-stable review patch. If anyone has any objections, please let us know. ------------------ From: Daniel Drake Commit f549d6c18c0e8e6cf1bf0e7a47acc1daf7e2cec1 introduced a generic fallback for security xattrs, but appears to include a subtle bug. Gentoo users with kernels with selinux compiled in, and coreutils compiled with acl support, noticed that they could not copy files on tmpfs using 'cp'. cp (compiled with acl support) copies the file, lists the extended attributes on the old file, copies them all to the new file, and then exits. However the listxattr() calls were failing with this odd behaviour: llistxattr("a.out", (nil), 0) = 17 llistxattr("a.out", 0x7fffff8c6cb0, 17) = -1 ERANGE (Numerical result out of range) I believe this is a simple problem in the logic used to check the buffer sizes; if the user sends a buffer the exact size of the data, then its ok :) This change solves the problem. More info can be found at http://bugs.gentoo.org/113138 Signed-off-by: Daniel Drake Acked-by: James Morris Acked-by: Stephen Smalley Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman --- fs/xattr.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) --- linux-2.6.14.3.orig/fs/xattr.c +++ linux-2.6.14.3/fs/xattr.c @@ -243,7 +243,7 @@ listxattr(struct dentry *d, char __user error = d->d_inode->i_op->listxattr(d, klist, size); } else { error = security_inode_listsecurity(d->d_inode, klist, size); - if (size && error >= size) + if (size && error > size) error = -ERANGE; } if (error > 0) { --