From: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> Subject: fs/ntfs: use timespec64 directly for timestamp conversion Now that the VFS has been converted from timespec to timespec64 timestamps, only the conversion to/from ntfs timestamps uses 32-bit seconds. This changes that last missing piece to get the ntfs implementation y2038 safe on 32-bit architectures. Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20180718115017.742609-2-arnd@xxxxxxxx Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> Cc: Anton Altaparmakov <anton@xxxxxxxxxx> Cc: Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- fs/ntfs/inode.c | 12 ++++++------ fs/ntfs/time.h | 27 +++++++++++++++------------ 2 files changed, 21 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-) --- a/fs/ntfs/inode.c~ntfs-use-timespec64-directly-for-timestamp-conversion +++ a/fs/ntfs/inode.c @@ -667,18 +667,18 @@ static int ntfs_read_locked_inode(struct * mtime is the last change of the data within the file. Not changed * when only metadata is changed, e.g. a rename doesn't affect mtime. */ - vi->i_mtime = timespec_to_timespec64(ntfs2utc(si->last_data_change_time)); + vi->i_mtime = ntfs2utc(si->last_data_change_time); /* * ctime is the last change of the metadata of the file. This obviously * always changes, when mtime is changed. ctime can be changed on its * own, mtime is then not changed, e.g. when a file is renamed. */ - vi->i_ctime = timespec_to_timespec64(ntfs2utc(si->last_mft_change_time)); + vi->i_ctime = ntfs2utc(si->last_mft_change_time); /* * Last access to the data within the file. Not changed during a rename * for example but changed whenever the file is written to. */ - vi->i_atime = timespec_to_timespec64(ntfs2utc(si->last_access_time)); + vi->i_atime = ntfs2utc(si->last_access_time); /* Find the attribute list attribute if present. */ ntfs_attr_reinit_search_ctx(ctx); @@ -2997,7 +2997,7 @@ int __ntfs_write_inode(struct inode *vi, si = (STANDARD_INFORMATION*)((u8*)ctx->attr + le16_to_cpu(ctx->attr->data.resident.value_offset)); /* Update the access times if they have changed. */ - nt = utc2ntfs(timespec64_to_timespec(vi->i_mtime)); + nt = utc2ntfs(vi->i_mtime); if (si->last_data_change_time != nt) { ntfs_debug("Updating mtime for inode 0x%lx: old = 0x%llx, " "new = 0x%llx", vi->i_ino, (long long) @@ -3006,7 +3006,7 @@ int __ntfs_write_inode(struct inode *vi, si->last_data_change_time = nt; modified = true; } - nt = utc2ntfs(timespec64_to_timespec(vi->i_ctime)); + nt = utc2ntfs(vi->i_ctime); if (si->last_mft_change_time != nt) { ntfs_debug("Updating ctime for inode 0x%lx: old = 0x%llx, " "new = 0x%llx", vi->i_ino, (long long) @@ -3015,7 +3015,7 @@ int __ntfs_write_inode(struct inode *vi, si->last_mft_change_time = nt; modified = true; } - nt = utc2ntfs(timespec64_to_timespec(vi->i_atime)); + nt = utc2ntfs(vi->i_atime); if (si->last_access_time != nt) { ntfs_debug("Updating atime for inode 0x%lx: old = 0x%llx, " "new = 0x%llx", vi->i_ino, --- a/fs/ntfs/time.h~ntfs-use-timespec64-directly-for-timestamp-conversion +++ a/fs/ntfs/time.h @@ -36,16 +36,16 @@ * Convert the Linux UTC time @ts to its corresponding NTFS time and return * that in little endian format. * - * Linux stores time in a struct timespec consisting of a time_t (long at - * present) tv_sec and a long tv_nsec where tv_sec is the number of 1-second - * intervals since 1st January 1970, 00:00:00 UTC and tv_nsec is the number of - * 1-nano-second intervals since the value of tv_sec. + * Linux stores time in a struct timespec64 consisting of a time64_t tv_sec + * and a long tv_nsec where tv_sec is the number of 1-second intervals since + * 1st January 1970, 00:00:00 UTC and tv_nsec is the number of 1-nano-second + * intervals since the value of tv_sec. * * NTFS uses Microsoft's standard time format which is stored in a s64 and is * measured as the number of 100-nano-second intervals since 1st January 1601, * 00:00:00 UTC. */ -static inline sle64 utc2ntfs(const struct timespec ts) +static inline sle64 utc2ntfs(const struct timespec64 ts) { /* * Convert the seconds to 100ns intervals, add the nano-seconds @@ -63,7 +63,10 @@ static inline sle64 utc2ntfs(const struc */ static inline sle64 get_current_ntfs_time(void) { - return utc2ntfs(current_kernel_time()); + struct timespec64 ts; + + ktime_get_coarse_real_ts64(&ts); + return utc2ntfs(ts); } /** @@ -73,18 +76,18 @@ static inline sle64 get_current_ntfs_tim * Convert the little endian NTFS time @time to its corresponding Linux UTC * time and return that in cpu format. * - * Linux stores time in a struct timespec consisting of a time_t (long at - * present) tv_sec and a long tv_nsec where tv_sec is the number of 1-second - * intervals since 1st January 1970, 00:00:00 UTC and tv_nsec is the number of - * 1-nano-second intervals since the value of tv_sec. + * Linux stores time in a struct timespec64 consisting of a time64_t tv_sec + * and a long tv_nsec where tv_sec is the number of 1-second intervals since + * 1st January 1970, 00:00:00 UTC and tv_nsec is the number of 1-nano-second + * intervals since the value of tv_sec. * * NTFS uses Microsoft's standard time format which is stored in a s64 and is * measured as the number of 100 nano-second intervals since 1st January 1601, * 00:00:00 UTC. */ -static inline struct timespec ntfs2utc(const sle64 time) +static inline struct timespec64 ntfs2utc(const sle64 time) { - struct timespec ts; + struct timespec64 ts; /* Subtract the NTFS time offset. */ u64 t = (u64)(sle64_to_cpu(time) - NTFS_TIME_OFFSET); _