Date: Mon, 31 Oct 2011 10:24:07 -0400 From: John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> To: Jilles Tjoelker <jilles@stack.nl> Cc: arch@freebsd.org Subject: Re: [PATCH] fadvise(2) system call Message-ID: <201110311024.07580.jhb@freebsd.org> In-Reply-To: <20111029214057.GB90408@stack.nl> References: <201110281426.00013.jhb@freebsd.org> <20111029214057.GB90408@stack.nl>
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On Saturday, October 29, 2011 5:40:58 pm Jilles Tjoelker wrote: > On Fri, Oct 28, 2011 at 02:25:59PM -0400, John Baldwin wrote: > > I have been working for the last week or so on a patch to add an > > fadvise(2) system call. It is somewhat similar to madvise(2) except > > that it operates on a file descriptor instead of a memory region. It > > also only really makes sense for regular files and does not apply to > > other file descriptor types. > > Cool. > > Various other posix_* functions such as posix_spawn() and posix_openpt() > are implemented directly, not as a wrapper around s/posix_//. I think > posix_madvise() is only implemented as a wrapper because madvise() > already existed. Therefore, I don't see a reason why a function named > fadvise would be useful on its own (except if there are existing > applications that use that name). Existing applications use the name and I find it ugly. (I also wish we had a plain fallocate() instead of just posix_fallocate().) However, if other folks prefer not having the wrapper I could update it to use the posix_* name. > If the advice is FADV_SEQUENTIAL, FADV_RANDOM or FADV_NOREUSE and the > file descriptor is invalid (fget() fails), the struct fadvise_info is > leaked. Gah, fixed (I had thought of that case but forgot to update it when converting the advice to be malloc'd vs stored in struct file directly). > The comparisons > > + (fa->fa_start != 0 && fa->fa_start == end + 1) || > + (uap->offset != 0 && fa->fa_end + 1 == uap->offset))) { > > should instead be something like > > + (end != OFF_MAX && fa->fa_start == end + 1) || > + (fa->fa_end != OFF_MAX && fa->fa_end + 1 == uap->offset))) { > > to avoid integer overflow. Hmm, but the expressions will still work in that case, yes? I already check for uap->offset and uap->len being negative earlier (so fa_start and fa_end are always positive), and off_t is signed, so if end is OFF_MAX, then end + 1 will certainly not == fa_start? -- John Baldwin
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