[PATCH] kheaders: Ignore silly-rename files
David Howells
dhowells at redhat.com
Wed Oct 16 05:49:14 PDT 2024
Tell tar to ignore silly-rename files (".__afs*" and ".nfs*") when building
the header archive. These occur when a file that is open is unlinked
locally, but hasn't yet been closed. Such files are visible to the user
via the getdents() syscall and so programs may want to do things with them.
During the kernel build, such files may be made during the processing of
header files and the cleanup may get deferred by fput() which may result in
tar seeing these files when it reads the directory, but they may have
disappeared by the time it tries to open them, causing tar to fail with an
error. Further, we don't want to include them in the tarball if they still
exist.
With CONFIG_HEADERS_INSTALL=y, something like the following may be seen:
find: './kernel/.tmp_cpio_dir/include/dt-bindings/reset/.__afs2080': No such file or directory
tar: ./include/linux/greybus/.__afs3C95: File removed before we read it
The find warning doesn't seem to cause a problem.
Fix this by telling tar when called from in gen_kheaders.sh to exclude such
files. This only affects afs and nfs; cifs uses the Windows Hidden
attribute to prevent the file from being seen.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells at redhat.com>
cc: Masahiro Yamada <masahiroy at kernel.org>
cc: Marc Dionne <marc.dionne at auristor.com>
cc: linux-afs at lists.infradead.org
cc: linux-nfs at vger.kernel.org
cc: linux-kernel at vger.kernel.org
---
kernel/gen_kheaders.sh | 1 +
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
diff --git a/kernel/gen_kheaders.sh b/kernel/gen_kheaders.sh
index 383fd43ac612..7e1340da5aca 100755
--- a/kernel/gen_kheaders.sh
+++ b/kernel/gen_kheaders.sh
@@ -89,6 +89,7 @@ find $cpio_dir -type f -print0 |
# Create archive and try to normalize metadata for reproducibility.
tar "${KBUILD_BUILD_TIMESTAMP:+--mtime=$KBUILD_BUILD_TIMESTAMP}" \
+ --exclude=".__afs*" --exclude=".nfs*" \
--owner=0 --group=0 --sort=name --numeric-owner --mode=u=rw,go=r,a+X \
-I $XZ -cf $tarfile -C $cpio_dir/ . > /dev/null
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