4.14-stable review patch.  If anyone has any objections, please let me know.

------------------

From: Thomas Gleixner <t...@linutronix.de>

commit 93ad0fc088c5b4631f796c995bdd27a082ef33a6 upstream.

The recent commit which prevented a division by 0 issue in the alarm timer
code broke posix CPU timers as an unwanted side effect.

The reason is that the common rearm code checks for timer->it_interval
being 0 now. What went unnoticed is that the posix cpu timer setup does not
initialize timer->it_interval as it stores the interval in CPU timer
specific storage. The reason for the separate storage is historical as the
posix CPU timers always had a 64bit nanoseconds representation internally
while timer->it_interval is type ktime_t which used to be a modified
timespec representation on 32bit machines.

Instead of reverting the offending commit and fixing the alarmtimer issue
in the alarmtimer code, store the interval in timer->it_interval at CPU
timer setup time so the common code check works. This also repairs the
existing inconistency of the posix CPU timer code which kept a single shot
timer armed despite of the interval being 0.

The separate storage can be removed in mainline, but that needs to be a
separate commit as the current one has to be backported to stable kernels.

Fixes: 0e334db6bb4b ("posix-timers: Fix division by zero bug")
Reported-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.to...@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <t...@linutronix.de>
Cc: John Stultz <john.stu...@linaro.org>
Cc: Peter Zijlstra <pet...@infradead.org>
Cc: sta...@vger.kernel.org
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20190111133500.840117...@linutronix.de
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gre...@linuxfoundation.org>

---
 kernel/time/posix-cpu-timers.c |    1 +
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)

--- a/kernel/time/posix-cpu-timers.c
+++ b/kernel/time/posix-cpu-timers.c
@@ -685,6 +685,7 @@ static int posix_cpu_timer_set(struct k_
         * set up the signal and overrun bookkeeping.
         */
        timer->it.cpu.incr = timespec64_to_ns(&new->it_interval);
+       timer->it_interval = ns_to_ktime(timer->it.cpu.incr);
 
        /*
         * This acts as a modification timestamp for the timer,


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