The jbd2 journal stores the commit time in 64-bit seconds and 32-bit
nanoseconds, which avoids an overflow in 2038, but it gets the numbers
from current_kernel_time(), which uses 'long' seconds on 32-bit
architectures.

This simply changes the code to call current_kernel_time64() so
we use 64-bit seconds consistently.

Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <a...@arndb.de>
---
 fs/jbd2/commit.c | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/fs/jbd2/commit.c b/fs/jbd2/commit.c
index 8f7d1339c973..5bb565f9989c 100644
--- a/fs/jbd2/commit.c
+++ b/fs/jbd2/commit.c
@@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ static int journal_submit_commit_record(journal_t *journal,
        struct commit_header *tmp;
        struct buffer_head *bh;
        int ret;
-       struct timespec now = current_kernel_time();
+       struct timespec64 now = current_kernel_time64();
 
        *cbh = NULL;
 
-- 
2.9.0

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