Re: Boot failure with ext2 and initrds

From: Russell King
Date: Sat Nov 25 2006 - 10:00:03 EST


On Thu, Nov 16, 2006 at 12:34:48PM +0000, Russell King wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 15, 2006 at 11:22:28PM -0800, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > On Wed, 15 Nov 2006 22:55:43 -0800
> > Mingming Cao <cmm@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > > Hmm, maxblocks, in bitmap_search_next_usable_block(), is the end block
> > > number of the range to search, not the lengh of the range. maxblocks
> > > get passed to ext2_find_next_zero_bit(), where it expecting to take the
> > > _size_ of the range to search instead...
> > >
> > > Something like this: (this is not a patch)
> > > @@ -524,7 +524,7 @@ bitmap_search_next_usable_block(ext2_grp
> > > ext2_grpblk_t next;
> > >
> > > - next = ext2_find_next_zero_bit(bh->b_data, maxblocks, start);
> > > + next = ext2_find_next_zero_bit(bh->b_data, maxblocks-start + 1, start);
> > > if (next >= maxblocks)
> > > return -1;
> > > return next;
> > > }
> >
> > yes, the `size' arg to find_next_zero_bit() represents the number of bits
> > to scan at `offset'.
>
> Are you sure? That's not the way it's implemented in many architectures.
> find_next_*_bit() has always taken "address, maximum offset, starting offset"
> and always has returned "next offset".
>
> Just look at arch/i386/lib/bitops.c:
>
> int find_next_zero_bit(const unsigned long *addr, int size, int offset)
> {
> unsigned long * p = ((unsigned long *) addr) + (offset >> 5);
> int set = 0, bit = offset & 31, res;
> ...
> /*
> * No zero yet, search remaining full bytes for a zero
> */
> res = find_first_zero_bit (p, size - 32 * (p - (unsigned long *) addr));
> return (offset + set + res);
> }
>
> So for the case that "offset" is aligned to a "long" boundary, that gives us:
>
> res = find_first_zero_bit(addr + (offset>>5),
> size - 32 * (addr + (offset>>5) - addr));
>
> or:
>
> res = find_first_zero_bit(addr + (offset>>5), size - (offset & ~31));
>
> So, size _excludes_ offset.
>
> Now, considering the return value, "res" above will be relative to
> "addr + (offset>>5)". However, we add "offset" on to that, so it's
> relative to addr + (offset bits).

Andrew,

Please respond to the above. If what you say is correct then all
architectures need their bitops fixing to fit ext2's requirements.

--
Russell King
Linux kernel 2.6 ARM Linux - http://www.arm.linux.org.uk/
maintainer of:
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