaps: Add heap name definitions
  docs/.../submit-checklist: Use Documentation/admin-guide/abi.rst for cross-ref of README
  docs: Correct installation instruction
  Documentation: kcsan: fix "Plain Accesses and Data Races" URL in kcsan.rst
  Documentation/CoC: Spell out the TAB role in enforcement decisions
  Documentation: ocxl.rst: Update consortium site
  scripts: get_feat.pl: substitute s390x with s390
  scripts/kernel-doc: drop dead code for Wcontents_before_sections
  scripts/kernel-doc: don't add not needed new lines
  docs: driver-api/infiniband.rst: fix Kerneldoc markup
  drivers: firewire: firewire-cdev.h: fix identation on a kernel-doc markup
  drivers: media: intel-ipu3.h: fix identation on a kernel-doc markup
  include/asm-generic/io.h: fix kerneldoc markup
  Docs/arch/arm64: Fix spelling in amu.rst
  ...
2025-03-24 18:42:27 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
aaca83f7b1 vfs-6.15-rc1.sysv
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Merge tag 'vfs-6.15-rc1.sysv' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs

Pull vfs sysv removal from Christian Brauner:
 "This removes the sysv filesystem. We've discussed this various times.

  It's time to try"

* tag 'vfs-6.15-rc1.sysv' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs:
  sysv: Remove the filesystem
2025-03-24 11:35:53 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
26d8e43079 vfs-6.15-rc1.async.dir
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Merge tag 'vfs-6.15-rc1.async.dir' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs

Pull vfs async dir updates from Christian Brauner:
 "This contains cleanups that fell out of the work from async directory
  handling:

   - Change kern_path_locked() and user_path_locked_at() to never return
     a negative dentry. This simplifies the usability of these helpers
     in various places

   - Drop d_exact_alias() from the remaining place in NFS where it is
     still used. This also allows us to drop the d_exact_alias() helper
     completely

   - Drop an unnecessary call to fh_update() from nfsd_create_locked()

   - Change i_op->mkdir() to return a struct dentry

     Change vfs_mkdir() to return a dentry provided by the filesystems
     which is hashed and positive. This allows us to reduce the number
     of cases where the resulting dentry is not positive to very few
     cases. The code in these places becomes simpler and easier to
     understand.

   - Repack DENTRY_* and LOOKUP_* flags"

* tag 'vfs-6.15-rc1.async.dir' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs:
  doc: fix inline emphasis warning
  VFS: Change vfs_mkdir() to return the dentry.
  nfs: change mkdir inode_operation to return alternate dentry if needed.
  fuse: return correct dentry for ->mkdir
  ceph: return the correct dentry on mkdir
  hostfs: store inode in dentry after mkdir if possible.
  Change inode_operations.mkdir to return struct dentry *
  nfsd: drop fh_update() from S_IFDIR branch of nfsd_create_locked()
  nfs/vfs: discard d_exact_alias()
  VFS: add common error checks to lookup_one_qstr_excl()
  VFS: change kern_path_locked() and user_path_locked_at() to never return negative dentry
  VFS: repack LOOKUP_ bit flags.
  VFS: repack DENTRY_ flags.
2025-03-24 10:47:14 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
804382d59b vfs-6.15-rc1.overlayfs
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Merge tag 'vfs-6.15-rc1.overlayfs' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs

Pull vfs overlayfs updates from Christian Brauner:
 "Currently overlayfs uses the mounter's credentials for its
  override_creds() calls. That provides a consistent permission model.

  This patches allows a caller to instruct overlayfs to use its
  credentials instead. The caller must be located in the same user
  namespace hierarchy as the user namespace the overlayfs instance will
  be mounted in. This provides a consistent and simple security model.

  With this it is possible to e.g., mount an overlayfs instance where
  the mounter must have CAP_SYS_ADMIN but the credentials used for
  override_creds() have dropped CAP_SYS_ADMIN. It also allows the usage
  of custom fs{g,u}id different from the callers and other tweaks"

* tag 'vfs-6.15-rc1.overlayfs' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs:
  selftests/ovl: add third selftest for "override_creds"
  selftests/ovl: add second selftest for "override_creds"
  selftests/filesystems: add utils.{c,h}
  selftests/ovl: add first selftest for "override_creds"
  ovl: allow to specify override credentials
2025-03-24 10:37:40 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
0ec0d4ecdd vfs-6.15-rc1.iomap
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Merge tag 'vfs-6.15-rc1.iomap' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs

Pull vfs iomap updates from Christian Brauner:

 - Allow the filesystem to submit the writeback bios.

    - Allow the filsystem to track completions on a per-bio bases
      instead of the entire I/O.

    - Change writeback_ops so that ->submit_bio can be done by the
      filesystem.

    - A new ANON_WRITE flag for writes that don't have a block number
      assigned to them at the iomap level leaving the filesystem to do
      that work in the submission handler.

 - Incremental iterator advance

   The folio_batch support for zero range where the filesystem provides
   a batch of folios to process that might not be logically continguous
   requires more flexibility than the current offset based iteration
   currently offers.

