ext2: Do not update mtime of a moved directory

One of our users is complaining that his backup tool is upset on ext2
(while it's happy on ext3, xfs, ...) because of the mtime change.

The problem is:

    mkdir foo
    mkdir bar
    mkdir foo/a

Now under ext2:
    mv foo/a foo/b

changes mtime of 'foo/a' (foo/b after the move).  That does not really
make sense and it does not happen under any other filesystem I've seen.

More complicated is:
    mv foo/a bar/a

This changes mtime of foo/a (bar/a after the move) and it makes some
sense since we had to update parent directory pointer of foo/a.  But
again, no other filesystem does this.  So after some thoughts I'd vote
for consistency and change ext2 to behave the same as other filesystems.

Do not update mtime of a moved directory.  Specs don't say anything
about it (neither that it should, nor that it should not be updated) and
other common filesystems (ext3, ext4, xfs, reiserfs, fat, ...) don't do
it.  So let's become more consistent.

Spotted by ronny.pretzsch@dfs.de, initial fix by Jörn Engel.

Reported-by: <ronny.pretzsch@dfs.de>
Cc: <hare@suse.de>
Cc: Jörn Engel <joern@logfs.org>
Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Cc: <linux-ext4@vger.kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
diff --git a/fs/ext2/dir.c b/fs/ext2/dir.c
index 0035004..6cde970 100644
--- a/fs/ext2/dir.c
+++ b/fs/ext2/dir.c
@@ -450,7 +450,7 @@
 
 /* Releases the page */
 void ext2_set_link(struct inode *dir, struct ext2_dir_entry_2 *de,
-			struct page *page, struct inode *inode)
+		   struct page *page, struct inode *inode, int update_times)
 {
 	loff_t pos = page_offset(page) +
 			(char *) de - (char *) page_address(page);
@@ -465,7 +465,8 @@
 	ext2_set_de_type(de, inode);
 	err = ext2_commit_chunk(page, pos, len);
 	ext2_put_page(page);
-	dir->i_mtime = dir->i_ctime = CURRENT_TIME_SEC;
+	if (update_times)
+		dir->i_mtime = dir->i_ctime = CURRENT_TIME_SEC;
 	EXT2_I(dir)->i_flags &= ~EXT2_BTREE_FL;
 	mark_inode_dirty(dir);
 }