media: v4l2-core: ignore native time32 ioctls on 64-bit
Syzbot found that passing ioctl command 0xc0505609 into a 64-bit
kernel from a 32-bit process causes uninitialized kernel memory to
get passed to drivers instead of the user space data:
The time32 commands are defined but were never meant to be called on
64-bit machines, as those have always used time64 interfaces. I missed
this in my patch that introduced the time64 handling on 32-bit platforms.
The problem in this case is the mismatch of one function checking for
the numeric value of the command and another function checking for the
type of process (native vs compat) instead, with the result being that
for this combination, nothing gets copied into the buffer at all.
Avoid this by only trying to convert the time32 commands when running
on a 32-bit kernel where these are defined in a meaningful way.