   Update all iomap operations to advance the iterator within the
   operation and thus remove the need to advance from the core iomap
   iterator.

 - Make buffered writes work with RWF_DONTCACHE

   If RWF_DONTCACHE is set for a write, mark the folios being written as
   uncached. On writeback completion the pages will be dropped.

 - Introduce infrastructure for large atomic writes

   This will eventually be used by xfs and ext4.

* tag 'vfs-6.15-rc1.iomap' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs: (42 commits)
  iomap: rework IOMAP atomic flags
  iomap: comment on atomic write checks in iomap_dio_bio_iter()
  iomap: inline iomap_dio_bio_opflags()
  iomap: fix inline data on buffered read
  iomap: Lift blocksize restriction on atomic writes
  iomap: Support SW-based atomic writes
  iomap: Rename IOMAP_ATOMIC -> IOMAP_ATOMIC_HW
  xfs: flag as supporting FOP_DONTCACHE
  iomap: make buffered writes work with RWF_DONTCACHE
  iomap: introduce a full map advance helper
  iomap: rename iomap_iter processed field to status
  iomap: remove unnecessary advance from iomap_iter()
  dax: advance the iomap_iter on pte and pmd faults
  dax: advance the iomap_iter on dedupe range
  dax: advance the iomap_iter on unshare range
  dax: advance the iomap_iter on zero range
  dax: push advance down into dax_iomap_iter() for read and write
  dax: advance the iomap_iter in the read/write path
  iomap: convert misc simple ops to incremental advance
  iomap: advance the iter on direct I/O
  ...
2025-03-24 10:19:31 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
99c21beaab vfs-6.15-rc1.misc
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Merge tag 'vfs-6.15-rc1.misc' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs

Pull misc vfs updates from Christian Brauner:
 "Features:

   - Add CONFIG_DEBUG_VFS infrastucture:
      - Catch invalid modes in open
      - Use the new debug macros in inode_set_cached_link()
      - Use debug-only asserts around fd allocation and install

   - Place f_ref to 3rd cache line in struct file to resolve false
     sharing

Cleanups:

   - Start using anon_inode_getfile_fmode() helper in various places

   - Don't take f_lock during SEEK_CUR if exclusion is guaranteed by
     f_pos_lock

   - Add unlikely() to kcmp()

   - Remove legacy ->remount_fs method from ecryptfs after port to the
     new mount api

   - Remove invalidate_inodes() in favour of evict_inodes()

   - Simplify ep_busy_loopER by removing unused argument

   - Avoid mmap sem relocks when coredumping with many missing pages

   - Inline getname()

   - Inline new_inode_pseudo() and de-staticize alloc_inode()

   - Dodge an atomic in putname if ref == 1

   - Consistently deref the files table with rcu_dereference_raw()

   - Dedup handling of struct filename init and refcounts bumps

   - Use wq_has_sleeper() in end_dir_add()

   - Drop the lock trip around I_NEW wake up in evict()

   - Load the ->i_sb pointer once in inode_sb_list_{add,del}

   - Predict not reaching the limit in alloc_empty_file()

   - Tidy up do_sys_openat2() with likely/unlikely

   - Call inode_sb_list_add() outside of inode hash lock

   - Sort out fd allocation vs dup2 race commentary

   - Turn page_offset() into a wrapper around folio_pos()

   - Remove locking in exportfs around ->get_parent() call

   - try_lookup_one_len() does not need any locks in autofs

   - Fix return type of several functions from long to int in open

   - Fix return type of several functions from long to int in ioctls

  Fixes:

   - Fix watch queue accounting mismatch"

* tag 'vfs-6.15-rc1.misc' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs: (30 commits)
  fs: sort out fd allocation vs dup2 race commentary, take 2
  fs: call inode_sb_list_add() outside of inode hash lock
  fs: tidy up do_sys_openat2() with likely/unlikely
  fs: predict not reaching the limit in alloc_empty_file()
  fs: load the ->i_sb pointer once in inode_sb_list_{add,del}
  fs: drop the lock trip around I_NEW wake up in evict()
  fs: use wq_has_sleeper() in end_dir_add()
  VFS/autofs: try_lookup_one_len() does not need any locks
  fs: dedup handling of struct filename init and refcounts bumps
  fs: consistently deref the files table with rcu_dereference_raw()
  exportfs: remove locking around ->get_parent() call.
  fs: use debug-only asserts around fd allocation and install
  fs: dodge an atomic in putname if ref == 1
  vfs: Remove invalidate_inodes()
  ecryptfs: remove NULL remount_fs from super_operations
  watch_queue: fix pipe accounting mismatch
  fs: place f_ref to 3rd cache line in struct file to resolve false sharing
  epoll: simplify ep_busy_loop by removing always 0 argument
  fs: Turn page_offset() into a wrapper around folio_pos()
  kcmp: improve performance adding an unlikely hint to task comparisons
  ...
2025-03-24 09:13:50 -07:00
Tuomas Ahola
34ceb69edd Documentation/fs/9p: fix broken link
In b529c06f9d (Update the documentation referencing Plan 9 from User
Space., 2020-04-26), another instance of the link was left unfixed.
Fix that as well.

