xfs/148: fix failure from bad shortform size assumptions

We replaced an attr named:

slashstr="are_bad_for_you"

with this substitution:

cp $imgfile $imgfile.old
sed -b \
        -e "s/$nullstr/too_many\x00beans/g" \
        -e "s/$slashstr/are_bad\/for_you/g" \
        -i $imgfile

We then try to retreive the attr named 'a_are_bad/for_you'. The
failure is:

    -Attribute "a_are_bad/for_you" had a 3 byte value for TEST_DIR/mount-148/testfile:
    -heh
    +attr_get: No data available
    +Could not get "a_are_bad/for_you" for TEST_DIR/mount-148/testfile

The error returned is ENODATA - the xattr does not exist. While the
name might exist in the attr leaf block:

....
nvlist[0].valuelen = 3
nvlist[0].namelen = 17
nvlist[0].name = "a_are_bad/for_you"
nvlist[0].value = "heh"
nvlist[1].valuelen = 3
....

xattrs are not looked up by name matches when in leaf or node form
like they are in short form.  They are looked up by *name hash*
matches, and if the hash is not found, then the name does not exist.
Only if the has match is found, then it goes and retrieves the xattr
pointed to by the hash and checks the name.

At this point, it should be obvious that the hash of
"a_are_bad_for_you" is different to "a_a_are_bad/for_you". Hence the
leaf lookup is always rejected at the hash match stage and never
gets to the name compare stage.

IOWs, this test can *never* pass when the xattr is in leaf/node
form, only when it is in short form.

The reason the attr fork is in leaf form is that we are using
"-m crc=0" and so the inodes are only 256 bytes in size and can only
hold ~150 bytes in the literal area. That leaves ~100 bytes maximum
for shortform attr data. The test consumes ~80 bytes of shortform
space, so it should fit and the test pass.

However:

nvlist[4].valuelen = 37
nvlist[4].namelen = 7
nvlist[4].name = "selinux"
nvlist[4].value = "unconfined_u:object_r:unlabeled_t:s0\000"

Yes, I run the fstests with selinux enabled on some of test
machines. The selinux attr pushes the attr fork way over the size
that can fit in the shortform literal area, and so it moves to leaf
form as the attrs are initially added and the test fails.

Fix this by forcing the test to use 512 byte inodes, so as to
provide around 350 bytes of usable attr fork literal area so it's
not affected by security attributes.

While there, clean up the silly conditional loop device cleanup
code.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Zorro Lang <zlang@kernel.org>
1 file changed