On Thu, May 17, 2007 at 07:10:19PM +0200, Jörn Engel (joern@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) wrote: > On Thu, 17 May 2007 20:03:11 +0400, Evgeniy Polyakov wrote: > > > > Is logfs 32bit fs or 674bit, since although you use 64bit values for > > offsets, area management and strange converstions like described below > > from offset into segment number are performed in 32bit? > > Is it enough for SSD for example to be 32bit only? Or if it is 64bit, > > could you please explain logic behind area management? > > Ignoring bugs and signed return values for error handling, it is either > 64bit or 32+32bit. > > Inode numbers and file positions are 64bit. Offsets are 64bit as well. > In a couple of places, offsets are also 32+32bit. Basically the high > bits contain the segment number, the lower bits the offset within a > segment. In that case segment size must be more than 32 bits, or below transformation will not be correct? segsize is long, but should be u64 I think. static void fixup_from_wbuf(struct super_block *sb, struct logfs_area *area, void *read, u64 ofs, size_t readlen) u32 read_start = ofs & (super->s_segsize - 1); u32 read_end = read_start + readlen; And this can overflow, since readlen is size_t. It is wbuf fixup, but I saw that somewhere else. Although, according to your description, it should be 32bit, sum can be more than 32 bit. > If anyone can find similar bugs, the bounty is a beer or non-alcoholic > beverage of choice. :) Stop kiling your kidneys, your health and promote such antisocial style of life, start drinking vodka instead. > Jörn -- Evgeniy Polyakov - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html