On Fri, Aug 2, 2019 at 12:43 AM Theodore Y. Ts'o <tytso@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, Aug 01, 2019 at 12:18:28PM -0700, Deepa Dinamani wrote: > > > Say you have a filesystem with s_inode_size > 128 where not all of the > > > ondisk inodes have been upgraded to i_extra_isize > 0 and therefore > > > don't support nanoseconds or times beyond 2038. I think this happens on > > > ext3 filesystems that reserved extra space for inode attrs that are > > > subsequently converted to ext4? > > > > I'm confused about ext3 being converted to ext4. If the converted > > inodes have extra space, then ext4_iget() will start using the extra > > space when it modifies the on disk inode, won't it?i > > It is possible that you can have an ext3 file system with (for > example) 256 byte inodes, and all of the extra space was used for > extended attributes, then ext4 won't have the extra space available. > This is going toh be on an inode-by-inode basis, and if an extended > attribute is motdified or deleted, the space would become available,t > and then inode would start getting a higher resolution timestamp. Is it correct to assume that this kind of file would have to be created using the ext3.ko file system implementation that was removed in linux-4.3, but not using ext2.ko or ext4.ko (which would always set the extended timestamps even in "-t ext2" or "-t ext3" mode)? I tried to reproduce this on a modern kernel and with and moderately old debugfs (1.42.13) but failed. > I really don't think it's worth worrying about that, though. It's > highly unlikely ext3 file systems will be still be in service by the > time it's needed in 2038. And if so, it's highly unlikely they would > be converted to ext4. As the difference is easily visible even before y2038 by using utimensat(old_inode, future_date) on a file, we should at least decide what the sanest behavior is that we can easily implement, and then document what is expected to happen here. If we check for s_min_extra_isize instead of s_inode_size to determine s_time_gran/s_time_max, we would warn at mount time as well as and consistently truncate all timestamps to full 32-bit seconds, regardless of whether there is actually space or not. Alternatively, we could warn if s_min_extra_isize is too small, but use i_inode_size to determine s_time_gran/s_time_max anyway. >From looking at e2fsprogs git history, I see that s_min_extra_isize has always been set by mkfs since 2008, but I'm not sure if there would have been a case in which it remains set but the ext3.ko would ignore it and use that space anyway. Arnd