Re: [net-next PATCH v4 1/3] sysctl: refactor integer handling proccode

From: Cong Wang
Date: Wed Feb 17 2010 - 11:28:23 EST


Octavian Purdila wrote:
On Tuesday 16 February 2010 15:08:23 you wrote:
Octavian Purdila wrote:
On Tuesday 16 February 2010 10:41:07 you wrote:
+
+ if (!write && !first && left && !err)
+ err = proc_put_newline(&buffer, &left);
+ if (write && !err)
+ err = proc_skip_wspace(&buffer, &left);
+ if (err == -EFAULT /* do we really need to check for -EFAULT? */
|| + (write && first))
+ return err ? : -EINVAL;
The logic here seems messy, adding one or two goto's may help?
OK, I'll give it a try.

What about the EFAULT check, is that really required?
I think so, it means to keep the errno to user-space when it is EFAULT,
right? This seems reasonable.


The problem I see is that this way we don't actually acknowledge some of the set values, e.g. say that we have buffer="1 2 3" and length = 100. Although we do accept values 1, 2 and 3 we don't acknowledge that to the user (as we would do for, say "1 2 3 4a"), but return -EFAULT.

I think it would be better to skip this check. That means that the user will get the ack for the 1, 2 and 3 values and next time it continues the write it will get -EFAULT.

This will of course change the userspace ABI, albeit in a minor way, and it is not clear to me if doing this is allowed (even if this new approach would be the correct one).


I think the right behavior is accept "1 2 3" and return the number of
bytes that we accept.
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