Reset the ns->file value to NULL also in the error case in
nvmet_file_ns_enable().
The ns->file variable points either to file object or contains the
error code after the filp_open() call. This can lead to following
problem:
When the user first setups an invalid file backend and tries to enable
the ns, it will fail. Then the user switches over to a bdev backend
and enables successfully the ns. The first received I/O will crash the
system because the IO backend is chosen based on the ns->file value:
static u16 nvmet_parse_io_cmd(struct nvmet_req *req)
{
[...]
if (req->ns->file)
return nvmet_file_parse_io_cmd(req);
return nvmet_bdev_parse_io_cmd(req);
}
Reported-by: Enzo Matsumiya <ematsumiya@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Wagner <dwagner@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
ns->file = filp_open(ns->device_path, flags, 0);
if (IS_ERR(ns->file)) {
- pr_err("failed to open file %s: (%ld)\n",
- ns->device_path, PTR_ERR(ns->file));
- return PTR_ERR(ns->file);
+ ret = PTR_ERR(ns->file);
+ pr_err("failed to open file %s: (%d)\n",
+ ns->device_path, ret);
+ ns->file = NULL;
+ return ret;
}
ret = nvmet_file_ns_revalidate(ns);