On Sat, Jun 23, 2018 at 8:00 AM, Ernesto A. Fernández <ernesto.mnd.fernandez@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, Jun 22, 2018 at 04:17:32PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote: >> According to the official documentation for HFS+ [1], inode timestamps >> are supposed to cover the time range from 1904 to 2040 as originally >> used in classic MacOS. >> >> The traditional Linux usage is to convert the timestamps into an unsigned >> 32-bit number based on the Unix epoch and from there to a time_t. On >> 32-bit systems, that wraps the time from 2038 to 1902, so the last >> two years of the valid time range become garbled. On 64-bit systems, >> all times before 1970 get turned into timestamps between 2038 and 2106, >> which is more convenient but also different from the documented behavior. >> >> The same behavior is used in Darwin and presumaby all versions of MacOS X, >> as seen in the to_hfs_time() function in [2]. It is unclear whether this >> is a bug in the file system code, or intentional but undocumented behavior. > > But the to_bsd_time() function considers wrapped timestamps as invalid, > doesn't it? So it seems they simply don't care about the post-2040 (or > pre-1970) case? Sorry for the late reply. Just got back to looking at what remains for the file systems. You are of course right, my mistake: Apple writes a wrapped date when converting from bsd time to on-disk format, but does treat the wrapped dates as invalid when reading >> diff --git a/fs/hfsplus/hfsplus_fs.h b/fs/hfsplus/hfsplus_fs.h >> index d9255abafb81..57838ef4dcdc 100644 >> --- a/fs/hfsplus/hfsplus_fs.h >> +++ b/fs/hfsplus/hfsplus_fs.h >> @@ -530,8 +530,9 @@ int hfsplus_submit_bio(struct super_block *sb, sector_t sector, void *buf, >> void **data, int op, int op_flags); >> int hfsplus_read_wrapper(struct super_block *sb); >> >> -/* time macros */ >> -#define __hfsp_mt2ut(t) (be32_to_cpu(t) - 2082844800U) >> +/* time macros: convert between 1904-2040 and 1970-2106 range, >> + * pre-1970 timestamps are interpreted as post-2038 times after wrap-around */ > > This comment seems to be from the original series, maybe you forgot to > change it? Correct. I'll change it and resend it with a fixed changelog. Arnd