Linux kernels (at least up until 2.6.27) are lacking compat sys_ustat handlers on some platforms (notably PPC) so that if called from 32 bits on a 64-bit kernel, the kernel will copy out too much (32 bytes onto a 20-byte structure): [root@xero xfstests]# xfs_logprint /dev/loop0 xfs_logprint: *** stack smashing detected ***: xfs_logprint terminated Aborted This will be fixed upstream, but for the benefit of older kernels we may want to guard against this by padding the structure we pass into the syscall. We don't care about the values anyway, just the return value. Signed-off-by: Eric Sandeen --- Index: xfs-cmds/xfsprogs/libxfs/linux.c =================================================================== --- xfs-cmds.orig/xfsprogs/libxfs/linux.c +++ xfs-cmds/xfsprogs/libxfs/linux.c @@ -49,7 +49,8 @@ static int max_block_alignment; int platform_check_ismounted(char *name, char *block, struct stat64 *s, int verbose) { - struct ustat ust; + /* Pad ust; pre-2.6.28 linux copies out too much in 32bit compat mode */ + struct ustat ust[2]; struct stat64 st; if (!s) { @@ -60,7 +61,7 @@ platform_check_ismounted(char *name, cha s = &st; } - if (ustat(s->st_rdev, &ust) >= 0) { + if (ustat(s->st_rdev, ust) >= 0) { if (verbose) fprintf(stderr, _("%s: %s contains a mounted filesystem\n"), _______________________________________________ xfs mailing list xfs@oss.sgi.com http://oss.sgi.com/mailman/listinfo/xfs