NFS-style symlinks have target location always stored in NFS/UNIX form
where backslash means the real UNIX backslash and not the SMB path
separator.
So do not mangle slash and backslash content of NFS-style symlink during
readlink() syscall as it is already in the correct Linux form.
This fixes interoperability of NFS-style symlinks with backslashes created
by Linux NFS3 client throw Windows NFS server and retrieved by Linux SMB
client throw Windows SMB server, where both Windows servers exports the
same directory.
Fixes: d5ecebc4900d ("smb3: Allow query of symlinks stored as reparse points")
Signed-off-by: Pali Rohár <pali@kernel.org>
---
fs/smb/client/reparse.c | 1 -
1 file changed, 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/fs/smb/client/reparse.c b/fs/smb/client/reparse.c
index af32a7dbca4b..e3cf7ae516cb 100644
--- a/fs/smb/client/reparse.c
+++ b/fs/smb/client/reparse.c
@@ -335,7 +335,6 @@ static int parse_reparse_posix(struct reparse_posix_data *buf,
cifs_sb->local_nls);
if (!data->symlink_target)
return -ENOMEM;
- convert_delimiter(data->symlink_target, '/');
cifs_dbg(FYI, "%s: target path: %s\n",
__func__, data->symlink_target);
break;
--
2.20.1