get_seconds() has a limited range on 32-bit architectures and is
deprecated because of that. While AFS uses the same limits for
its inode timestamps on the wire protocol, let's just use the
simpler current_time() as we do for other file systems.

This will still zero out the 'tv_nsec' field of the timestamps
internally.

Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <[email protected]>
---
Originally submitted this on June 20, but got no reply.
Resending this in case it got lost somewhere on the way.
David, can you pick up both patches?
---
 fs/afs/inode.c | 4 +---
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/fs/afs/inode.c b/fs/afs/inode.c
index 479b7fdda124..0507e52e3330 100644
--- a/fs/afs/inode.c
+++ b/fs/afs/inode.c
@@ -213,9 +213,7 @@ struct inode *afs_iget_pseudo_dir(struct super_block *sb, 
bool root)
        set_nlink(inode, 2);
        inode->i_uid            = GLOBAL_ROOT_UID;
        inode->i_gid            = GLOBAL_ROOT_GID;
-       inode->i_ctime.tv_sec   = get_seconds();
-       inode->i_ctime.tv_nsec  = 0;
-       inode->i_atime          = inode->i_mtime = inode->i_ctime;
+       inode->i_ctime = inode->i_atime = inode->i_mtime = current_time(inode);
        inode->i_blocks         = 0;
        inode_set_iversion_raw(inode, 0);
        inode->i_generation     = 0;
-- 
2.9.0

Reply via email to