Signed-off-by: Tuomas Ahola <taahol@utu.fi>
Message-ID: <20250322153639.4917-1-taahol@utu.fi>
Signed-off-by: Dominique Martinet <asmadeus@codewreck.org>
2025-03-23 06:20:36 +09:00
Nico Pache
0bfd458685 MM documentation: add "Unaccepted" meminfo entry
Commit dcdfdd40fa ("mm: Add support for unaccepted memory") added a
entry to meminfo but did not document it in the proc.rst file.

This counter tracks the amount of "Unaccepted" guest memory for some
Virtual Machine platforms, such as Intel TDX or AMD SEV-SNP.

Add the missing entry in the documentation.

Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20250317230403.79632-1-npache@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Nico Pache <npache@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com>
Acked-by: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com>
Cc: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@kernel.org>
Cc: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
Cc: Jeff Xu <jeffxu@chromium.org>
Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Cc: Pasha Tatashin <pasha.tatashin@soleen.com>
Cc: Suren Baghdasaryan <surenb@google.com>
Cc: xu xin <xu.xin16@zte.com.cn>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2025-03-21 22:03:14 -07:00
Nico Pache
835de37603 meminfo: add a per node counter for balloon drivers
Patch series "track memory used by balloon drivers", v2.

This series introduces a way to track memory used by balloon drivers.

Add a NR_BALLOON_PAGES counter to track how many pages are reclaimed by
the balloon drivers.  First add the accounting, then updates the balloon
drivers (virtio, Hyper-V, VMware, Pseries-cmm, and Xen) to maintain this
counter.  The virtio, Vmware, and pseries-cmm balloon drivers utilize the
balloon_compaction interface to allocate and free balloon pages.  Other
balloon drivers will have to maintain this counter manually.

This makes the information visible in memory reporting interfaces like
/proc/meminfo, show_mem, and OOM reporting.

This provides admins visibility into their VM balloon sizes without
requiring different virtualization tooling.  Furthermore, this information
is helpful when debugging an OOM inside a VM.


This patch (of 4):

Add NR_BALLOON_PAGES counter to track memory used by balloon drivers and
expose it through /proc/meminfo and other memory reporting interfaces.

[npache@redhat.com: document Balloon Meminfo entry]
  Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/a0315ccf-f244-460e-8643-fd7388724fe5@redhat.com
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20250314213757.244258-1-npache@redhat.com
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20250314213757.244258-2-npache@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Nico Pache <npache@redhat.com>
Cc: Alexander Atanasov <alexander.atanasov@virtuozzo.com>
Cc: Chengming Zhou <chengming.zhou@linux.dev>
Cc: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com>
Cc: Dexuan Cui <decui@microsoft.com>
Cc: Haiyang Zhang <haiyangz@microsoft.com>
Cc: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org>
Cc: Juegren Gross <jgross@suse.com>
Cc: Kanchana P Sridhar <kanchana.p.sridhar@intel.com>
Cc: K. Y. Srinivasan <kys@microsoft.com>
Cc: "Michael S. Tsirkin" <mst@redhat.com>
Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@kernel.org>
Cc: Muchun Song <muchun.song@linux.dev>
Cc: Nhat Pham <nphamcs@gmail.com>
Cc: Oleksandr Tyshchenko <oleksandr_tyshchenko@epam.com>
Cc: Roman Gushchin <roman.gushchin@linux.dev>
Cc: Shakeel Butt <shakeel.butt@linux.dev>
Cc: Stefano Stabellini <sstabellini@kernel.org>
Cc: Wei Liu <wei.liu@kernel.org>
Cc: Michael Kelley <mhklinux@outlook.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2025-03-21 22:03:13 -07:00
John Garry
370a6de765
iomap: rework IOMAP atomic flags
Flag IOMAP_ATOMIC_SW is not really required. The idea of having this flag
is that the FS ->iomap_begin callback could check if this flag is set to
decide whether to do a SW (FS-based) atomic write. But the FS can set
which ->iomap_begin callback it wants when deciding to do a FS-based
atomic write.

Furthermore, it was thought that IOMAP_ATOMIC_HW is not a proper name, as
the block driver can use SW-methods to emulate an atomic write. So change
back to IOMAP_ATOMIC.

The ->iomap_begin callback needs though to indicate to iomap core that
REQ_ATOMIC needs to be set, so add IOMAP_F_ATOMIC_BIO for that.

These changes were suggested by Christoph Hellwig and Dave Chinner.

Signed-off-by: John Garry <john.g.garry@oracle.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250320120250.4087011-4-john.g.garry@oracle.com
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
2025-03-20 15:16:03 +01:00
David Hildenbrand
749492229e mm: stop maintaining the per-page mapcount of large folios (CONFIG_NO_PAGE_MAPCOUNT)
Everything is in place to stop using the per-page mapcounts in large
folios: the mapcount of tail pages will always be logically 0 (-1 value),
just like it currently is for hugetlb folios already, and the page
mapcount of the head page is either 0 (-1 value) or contains a page type
(e.g., hugetlb).

