xfs: fix an agbno overflow in __xfs_getfsmap_datadev
Dave Chinner reported that xfs/273 fails if the AG size happens to be an exact power of two. I traced this to an agbno integer overflow when the current GETFSMAP call is a continuation of a previous GETFSMAP call, and the last record returned was non-shareable space at the end of an AG. __xfs_getfsmap_datadev sets up a data device query by converting the incoming fmr_physical into an xfs_fsblock_t and cracking it into an agno and agbno pair. In the (failing) case of where fmr_blockcount of the low key is nonzero and the record was for a non-shareable extent, it will add fmr_blockcount to start_fsb and info->low.rm_startblock. If the low key was actually the last record for that AG, then this addition causes info->low.rm_startblock to point beyond EOAG. When the rmapbt range query starts, it'll return an empty set, and fsmap moves on to the next AG. Or so I thought. Remember how we added to start_fsb? If agsize < 1<<agblklog, start_fsb points to the same AG as the original fmr_physical from the low key. We run the rmapbt query, which returns nothing, so getfsmap zeroes info->low and moves on to the next AG. If agsize == 1<<agblklog, start_fsb now points to the next AG. We run the rmapbt query on the next AG with the excessively large rm_startblock. If this next AG is actually the last AG, we'll set info->high to EOFS (which is now has a lower rm_startblock than info->low), and the ranged btree query code will return -EINVAL. If it's not the last AG, we ignore all records for the intermediate AGs. Oops. Fix this by decoding start_fsb into agno and agbno only after making adjustments to start_fsb. This means that info->low.rm_startblock will always be set to a valid agbno, and we always start the rmapbt iteration in the correct AG. While we're at it, fix the predicate for determining if an fsmap record represents non-shareable space to include file data on pre-reflink filesystems. Reported-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com> Fixes: 63ef7a35 ("xfs: fix interval filtering in multi-step fsmap queries") Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
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