more conservative S_NOSEC handling

Caching "we have already removed suid/caps" was overenthusiastic as merged.
On network filesystems we might have had suid/caps set on another client,
silently picked by this client on revalidate, all of that *without* clearing
the S_NOSEC flag.

AFAICS, the only reasonably sane way to deal with that is
	* new superblock flag; unless set, S_NOSEC is not going to be set.
	* local block filesystems set it in their ->mount() (more accurately,
mount_bdev() does, so does btrfs ->mount(), users of mount_bdev() other than
local block ones clear it)
	* if any network filesystem (or a cluster one) wants to use S_NOSEC,
it'll need to set MS_NOSEC in sb->s_flags *AND* take care to clear S_NOSEC when
inode attribute changes are picked from other clients.

It's not an earth-shattering hole (anybody that can set suid on another client
will almost certainly be able to write to the file before doing that anyway),
but it's a bug that needs fixing.

Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
diff --git a/mm/filemap.c b/mm/filemap.c
index d7b1057..a8251a8 100644
--- a/mm/filemap.c
+++ b/mm/filemap.c
@@ -2000,7 +2000,7 @@
 		error = security_inode_killpriv(dentry);
 	if (!error && killsuid)
 		error = __remove_suid(dentry, killsuid);
-	if (!error)
+	if (!error && (inode->i_sb->s_flags & MS_NOSEC))
 		inode->i_flags |= S_NOSEC;
 
 	return error;