Maintaining _nr_pages_mapped without per-page mapcounts is impossible, so
that one also has to go with CONFIG_NO_PAGE_MAPCOUNT.

There are two remaining implications:

(1) Per-node, per-cgroup and per-lruvec stats of "NR_ANON_MAPPED"
    ("mapped anonymous memory") and "NR_FILE_MAPPED"
    ("mapped file memory"):

    As soon as any page of the folio is mapped -- folio_mapped() -- we
    now account the complete folio as mapped. Once the last page is
    unmapped -- !folio_mapped() -- we account the complete folio as
    unmapped.

    This implies that ...

    * "AnonPages" and "Mapped" in /proc/meminfo and
      /sys/devices/system/node/*/meminfo
    * cgroup v2: "anon" and "file_mapped" in "memory.stat" and
      "memory.numa_stat"
    * cgroup v1: "rss" and "mapped_file" in "memory.stat" and
      "memory.numa_stat

    ... can now appear higher than before. But note that these folios do
    consume that memory, simply not all pages are actually currently
    mapped.

    It's worth nothing that other accounting in the kernel (esp. cgroup
    charging on allocation) is not affected by this change.

    [why oh why is "anon" called "rss" in cgroup v1]

 (2) Detecting partial mappings

     Detecting whether anon THPs are partially mapped gets a bit more
     unreliable. As long as a single MM maps such a large folio
     ("exclusively mapped"), we can reliably detect it. Especially before
     fork() / after a short-lived child process quit, we will detect
     partial mappings reliably, which is the common case.

     In essence, if the average per-page mapcount in an anon THP is < 1,
     we know for sure that we have a partial mapping.

     However, as soon as multiple MMs are involved, we might miss detecting
     partial mappings: this might be relevant with long-lived child
     processes. If we have a fully-mapped anon folio before fork(), once
     our child processes and our parent all unmap (zap/COW) the same pages
     (but not the complete folio), we might not detect the partial mapping.
     However, once the child processes quit we would detect the partial
     mapping.

     How relevant this case is in practice remains to be seen.
     Swapout/migration will likely mitigate this.

     In the future, RMAP walkers could check for that for that case
     (e.g., when collecting access bits during reclaim) and simply flag
     them for deferred-splitting.

Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20250303163014.1128035-21-david@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com>
Cc: Andy Lutomirks^H^Hski <luto@kernel.org>
Cc: Borislav Betkov <bp@alien8.de>
Cc: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com>
Cc: Jann Horn <jannh@google.com>
Cc: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org>
Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Cc: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Lance Yang <ioworker0@gmail.com>
Cc: Liam Howlett <liam.howlett@oracle.com>
Cc: Lorenzo Stoakes <lorenzo.stoakes@oracle.com>
Cc: Matthew Wilcow (Oracle) <willy@infradead.org>
Cc: Michal Koutn <mkoutny@suse.com>
Cc: Muchun Song <muchun.song@linux.dev>
Cc: tejun heo <tj@kernel.org>
Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@suse.cz>
Cc: Zefan Li <lizefan.x@bytedance.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2025-03-17 22:06:48 -07:00
David Hildenbrand
6dd55dd1c5 fs/proc/task_mmu: remove per-page mapcount dependency for smaps/smaps_rollup (CONFIG_NO_PAGE_MAPCOUNT)
Let's implement an alternative when per-page mapcounts in large folios are
no longer maintained -- soon with CONFIG_NO_PAGE_MAPCOUNT.

When computing the output for smaps / smaps_rollups, in particular when
calculating the USS (Unique Set Size) and the PSS (Proportional Set Size),
we still rely on per-page mapcounts.

To determine private vs.  shared, we'll use folio_likely_mapped_shared(),
similar to how we handle PM_MMAP_EXCLUSIVE.  Similarly, we might now
under-estimate the USS and count pages towards "shared" that are actually
"private" ("exclusively mapped").

When calculating the PSS, we'll now also use the average per-page mapcount
for large folios: this can result in both, an over-estimation and an
under-estimation of the PSS.  The difference is not expected to matter
much in practice, but we'll have to learn as we go.

We can now provide folio_precise_page_mapcount() only with
CONFIG_PAGE_MAPCOUNT, and remove one of the last users of per-page
mapcounts when CONFIG_NO_PAGE_MAPCOUNT is enabled.

Document the new behavior.

Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20250303163014.1128035-20-david@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com>
Cc: Andy Lutomirks^H^Hski <luto@kernel.org>
Cc: Borislav Betkov <bp@alien8.de>
Cc: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com>
Cc: Jann Horn <jannh@google.com>
Cc: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org>
Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Cc: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Lance Yang <ioworker0@gmail.com>
Cc: Liam Howlett <liam.howlett@oracle.com>
Cc: Lorenzo Stoakes <lorenzo.stoakes@oracle.com>
Cc: Matthew Wilcow (Oracle) <willy@infradead.org>
Cc: Michal Koutn <mkoutny@suse.com>
Cc: Muchun Song <muchun.song@linux.dev>
Cc: tejun heo <tj@kernel.org>
Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@suse.cz>
Cc: Zefan Li <lizefan.x@bytedance.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2025-03-17 22:06:47 -07:00
David Hildenbrand
7a34ae1449 fs/proc/task_mmu: remove per-page mapcount dependency for "mapmax" (CONFIG_NO_PAGE_MAPCOUNT)
Let's implement an alternative when per-page mapcounts in large folios are
no longer maintained -- soon with CONFIG_NO_PAGE_MAPCOUNT.

