diff options
author | Suresh Jayaraman <sjayaraman@suse.de> | 2010-08-26 14:46:09 +0530 |
---|---|---|
committer | Steve French <sfrench@us.ibm.com> | 2010-08-26 16:53:27 +0000 |
commit | f0138a79d74e1e942970ea163be268cd2e4bbcfc (patch) | |
tree | b3c3ddc0dbb3b46ecbb78ab24ea20a405b2b4b49 /fs/cifs | |
parent | c89e5198b26a869ce2842bad8519264f3394dee9 (diff) |
Cannot allocate memory error on mount
On 08/26/2010 01:56 AM, joe hefner wrote:
> On a recent Fedora (13), I am seeing a mount failure message that I can not explain. I have a Windows Server 2003ýa with a share set up for access only for a specific username (say userfoo). If I try to mount it from Linux,ýusing userfoo and the correct password all is well. If I try with a bad password or with some other username (userbar), it fails with "Permission denied" as expected. If I try to mount as username = administrator, and give the correct administrator password, I would also expect "Permission denied", but I see "Cannot allocate memory" instead.
> ýfs/cifs/netmisc.c: Mapping smb error code 5 to POSIX err -13
> ýfs/cifs/cifssmb.c: Send error in QPathInfo = -13
> ýCIFS VFS: cifs_read_super: get root inode failed
Looks like the commit 0b8f18e3 assumed that cifs_get_inode_info() and
friends fail only due to memory allocation error when the inode is NULL
which is not the case if CIFSSMBQPathInfo() fails and returns an error.
Fix this by propagating the actual error code back.
Acked-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Suresh Jayaraman <sjayaraman@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Steve French <sfrench@us.ibm.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/cifs')
-rw-r--r-- | fs/cifs/inode.c | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/fs/cifs/inode.c b/fs/cifs/inode.c index 4bc47e5b5f29..86a164f08a74 100644 --- a/fs/cifs/inode.c +++ b/fs/cifs/inode.c @@ -834,7 +834,7 @@ struct inode *cifs_root_iget(struct super_block *sb, unsigned long ino) xid, NULL); if (!inode) - return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM); + return ERR_PTR(rc); #ifdef CONFIG_CIFS_FSCACHE /* populate tcon->resource_id */ |