I had an extremely corrupted customer filesystem which, after thousands of lines of e2fsck output, found one more problem on an immediately subsequent e2fsck. In short, a file had had its i_file_acl block cloned due to being a duplicate. That ultimately got cleared because the fs did not have the xattr feature, and the inode was subsequently removed due to invalid mode. The 2nd e2fsck pass found the cloned xattr block as in use, but not owned by any file, and had to fix up the block bitmaps. Simply skipping the processing of duplicate xattr blocks on a non-xattr filesystem seems reasonable, since they will be cleared later in any case. (also fix existing brace misalignment) Signed-off-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@xxxxxxxxxx> --- diff --git a/e2fsck/pass1b.c b/e2fsck/pass1b.c index 155fcba..2ddaeb4 100644 --- a/e2fsck/pass1b.c +++ b/e2fsck/pass1b.c @@ -310,12 +310,14 @@ static void pass1b(e2fsck_t ctx, char *block_buf) pctx.errcode = ext2fs_block_iterate3(fs, ino, BLOCK_FLAG_READ_ONLY, block_buf, process_pass1b_block, &pb); - if (ext2fs_file_acl_block(&inode)) { + /* If the feature is not set, attrs will be cleared later anyway */ + if ((fs->super->s_feature_compat & EXT2_FEATURE_COMPAT_EXT_ATTR) && + ext2fs_file_acl_block(&inode)) { blk64_t blk = ext2fs_file_acl_block(&inode); process_pass1b_block(fs, &blk, BLOCK_COUNT_EXTATTR, 0, 0, &pb); ext2fs_file_acl_block_set(&inode, blk); - } + } if (pb.dup_blocks) { end_problem_latch(ctx, PR_LATCH_DBLOCK); if (ino >= EXT2_FIRST_INODE(fs->super) || -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html