Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > @@ -408,6 +417,10 @@ int netfs_write_begin(struct netfs_inode *ctx, > > ractl._nr_pages = folio_nr_pages(folio); > > netfs_rreq_expand(rreq, &ractl); > > > > + /* Set up the output buffer */ > > + iov_iter_xarray(&rreq->iter, ITER_DEST, &mapping->i_pages, > > + rreq->start, rreq->len); > > Should the above be ITER_SOURCE ? No - we're in ->write_begin() and are prefetching. If you look in the code, there's a netfs_begin_read() call a few lines below. The output buffer for the read is the page we're going to write into. Note that netfs_write_begin() should be considered deprecated as the whole perform_write thing will get replaced. > > @@ -88,6 +78,11 @@ static void netfs_read_from_server(struct netfs_io_request *rreq, > > struct netfs_io_subrequest *subreq) > > { > > netfs_stat(&netfs_n_rh_download); > > + if (iov_iter_count(&subreq->io_iter) != subreq->len - subreq->transferred) > > + pr_warn("R=%08x[%u] ITER PRE-MISMATCH %zx != %zx-%zx %lx\n", > > + rreq->debug_id, subreq->debug_index, > > + iov_iter_count(&subreq->io_iter), subreq->len, > > + subreq->transferred, subreq->flags); > > pr_warn is a bit alarmist, esp given the cryptic message. Maybe demote > this to INFO or DEBUG? > > Does this indicate a bug in the client or that the server is sending us > malformed frames? Good question. The network filesystem updated subreq->transferred to indicate it had transferred X amount of data, but the iterator had been updated to indicate Y amount of data was transferred. They really ought to match as it may otherwise indicate an underrun (and potential leakage of old data). Overruns are less of a problem since the iterator would have to 'go negative' as it were. However, it might be better just to leave io_iter unchecked since we end up resetting it anyway each time we reinvoke the ->issue_read() op. It's always possible that it will get copied and a different iterator get passed to the network layer or cache fs - and so the change to the iterator then has to be manually propagated just to avoid the warning. David