On Sat, Aug 25, 2018 at 12:47 PM, Amir Goldstein <amir73il@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Actually, I believe the intention was that fs developers don't need to worry > about using file_inode() at all, because before the change we had: > > - file passed in to xfs f_op's and a_ops is either overlay file OR xfs file > - file_inode() of either overlay/xfs file in xfs context is always xfs inode > - file->f_path in xfs context, BTW, was overlay path and therefore, > XFS_IOC_OPEN_BY_HANDLE was slightly broken in overlayfs over xfs, > as were several other fs specific ioctls > > After stacked file operations change we should have the rules: > > 1. file passed in to xfs f_op's is always xfs file (*) > 2. file passed in to xfs a_ops is always xfs file (**) > 3. file_inode() of overlay file is an overlay inode > > (*) as explicit file argument or on iocb->ki_filp > (**) as explicit file argument or on ->vm_file > > I believe that swapfile leaking an overlay file into xfs was an oversight, > that is breaking rule #2. Correct. I believe the root cause is this /* For O_DIRECT dentry_open() checks f_mapping->a_ops->direct_IO */ file->f_mapping = realfile->f_mapping; in ovl_open(). So lets start with removing that. That should fix any oopses related to this, but we'll have some other issues: 1) open(..., O_DIRECT) will return an error This is easy to fix: add ovl_file_aops with a dummy ovl_direct_IO() function that will never be called. 2) swapon() will return an error First question that comes to mind: does anybody care? I wouldn't think swapfiles would be an important feature for overlayfs, but we did support them up till now, so removing support might cause a regression somewhere out there. Unfortunate... Thanks, Miklos