gfs2: init_journal's undo directive should also undo the statfs inodes
Hi, Before this patch, function init_journal's "undo" directive jumped to label fail_jinode_gh. But now that it does statfs initialization, it needs to jump to fail_statfs instead. Failure to do so means that mount failures after init_journal is successful will neglect to let go of the proper statfs information, stranding the statfs_changeX inodes. This makes it impossible to free its glocks, and results in: gfs2: fsid=sda.s: G: s:EX n:2/805f f:Dqob t:EX d:UN/603701000 a:0 v:0 r:4 m:200 p:1 gfs2: fsid=sda.s: H: s:EX f:H e:0 p:1397947 [(ended)] init_journal+0x548/0x890 [gfs2] gfs2: fsid=sda.s: I: n:6/32863 t:8 f:0x00 d:0x00000201 s:24 p:0 gfs2: fsid=sda.s: G: s:SH n:5/805f f:Dqob t:SH d:UN/603712000 a:0 v:0 r:3 m:200 p:0 gfs2: fsid=sda.s: H: s:SH f:EH e:0 p:1397947 [(ended)] gfs2_inode_lookup+0x1fb/0x410 [gfs2] VFS: Busy inodes after unmount of sda. Self-destruct in 5 seconds. Have a nice day... The next time the file system is mounted, it then reuses the same glocks, which ends in a kernel NULL pointer dereference when trying to dump the reused glock. This patch makes the "undo" function of init_journal jump to fail_statfs so the statfs files are properly deconstructed upon failure. Fixes: 97fd734b ("gfs2: lookup local statfs inodes prior to journal recovery") Signed-off-by:Bob Peterson <rpeterso@redhat.com> Signed-off-by:
Andreas Gruenbacher <agruenba@redhat.com>
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