For calculating "mapmax", we now use the average per-page mapcount in a
large folio instead of the per-page mapcount.

For hugetlb folios and folios that are not partially mapped into MMs,
there is no change.

Likely, this change will not matter much in practice, and an alternative
might be to simple remove this stat with CONFIG_NO_PAGE_MAPCOUNT. 
However, there might be value to it, so let's keep it like that and
document the behavior.

Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20250303163014.1128035-19-david@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com>
Cc: Andy Lutomirks^H^Hski <luto@kernel.org>
Cc: Borislav Betkov <bp@alien8.de>
Cc: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com>
Cc: Jann Horn <jannh@google.com>
Cc: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org>
Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Cc: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Lance Yang <ioworker0@gmail.com>
Cc: Liam Howlett <liam.howlett@oracle.com>
Cc: Lorenzo Stoakes <lorenzo.stoakes@oracle.com>
Cc: Matthew Wilcow (Oracle) <willy@infradead.org>
Cc: Michal Koutn <mkoutny@suse.com>
Cc: Muchun Song <muchun.song@linux.dev>
Cc: tejun heo <tj@kernel.org>
Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@suse.cz>
Cc: Zefan Li <lizefan.x@bytedance.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2025-03-17 22:06:47 -07:00
Dan Williams
653d7825c1 dcssblk: mark DAX broken, remove FS_DAX_LIMITED support
The dcssblk driver has long needed special case supoprt to enable limited
dax operation, so called CONFIG_FS_DAX_LIMITED.  This mode works around
the incomplete support for ZONE_DEVICE on s390 by forgoing the ability of
dax-mapped pages to support GUP.

Now, pending cleanups to fsdax that fix its reference counting [1] depend
on the ability of all dax drivers to supply ZONE_DEVICE pages.

To allow that work to move forward, dax support needs to be paused for
dcssblk until ZONE_DEVICE support arrives.  That work has been known for a
few years [2], and the removal of "pte_devmap" requirements [3] makes the
conversion easier.

For now, place the support behind CONFIG_BROKEN, and remove PFN_SPECIAL
(dcssblk was the only user).

Link: http://lore.kernel.org/cover.9f0e45d52f5cff58807831b6b867084d0b14b61c.1725941415.git-series.apopple@nvidia.com [1]
Link: http://lore.kernel.org/20210820210318.187742e8@thinkpad/ [2]
Link: http://lore.kernel.org/4511465a4f8429f45e2ac70d2e65dc5e1df1eb47.1725941415.git-series.apopple@nvidia.com [3]
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/33eef2379c0d240f40cc15453fad2df1a4ae34c8.1740713401.git-series.apopple@nvidia.com
Signed-off-by: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Gerald Schaefer <gerald.schaefer@linux.ibm.com>
Tested-by: Alexander Gordeev <agordeev@linux.ibm.com>
Acked-by: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Alison Schofield <alison.schofield@intel.com>
Cc: Heiko Carstens <hca@linux.ibm.com>
Cc: Vasily Gorbik <gor@linux.ibm.com>
Cc: Christian Borntraeger <borntraeger@linux.ibm.com>
Cc: Sven Schnelle <svens@linux.ibm.com>
Cc: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Cc: Matthew Wilcox <willy@infradead.org>
Cc: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Cc: Alistair Popple <apopple@nvidia.com>
Cc: Asahi Lina <lina@asahilina.net>
Cc: Balbir Singh <balbirs@nvidia.com>
Cc: Bjorn Helgaas <bhelgaas@google.com>
Cc: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
Cc: Chunyan Zhang <zhang.lyra@gmail.com>
Cc: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Cc: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Cc: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Dave Jiang <dave.jiang@intel.com>
Cc: Huacai Chen <chenhuacai@kernel.org>
Cc: Ira Weiny <ira.weiny@intel.com>
Cc: Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@nvidia.com>
Cc: Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@ziepe.ca>
Cc: John Hubbard <jhubbard@nvidia.com>
Cc: linmiaohe <linmiaohe@huawei.com>
Cc: Logan Gunthorpe <logang@deltatee.com>
Cc: Michael "Camp Drill Sergeant" Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
Cc: Nicholas Piggin <npiggin@gmail.com>
Cc: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com>
Cc: Ted Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
Cc: Vishal Verma <vishal.l.verma@intel.com>
Cc: Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@redhat.com>
Cc: WANG Xuerui <kernel@xen0n.name>
Cc: Will Deacon <will@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2025-03-17 22:06:40 -07:00
Andrii Nakryiko
87ad827a27 docs,procfs: document /proc/PID/* access permission checks
Add a paragraph explaining what sort of capabilities a process would need
to read procfs data for some other process.  Also mention that reading
data for its own process doesn't require any extra permissions.

Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20250129001747.759990-1-andrii@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Shakeel Butt <shakeel.butt@linux.dev>
Cc: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Cc: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
Cc: Steven Rostedt (VMware) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
Cc: Jann Horn <jannh@google.com>
Cc: Kees Cook <kees@kernel.org>
Cc: Liam Howlett <liam.howlett@oracle.com>
Cc: "Mike Rapoport (IBM)" <rppt@kernel.org>
Cc: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
Cc: Suren Baghdasaryan <surenb@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2025-03-16 22:30:47 -07:00
Bagas Sanjaya
a42d685ff2 Documentation: bcachefs: SubmittingPatches: Convert footnotes to reST syntax
Footnotes list are outputted in htmldocs simply as long-running
paragraph instead. Use reST numbered footnotes syntax for the job.

Signed-off-by: Bagas Sanjaya <bagasdotme@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2025-03-14 21:02:15 -04:00
Bagas Sanjaya
76d6305dca Documentation: bcachefs: SubmittingPatches: Demote section headings
SubmttingPatches.rst has 4 section headings, all under the same heading
levels. In absence of title headings, these section headings are all
ended up as title headings in the docs output, which also affect
the index toctree (increasing titles to 6 from the original 2)
due to :numbered: option.

Demote second-to-last section headings, making "Submitting patches
to bcachefs" as title heading.

Signed-off-by: Bagas Sanjaya <bagasdotme@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2025-03-14 21:02:15 -04:00
Bagas Sanjaya
93422e0b33 Documentation: bcachefs: Split index toctree
bcachefs subsystem currently has 4 docs: two are development notes and
the rest are actual filesystem docs. These two groups are clearly
distinct and can be organized.

Split the toctree into two, one for each docs group. While at it, also
reduce :maxdepth: so that only title headings are listed in the
toctrees.

Signed-off-by: Bagas Sanjaya <bagasdotme@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2025-03-14 21:02:15 -04:00
Bagas Sanjaya
7442ef7082 Documentation: bcachefs: Add casefolding toctree entry
Sphinx reports htmldocs toctree warning:

Documentation/filesystems/bcachefs/casefolding.rst: WARNING: document isn't included in any toctree

Fix the warning by adding casefolding documentation entry to bcachefs
toctree.

Fixes: bc5cc09246c5 ("bcachefs: bcachefs_metadata_version_casefolding")
Reported-by: Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-next/20250221161728.32739f85@canb.auug.org.au/
Signed-off-by: Bagas Sanjaya <bagasdotme@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2025-03-14 21:02:15 -04:00
Bagas Sanjaya
47d4100b15 Documentation: bcachefs: casefolding: Use bullet list for dirent structure
The doc lists dirent structure for both regular and casefolded names,
yet it is written (and rendered) as long paragraph instead.

Write the structure list as bullet list.

Fixes: bc5cc09246c5 ("bcachefs: bcachefs_metadata_version_casefolding")
Signed-off-by: Bagas Sanjaya <bagasdotme@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2025-03-14 21:02:15 -04:00
Bagas Sanjaya
210997859a Documentation: bcachefs: casefolding: Fix dentry/dcache considerations section
Sphinx reports htmldocs warnings on dentry/dcache section:

Documentation/filesystems/bcachefs/casefolding.rst:75: WARNING: Title underline too short.

dentry/dcache considerations
--------- [docutils]
Documentation/filesystems/bcachefs/casefolding.rst:84: WARNING: Definition list ends without a blank line; unexpected unindent. [docutils]

Fix the section by:

* Extending the section underline to match the section title length;
* Separating problem list from surrounding paragraphs.

Fixes: bc5cc09246c5 ("bcachefs: bcachefs_metadata_version_casefolding")
Reported-by: Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-next/20250221161911.2d16138b@canb.auug.org.au/
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-next/20250221162135.79be0147@canb.auug.org.au/
Signed-off-by: Bagas Sanjaya <bagasdotme@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2025-03-14 21:02:15 -04:00
Bagas Sanjaya
82b5666912 Documentation: bcachefs: casefolding: Do not italicize NUL
Sphinx reports htmldocs warning:

Documentation/filesystems/bcachefs/casefolding.rst:36: WARNING: Inline interpreted text or phrase reference start-string without end-string. [docutils]

That's because NUL word is italicized but it is written in plural form
instead (`NUL`s). Sphinx, however, doesn't tip over when the italicized
word in this fashion is followed by punctuation instead.

Do not italicize the word to keep Sphinx happy.

Fixes: bc5cc09246c5 ("bcachefs: bcachefs_metadata_version_casefolding")
Reported-by: Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-next/20250221162135.79be0147@canb.auug.org.au/
Signed-off-by: Bagas Sanjaya <bagasdotme@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2025-03-14 21:02:15 -04:00
Joshua Ashton
d37c14ac6f bcachefs: bcachefs_metadata_version_casefolding
This patch implements support for case-insensitive file name lookups
in bcachefs.

