From 9960f85181dd08cda03fddcf0bc8d81190bec4eb Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andrei Vagin Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2017 13:55:13 -0800 Subject: target: don't call an unmap callback if a range length is zero If a length of a range is zero, it means there is nothing to unmap and we can skip this range. Here is one more reason, why we have to skip such ranges. An unmap callback calls file_operations->fallocate(), but the man page for the fallocate syscall says that fallocate(fd, mode, offset, let) returns EINVAL, if len is zero. It means that file_operations->fallocate() isn't obligated to handle zero ranges too. Signed-off-by: Andrei Vagin Signed-off-by: Nicholas Bellinger --- drivers/target/target_core_sbc.c | 8 +++++--- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) (limited to 'drivers/target/target_core_sbc.c') diff --git a/drivers/target/target_core_sbc.c b/drivers/target/target_core_sbc.c index 750a04ed0e93..b054682e974f 100644 --- a/drivers/target/target_core_sbc.c +++ b/drivers/target/target_core_sbc.c @@ -1216,9 +1216,11 @@ sbc_execute_unmap(struct se_cmd *cmd) goto err; } - ret = ops->execute_unmap(cmd, lba, range); - if (ret) - goto err; + if (range) { + ret = ops->execute_unmap(cmd, lba, range); + if (ret) + goto err; + } ptr += 16; size -= 16; -- cgit