On Mon, Jul 07, 2014 at 03:34:06PM -0700, Dave Hansen wrote: > On 07/07/2014 01:59 PM, Naoya Horiguchi wrote: > > On Mon, Jul 07, 2014 at 12:08:12PM -0700, Dave Hansen wrote: > >> On 07/07/2014 11:00 AM, Naoya Horiguchi wrote: > >>> +.SH RETURN VALUE > >>> +On success, > >>> +.BR fincore () > >>> +returns 0. > >>> +On error, \-1 is returned, and > >>> +.I errno > >>> +is set appropriately. > >> > >> Is this accurate? From reading the syscall itself, it looked like it > >> did this: > >> > >>> + * Return value is the number of pages whose data is stored in fc->buffer. > >>> + */ > >>> +static long do_fincore(struct fincore_control *fc, int nr_pages) > >> > >> and: > >> > >>> +SYSCALL_DEFINE6(fincore, int, fd, loff_t, start, long, nr_pages, > >> ... > >>> + while (fc.nr_pages > 0) { > >>> + memset(fc.buffer, 0, fc.buffer_size); > >>> + ret = do_fincore(&fc, min(step, fc.nr_pages)); > >>> + /* Reached the end of the file */ > >>> + if (ret == 0) > >>> + break; > >>> + if (ret < 0) > >>> + break; > >> ... > >>> + } > >> ... > >>> + return ret; > >>> +} > >> > >> Which seems that for a given loop of do_fincore(), you might end up > >> returning the result of that *single* iteration of do_fincore() instead > >> of the aggregate of the entire syscall. > >> > >> So, it can return <0 on failure, 0 on success, or also an essentially > >> random >0 number on success too. > > > > We don't break this while loop if do_fincore() returned a positive value > > unless copy_to_user() fails. And in that case ret is set to -EFAULT. > > So I think sys_fincore() never returns a positive value. > > OK, that makes sense as I'm reading it again. > > >> Why not just use the return value for something useful instead of > >> hacking in the extras->nr_entries stuff? > > > > Hmm, I got the opposite complaint previously, where we shouldn't > > interpret the return value differently depending on the flag. > > And I'd like to keep the extra argument for future extensibility. > > For example, if we want to collect pages only with a specific > > set of page flags, this extra argument will be necessary. > > Couldn't it simply be the number of elements that it wrote in to the > buffer, or even the number of bytes? Yes, returning the number of elements looks clearer to me. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-api" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html