The implementation uses the same UTF-8 lowering and normalization that
ext4 and f2fs is using.

More information is provided in Documentation/bcachefs/casefolding.rst

Compatibility notes:

This uses the new versioning scheme for incompatible features where an
incompatible feature is tied to a version number: the superblock says
"we may use incompat features up to x" and "incompat features up to x
are in use", disallowing mounting by previous versions.

Additionally, and old style incompat feature bit is used, so that
kernels without utf8 casefolding support know if casefolding
specifically is in use and they're allowed to mount.

Signed-off-by: Joshua Ashton <joshua@froggi.es>
Cc: André Almeida <andrealmeid@igalia.com>
Cc: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2025-03-14 21:02:15 -04:00
Chao Yu
1788971e0b f2fs: introduce FAULT_INCONSISTENT_FOOTER
To simulate inconsistent node footer error.

Signed-off-by: Chao Yu <chao@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2025-03-11 03:25:53 +00:00
Mike Snitzer
9254c8ae9b nfsd: disallow file locking and delegations for NFSv4 reexport
We do not and cannot support file locking with NFS reexport over
NFSv4.x for the same reason we don't do it for NFSv3: NFS reexport
server reboot cannot allow clients to recover locks because the source
NFS server has not rebooted, and so it is not in grace.  Since the
source NFS server is not in grace, it cannot offer any guarantees that
the file won't have been changed between the locks getting lost and
any attempt to recover/reclaim them.  The same applies to delegations
and any associated locks, so disallow them too.

Clients are no longer allowed to get file locks or delegations from a
reexport server, any attempts will fail with operation not supported.

Update the "Reboot recovery" section accordingly in
Documentation/filesystems/nfs/reexport.rst

Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com>
2025-03-10 09:11:08 -04:00
Chao Yu
c2ecba0265 f2fs: control nat_bits feature via mount option
Introduce a new mount option "nat_bits" to control nat_bits feature,
by default nat_bits feature is disabled.

Signed-off-by: Chao Yu <chao@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2025-03-08 16:04:10 +00:00
Jan Kara
93fd0d46cb
vfs: Remove invalidate_inodes()
The function can be replaced by evict_inodes. The only difference is
that evict_inodes() skips the inodes with positive refcount without
touching ->i_lock, but they are equivalent as evict_inodes() repeats the
refcount check after having grabbed ->i_lock.

Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250307144318.28120-2-jack@suse.cz
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
2025-03-08 12:19:22 +01:00
John Garry
794ca29dcc
iomap: Support SW-based atomic writes
Currently atomic write support requires dedicated HW support. This imposes
a restriction on the filesystem that disk blocks need to be aligned and
contiguously mapped to FS blocks to issue atomic writes.

XFS has no method to guarantee FS block alignment for regular,
non-RT files. As such, atomic writes are currently limited to 1x FS block
there.

To deal with the scenario that we are issuing an atomic write over
misaligned or discontiguous data blocks - and raise the atomic write size
limit - support a SW-based software emulated atomic write mode. For XFS,
this SW-based atomic writes would use CoW support to issue emulated untorn
writes.

It is the responsibility of the FS to detect discontiguous atomic writes
and switch to IOMAP_DIO_ATOMIC_SW mode and retry the write. Indeed,
SW-based atomic writes could be used always when the mounted bdev does
not support HW offload, but this strategy is not initially expected to be
used.

Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: John Garry <john.g.garry@oracle.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250303171120.2837067-6-john.g.garry@oracle.com
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
2025-03-06 11:00:12 +01:00
John Garry
b4de0e9be9
iomap: Rename IOMAP_ATOMIC -> IOMAP_ATOMIC_HW
In future xfs will support a SW-based atomic write, so rename
IOMAP_ATOMIC -> IOMAP_ATOMIC_HW to be clear which mode is being used.

Also relocate setting of IOMAP_ATOMIC_HW to the write path in
__iomap_dio_rw(), to be clear that this flag is only relevant to writes.

Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: John Garry <john.g.garry@oracle.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250303171120.2837067-3-john.g.garry@oracle.com
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
2025-03-06 11:00:12 +01:00
Christian Brauner
1743d385e7
Merge branch 'vfs-6.15.shared.iomap' of gitolite.kernel.org:pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs
Bring in iomap changes that xfs relies on.

Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
2025-03-06 10:59:18 +01:00
Aiden Ma
50dc696c3a
doc: correcting two prefix errors in idmappings.rst
Add the 'k' prefix to id 21000. And id `u1000` in the third
idmapping should be mapped to `k31000`, not `u31000`.

