On Thu, 14 Apr 2022 at 00:09, Ard Biesheuvel <ardb@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > (cc Kees for pstore) > > On Wed, 13 Apr 2022 at 20:08, Jakob Koschel <jakobkoschel@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > > On 13. Apr 2022, at 19:05, Ard Biesheuvel <ardb@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > On Fri, 1 Apr 2022 at 00:11, Jakob Koschel <jakobkoschel@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > >> > > >> In preparation to limiting the scope of a list iterator to the list > > >> traversal loop, use a dedicated pointer to iterate through the list [1]. > > >> > > >> In the current state the list_for_each_entry() is guaranteed to > > >> hit a break or goto in order to work properly. If the list iterator > > >> executes completely or the list is empty the iterator variable contains > > >> a type confused bogus value infered from the head of the list. > > >> > > >> With this patch the variable used past the list iterator is only set > > >> if the list exists early and is NULL otherwise. It should therefore > > >> be safe to just set *prev = NULL (as it was before). > > >> > > > > > > This generic boilerplate is fine to include, but it would help if you > > > could point out why repainting the current logic with your new brush > > > is appropriate here. > > > > This makes sense, I can see that the commit message should be improved here. > > > > > > > > In this particular case, I wonder whether updating *prev makes sense > > > to begin with if we are returning an error, and if we fix that, the > > > issue disappears as well. > > > > Actually I'm rethinking this now. The only use of 'prev' that I can see is > > in efi_pstore_erase_name(). It only uses it if found != 0 > > which would mean err != 0 in __efivar_entry_iter(). > > > > This would allow massively simplifying the entire function. > > The valid case is updating *prev when there is an "error" as far as I can tell. > > > > OK, so in summary, the only user of that code that bothers to pass a > value for prev abuses it to implement its own version of > efivar_entry_find(), and so if we fix that caller, we can drop the > 'prev' argument from this function altogether. > > > > I've sketched up a rewritten function that should hopefully be more clear and > > archive the same goal, I'm curious what you think: > > > > > > int __efivar_entry_iter(int (*func)(struct efivar_entry *, void *), > > struct list_head *head, void *data, > > struct efivar_entry **prev) > > { > > struct efivar_entry *entry, *n; > > int err = 0; > > > > /* If prev is set and *prev != NULL start iterating from there */ > > if (prev) > > entry = list_prepare_entry(*prev, head, list); > > /* Otherwise start at the beginning */ > > else > > entry = list_entry(head, typeof(*entry), list); > > list_for_each_entry_safe_continue(entry, n, head, list) { > > err = func(entry, data); > > if (err && prev) > > *prev = entry; > > if (err) > > return err; > > } > > > > return 0; > > } > > > > Thanks for this. I'll have a stab myself at fixing the EFI pstore > code, and hopefully we can clean up __efivar_entry_iter() as I > suggested. This is now queued up in the EFI tree: the pstore driver no longer use the efivar_entry API at all, and the remaining user of efivar_entry_iter() does not use the value of the iterator variable in the same way.