When asked to create a path ending '/', but which is not to be a directory (LOOKUP_DIRECTORY not set), filename_create() will never try to create the file. If it doesn't exist, -ENOENT is reported. However, it still passes LOOKUP_CREATE|LOOKUP_EXCL to the filesystems ->lookup() function, even though there is no intent to create. This is misleading and can cause incorrect behaviour. If you try ln -s foo /path/dir/ where 'dir' is a directory on an NFS filesystem which is not currently known in the dcache, this will fail with ENOENT. As the name is not in the dcache, nfs_lookup gets called with LOOKUP_CREATE|LOOKUP_EXCL and so it returns NULL without performing any lookup, with the expectation that a subsequent call to create the target will be made, and the lookup can be combined with the creation. In the case with a trailing '/' and no LOOKUP_DIRECTORY, that call is never made. Instead filename_create() sees that the dentry is not (yet) positive and returns -ENOENT - even though the directory actually exists. So only set LOOKUP_CREATE|LOOKUP_EXCL if there really is an intent to create, and use the absence of these flags to decide if -ENOENT should be returned. Note that filename_parentat() is only interested in LOOKUP_REVAL, so we split that out and store it in 'reval_flag'. __lookup_hash() then gets reval_flag combined with whatever create flags were determined to be needed. Reviewed-by: David Disseldorp <ddiss@xxxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: NeilBrown <neilb@xxxxxxx> --- fs/namei.c | 22 ++++++++++------------ 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) diff --git a/fs/namei.c b/fs/namei.c index 3f1829b3ab5b..509657fdf4f5 100644 --- a/fs/namei.c +++ b/fs/namei.c @@ -3673,18 +3673,14 @@ static struct dentry *filename_create(int dfd, struct filename *name, { struct dentry *dentry = ERR_PTR(-EEXIST); struct qstr last; + bool want_dir = lookup_flags & LOOKUP_DIRECTORY; + unsigned int reval_flag = lookup_flags & LOOKUP_REVAL; + unsigned int create_flags = LOOKUP_CREATE | LOOKUP_EXCL; int type; int err2; int error; - bool is_dir = (lookup_flags & LOOKUP_DIRECTORY); - /* - * Note that only LOOKUP_REVAL and LOOKUP_DIRECTORY matter here. Any - * other flags passed in are ignored! - */ - lookup_flags &= LOOKUP_REVAL; - - error = filename_parentat(dfd, name, lookup_flags, path, &last, &type); + error = filename_parentat(dfd, name, reval_flag, path, &last, &type); if (error) return ERR_PTR(error); @@ -3698,11 +3694,13 @@ static struct dentry *filename_create(int dfd, struct filename *name, /* don't fail immediately if it's r/o, at least try to report other errors */ err2 = mnt_want_write(path->mnt); /* - * Do the final lookup. + * Do the final lookup. Suppress 'create' if there is a trailing + * '/', and a directory wasn't requested. */ - lookup_flags |= LOOKUP_CREATE | LOOKUP_EXCL; + if (last.name[last.len] && !want_dir) + create_flags = 0; inode_lock_nested(path->dentry->d_inode, I_MUTEX_PARENT); - dentry = __lookup_hash(&last, path->dentry, lookup_flags); + dentry = __lookup_hash(&last, path->dentry, reval_flag | create_flags); if (IS_ERR(dentry)) goto unlock; @@ -3716,7 +3714,7 @@ static struct dentry *filename_create(int dfd, struct filename *name, * all is fine. Let's be bastards - you had / on the end, you've * been asking for (non-existent) directory. -ENOENT for you. */ - if (unlikely(!is_dir && last.name[last.len])) { + if (unlikely(!create_flags)) { error = -ENOENT; goto fail; } -- 2.35.2