Signed-off-by: Aiden Ma <jiaheng.ma@foxmail.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/tencent_4E7B1F143E8051530C21FCADF4E014DCBB06@qq.com
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
2025-03-05 11:54:18 +01:00
Christian Brauner
be66901997
doc: fix inline emphasis warning
Fix a warning spotted by linux-next build (htmldocs):

Documentation/filesystems/porting.rst:1186: WARNING: Inline emphasis start-string without end-string. [docutils]

Introduced by commit

  88d5baf690 ("Change inode_operations.mkdir to return struct dentry *")

Reported-by: Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au>
Fixes: 88d5baf690 ("Change inode_operations.mkdir to return struct dentry *")
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
2025-03-05 11:52:50 +01:00
Eric Biggers
13dc8eb900 fscrypt: mention init_on_free instead of page poisoning
Page poisoning is an older debug option.  The modern way to initialize
memory on free for security reasons is to set init_on_free=1.

Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250304210156.14912-1-ebiggers@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Eric Biggers <ebiggers@google.com>
2025-03-04 13:02:45 -08:00
Eric Biggers
eea957d8db fscrypt: drop obsolete recommendation to enable optimized ChaCha20
Since the crypto kconfig options are being fixed to enable optimized
ChaCha20 automatically
(https://lore.kernel.org/r/Z8AY16EIqAYpfmRI@gondor.apana.org.au/), it is
no longer necessary to give a recommendation to enable it.

Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250304205501.13797-1-ebiggers@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Eric Biggers <ebiggers@google.com>
2025-03-04 12:56:06 -08:00
NeilBrown
88d5baf690
Change inode_operations.mkdir to return struct dentry *
Some filesystems, such as NFS, cifs, ceph, and fuse, do not have
complete control of sequencing on the actual filesystem (e.g.  on a
different server) and may find that the inode created for a mkdir
request already exists in the icache and dcache by the time the mkdir
request returns.  For example, if the filesystem is mounted twice the
directory could be visible on the other mount before it is on the
original mount, and a pair of name_to_handle_at(), open_by_handle_at()
calls could instantiate the directory inode with an IS_ROOT() dentry
before the first mkdir returns.

This means that the dentry passed to ->mkdir() may not be the one that
is associated with the inode after the ->mkdir() completes.  Some
callers need to interact with the inode after the ->mkdir completes and
they currently need to perform a lookup in the (rare) case that the
dentry is no longer hashed.

This lookup-after-mkdir requires that the directory remains locked to
avoid races.  Planned future patches to lock the dentry rather than the
directory will mean that this lookup cannot be performed atomically with
the mkdir.

To remove this barrier, this patch changes ->mkdir to return the
resulting dentry if it is different from the one passed in.
Possible returns are:
  NULL - the directory was created and no other dentry was used
  ERR_PTR() - an error occurred
  non-NULL - this other dentry was spliced in

This patch only changes file-systems to return "ERR_PTR(err)" instead of
"err" or equivalent transformations.  Subsequent patches will make
further changes to some file-systems to return a correct dentry.

Not all filesystems reliably result in a positive hashed dentry:

- NFS, cifs, hostfs will sometimes need to perform a lookup of
  the name to get inode information.  Races could result in this
  returning something different. Note that this lookup is
  non-atomic which is what we are trying to avoid.  Placing the
  lookup in filesystem code means it only happens when the filesystem
  has no other option.
- kernfs and tracefs leave the dentry negative and the ->revalidate
  operation ensures that lookup will be called to correctly populate
  the dentry.  This could be fixed but I don't think it is important
  to any of the users of vfs_mkdir() which look at the dentry.

The recommendation to use
    d_drop();d_splice_alias()
is ugly but fits with current practice.  A planned future patch will
change this.

Reviewed-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250227013949.536172-2-neilb@suse.de
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
2025-02-27 20:00:17 +01:00
Jens Axboe
b2cd5ae693
iomap: make buffered writes work with RWF_DONTCACHE
Add iomap buffered write support for RWF_DONTCACHE. If RWF_DONTCACHE is
set for a write, mark the folios being written as uncached. Then
writeback completion will drop the pages. The write_iter handler simply
kicks off writeback for the pages, and writeback completion will take
care of the rest.

Signed-off-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250204184047.356762-2-axboe@kernel.dk
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
2025-02-27 11:27:54 +01:00
Christian Brauner
71628584df
Merge patch series "prep patches for my mkdir series"
NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de> says:

These two patches are cleanup are dependencies for my mkdir changes and
subsequence directory locking changes.

* patches from https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250226062135.2043651-1-neilb@suse.de: (2 commits)
  nfsd: drop fh_update() from S_IFDIR branch of nfsd_create_locked()
  nfs/vfs: discard d_exact_alias()

Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250226062135.2043651-1-neilb@suse.de
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
2025-02-27 09:25:34 +01:00
Jan Kara
448fa70158
sysv: Remove the filesystem
Since 2002 (change "Replace BKL for chain locking with sysvfs-private
rwlock") the sysv filesystem was doing IO under a rwlock in its
get_block() function (yes, a non-sleepable lock hold over a function
used to read inode metadata for all reads and writes).  Nobody noticed
until syzbot in 2023 [1]. This shows nobody is using the filesystem.
Just drop it.

[1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/0000000000000ccf9a05ee84f5b0@google.com/

Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250220163940.10155-2-jack@suse.cz
Reviewed-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
2025-02-21 10:32:47 +01:00