xfs: make struct xfs_buf_log_format have a consistent size

Increase XFS_BLF_DATAMAP_SIZE by 1 to fill in the implied padding at the
end of struct xfs_buf_log_format.  This makes the size consistent so
that we can check it in xfs_ondisk.h, and will be needed once we start
logging attribute values.

On amd64 we get the following pahole:

struct xfs_buf_log_format {
        short unsigned int         blf_type;       /*     0     2 */
        short unsigned int         blf_size;       /*     2     2 */
        short unsigned int         blf_flags;      /*     4     2 */
        short unsigned int         blf_len;        /*     6     2 */
        long long int              blf_blkno;      /*     8     8 */
        unsigned int               blf_map_size;   /*    16     4 */
        unsigned int               blf_data_map[16]; /*    20    64 */
        /* --- cacheline 1 boundary (64 bytes) was 20 bytes ago --- */

        /* size: 88, cachelines: 2, members: 7 */
        /* padding: 4 */
        /* last cacheline: 24 bytes */
};

But on i386 we get the following:

struct xfs_buf_log_format {
        short unsigned int         blf_type;       /*     0     2 */
        short unsigned int         blf_size;       /*     2     2 */
        short unsigned int         blf_flags;      /*     4     2 */
        short unsigned int         blf_len;        /*     6     2 */
        long long int              blf_blkno;      /*     8     8 */
        unsigned int               blf_map_size;   /*    16     4 */
        unsigned int               blf_data_map[16]; /*    20    64 */
        /* --- cacheline 1 boundary (64 bytes) was 20 bytes ago --- */

        /* size: 84, cachelines: 2, members: 7 */
        /* last cacheline: 20 bytes */
};

Notice how the amd64 compiler inserts 4 bytes of padding to the end of
the structure to ensure 8-byte alignment.  Prior to "xfs: fix memory
corruption during remote attr value buffer invalidation" we would try to
write to blf_data_map[17], which is harmless on amd64 but really bad on
i386.

This shouldn't cause any changes in the ondisk logging formats because
the log code writes out the log vectors with the appropriate size for
the log item's map_size, and log recovery treats the data_map array as a
VLA.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
This commit is contained in:
Darrick J. Wong 2020-01-07 16:12:25 -08:00
parent c3d5f0c2fb
commit b7df5e9205
2 changed files with 14 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@ -462,11 +462,20 @@ static inline uint xfs_log_dinode_size(int version)
#define XFS_BLF_GDQUOT_BUF (1<<4)
/*
* This is the structure used to lay out a buf log item in the
* log. The data map describes which 128 byte chunks of the buffer
* have been logged.
* This is the structure used to lay out a buf log item in the log. The data
* map describes which 128 byte chunks of the buffer have been logged.
*
* The placement of blf_map_size causes blf_data_map to start at an odd
* multiple of sizeof(unsigned int) offset within the struct. Because the data
* bitmap size will always be an even number, the end of the data_map (and
* therefore the structure) will also be at an odd multiple of sizeof(unsigned
* int). Some 64-bit compilers will insert padding at the end of the struct to
* ensure 64-bit alignment of blf_blkno, but 32-bit ones will not. Therefore,
* XFS_BLF_DATAMAP_SIZE must be an odd number to make the padding explicit and
* keep the structure size consistent between 32-bit and 64-bit platforms.
*/
#define XFS_BLF_DATAMAP_SIZE ((XFS_MAX_BLOCKSIZE / XFS_BLF_CHUNK) / NBWORD)
#define __XFS_BLF_DATAMAP_SIZE ((XFS_MAX_BLOCKSIZE / XFS_BLF_CHUNK) / NBWORD)
#define XFS_BLF_DATAMAP_SIZE (__XFS_BLF_DATAMAP_SIZE + 1)
typedef struct xfs_buf_log_format {
unsigned short blf_type; /* buf log item type indicator */

View File

@ -111,6 +111,7 @@ xfs_check_ondisk_structs(void)
XFS_CHECK_STRUCT_SIZE(xfs_dir2_sf_hdr_t, 10);
/* log structures */
XFS_CHECK_STRUCT_SIZE(struct xfs_buf_log_format, 88);
XFS_CHECK_STRUCT_SIZE(struct xfs_dq_logformat, 24);
XFS_CHECK_STRUCT_SIZE(struct xfs_efd_log_format_32, 28);
XFS_CHECK_STRUCT_SIZE(struct xfs_efd_log_format_64, 32);