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authorNeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>2008-06-19 10:11:09 +1000
committerJ. Bruce Fields <bfields@citi.umich.edu>2008-06-23 13:02:50 -0400
commit599eb3046a1380f31c65715f3940184c531c90cb (patch)
tree559719d700d80fc2acef1ff77506daa351cebba9 /fs/nfsd/lockd.c
parentc7d106c90ec40a0e35a6960157b40f238627246e (diff)
downloadop-kernel-dev-599eb3046a1380f31c65715f3940184c531c90cb.zip
op-kernel-dev-599eb3046a1380f31c65715f3940184c531c90cb.tar.gz
knfsd: nfsd: Handle ERESTARTSYS from syscalls.
OCFS2 can return -ERESTARTSYS from write requests (and possibly elsewhere) if there is a signal pending. If nfsd is shutdown (by sending a signal to each thread) while there is still an IO load from the client, each thread could handle one last request with a signal pending. This can result in -ERESTARTSYS which is not understood by nfserrno() and so is reflected back to the client as nfserr_io aka -EIO. This is wrong. Instead, interpret ERESTARTSYS to mean "try again later" by returning nfserr_jukebox. The client will resend and - if the server is restarted - the write will (hopefully) be successful and everyone will be happy. The symptom that I narrowed down to this was: copy a large file via NFS to an OCFS2 filesystem, and restart the nfs server during the copy. The 'cp' might get an -EIO, and the file will be corrupted - presumably holes in the middle where writes appeared to fail. Signed-off-by: Neil Brown <neilb@suse.de> Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@citi.umich.edu>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/nfsd/lockd.c')
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