Filesystems like ext4 can submit writes in multiples of blocksizes. But we still can't allow the writes to be split. Hence let's check if the iomap_length() is same as iter->len or not. This shouldn't affect XFS since it anyways checks for this in xfs_file_write_iter() to not support atomic write size request of more than FS blocksize. Signed-off-by: Ritesh Harjani (IBM) <ritesh.list@xxxxxxxxx> --- fs/iomap/direct-io.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/fs/iomap/direct-io.c b/fs/iomap/direct-io.c index ed4764e3b8f0..1d33b4239b3e 100644 --- a/fs/iomap/direct-io.c +++ b/fs/iomap/direct-io.c @@ -306,7 +306,7 @@ static loff_t iomap_dio_bio_iter(const struct iomap_iter *iter, size_t copied = 0; size_t orig_count; - if (atomic && length != fs_block_size) + if (atomic && length != iter->len) return -EINVAL; if ((pos | length) & (bdev_logical_block_size(iomap->bdev) - 1) || -- 2.46.0