From: Darrick J. Wong djwong@kernel.org
[ Upstream commit b69eea82d37d9ee7cfb3bf05103549dd4ed5ffc3 ]
Modern-day mapping_set_error has the ability to squash the usual negative error code into something appropriate for long-term storage in a struct address_space -- ENOSPC becomes AS_ENOSPC, and everything else becomes EIO. iomap squashes /everything/ to EIO, just as XFS did before that, but this doesn't make sense.
Fix this by making it so that we can pass ENOSPC to userspace when writeback fails due to space problems.
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong djwong@kernel.org Reviewed-by: Matthew Wilcox (Oracle) willy@infradead.org Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin sashal@kernel.org --- fs/iomap/buffered-io.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c b/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c index 9023717c5188..35839acd0004 100644 --- a/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c +++ b/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c @@ -1045,7 +1045,7 @@ iomap_finish_page_writeback(struct inode *inode, struct page *page,
if (error) { SetPageError(page); - mapping_set_error(inode->i_mapping, -EIO); + mapping_set_error(inode->i_mapping, error); }
WARN_ON_ONCE(i_blocks_per_page(inode, page) > 1 && !iop);