if (!uuid_equal(&btblock->bb_u.s.bb_uuid,
&mp->m_sb.sb_meta_uuid))
goto out;
+ /*
+ * Read verifiers can reference b_ops, so we set the pointer
+ * here. If the verifier fails we'll reset the buffer state
+ * to what it was before we touched the buffer.
+ */
+ bp->b_ops = fab->buf_ops;
fab->buf_ops->verify_read(bp);
if (bp->b_error) {
+ bp->b_ops = NULL;
bp->b_error = 0;
goto out;
}
/*
* Some read verifiers will (re)set b_ops, so we must be
- * careful not to blow away any such assignment.
+ * careful not to change b_ops after running the verifier.
*/
- if (!bp->b_ops)
- bp->b_ops = fab->buf_ops;
}
/*
}
/*
+ * Set buffer ops on an unchecked buffer and validate it, if possible.
+ *
* If the caller passed in an ops structure and the buffer doesn't have ops
* assigned, set the ops and use them to verify the contents. If the contents
* cannot be verified, we'll clear XBF_DONE. We assume the buffer has no
* recorded errors and is already in XBF_DONE state.
+ *
+ * Under normal operations, every in-core buffer must have buffer ops assigned
+ * to them when the buffer is read in from disk so that we can validate the
+ * metadata.
+ *
+ * However, there are two scenarios where one can encounter in-core buffers
+ * that don't have buffer ops. The first is during log recovery of buffers on
+ * a V4 filesystem, though these buffers are purged at the end of recovery.
+ *
+ * The other is online repair, which tries to match arbitrary metadata blocks
+ * with btree types in order to find the root. If online repair doesn't match
+ * the buffer with /any/ btree type, the buffer remains in memory in DONE state
+ * with no ops, and a subsequent read_buf call from elsewhere will not set the
+ * ops. This function helps us fix this situation.
*/
int
xfs_buf_ensure_ops(