xfs: report proper f_files in statfs if we overshoot imaxpct

Normally, a statfs syscall reports m_maxicount as f_files
(total file nodes in file system) because it is supposed
to be the upper limit for dynamically-allocated inodes.

It's possible, however, to overshoot imaxpct / m_maxicount.
If this happens, we should report the actual number of allocated
inodes, which is contained in sb_icount.  Add one more adjustment
to the statfs code to make this happen.

Reported-by: Alexander Tsvetkov <alexander.tsvetkov@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
This commit is contained in:
Eric Sandeen 2015-02-06 09:53:02 +11:00 committed by Dave Chinner
parent de8bd0eb69
commit 01f9882eac

View File

@ -1111,6 +1111,11 @@ xfs_fs_statfs(
statp->f_files, statp->f_files,
mp->m_maxicount); mp->m_maxicount);
/* If sb_icount overshot maxicount, report actual allocation */
statp->f_files = max_t(typeof(statp->f_files),
statp->f_files,
sbp->sb_icount);
/* make sure statp->f_ffree does not underflow */ /* make sure statp->f_ffree does not underflow */
ffree = statp->f_files - (sbp->sb_icount - sbp->sb_ifree); ffree = statp->f_files - (sbp->sb_icount - sbp->sb_ifree);
statp->f_ffree = max_t(__int64_t, ffree, 0); statp->f_ffree = max_t(__int64_t, ffree, 0);