From: David Howells dhowells@redhat.com
[ Upstream commit c74386d50fbaf4a54fd3fe560f1abc709c0cff4b ]
In afs_wait_for_call_to_complete(), rather than immediately aborting an operation if a signal occurs, the code attempts to wait for it to complete, using a schedule timeout of 2*RTT (or min 2 jiffies) and a check that we're still receiving relevant packets from the server before we consider aborting the call. We may even ping the server to check on the status of the call.
However, there's a missing timeout reset in the event that we do actually get a packet to process, such that if we then get a couple of short stalls, we then time out when progress is actually being made.
Fix this by resetting the timeout any time we get something to process. If it's the failure of the call then the call state will get changed and we'll exit the loop shortly thereafter.
A symptom of this is data fetches and stores failing with EINTR when they really shouldn't.
Fixes: bc5e3a546d55 ("rxrpc: Use MSG_WAITALL to tell sendmsg() to temporarily ignore signals") Signed-off-by: David Howells dhowells@redhat.com Reviewed-by: Marc Dionne marc.dionne@auristor.com Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds torvalds@linux-foundation.org Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin sashal@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Yang Yingliang yangyingliang@huawei.com --- fs/afs/rxrpc.c | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
diff --git a/fs/afs/rxrpc.c b/fs/afs/rxrpc.c index 2543f24..560dd5f 100644 --- a/fs/afs/rxrpc.c +++ b/fs/afs/rxrpc.c @@ -573,6 +573,7 @@ static long afs_wait_for_call_to_complete(struct afs_call *call, call->need_attention = false; __set_current_state(TASK_RUNNING); afs_deliver_to_call(call); + timeout = rtt2; continue; }