On Wed, Jul 29, 2020 at 09:11:17PM +0100, Al Viro wrote: > On Wed, Jul 22, 2020 at 11:12:19PM +0200, Jiri Olsa wrote: > > > +BPF_CALL_3(bpf_d_path, struct path *, path, char *, buf, u32, sz) > > +{ > > + char *p = d_path(path, buf, sz - 1); > > + int len; > > + > > + if (IS_ERR(p)) { > > + len = PTR_ERR(p); > > + } else { > > + len = strlen(p); > > + if (len && p != buf) > > + memmove(buf, p, len); > > *blink* > What the hell do you need that strlen() for? d_path() copies into > the end of buffer (well, starts there and prepends to it); all you > really need is memmove(buf, p, buf + sz - p) I used the code from some of the other users like backing_dev_show fsg_show_file nice, looks like we could omit strlen call in perf mmap event call as well > > > > + buf[len] = 0; > > Wait a minute... Why are you NUL-terminating it separately? > You do rely upon having NUL in the damn thing (and d_path() does > guarantee it there). Without that strlen() would've gone into > the nasal demon country; you can't call it on non-NUL-terminated > array. So you are guaranteed that p[len] will be '\0'; why bother > copying the first len bytes and then separately deal with that > NUL? Just memmove() the fucker and be done with that... > > If you are worried about stray NUL in the middle of the returned > data... can't happen. Note the rename_lock use in fs/d_path.c; > the names of everything involved are guaranteed to have been > stable throughout the copying them into the buffer - if anything > were to be renamed while we are doing that, we'd repeat the whole > thing (with rename_lock taken exclusive the second time around). > > So make it simply > if (IS_ERR(p)) > return PTR_ERR(p); > len = buf + sz - p; > memmove(buf, p, len); > return len; ok, will use this > and be done with that. BTW, the odds of p == buf are pretty much > nil - it would happen only if sz - 1 happened to be the exact length > of pathname. > ok, great thanks, jirka