On 03/08/2018 12:57 PM, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > On Thu, Mar 08, 2018 at 05:51:09PM +0000, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: >> On Thu, Mar 01, 2018 at 01:31:17PM -0800, Andrew Morton wrote: >>> On Thu, 1 Mar 2018 12:43:37 -0500 Waiman Long <longman@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>>> When minimum/maximum values are specified for a sysctl parameter in >>>> the ctl_table structure with proc_dointvec_minmax() handler, update >>>> to that parameter will fail with error if the given value is outside >>>> of the required range. >>>> >>>> There are use cases where it may be better to clamp the value of >>>> the sysctl parameter to the given range without failing the update, >>>> especially if the users are not aware of the actual range limits. >>>> Reading the value back after the update will now be a good practice >>>> to see if the provided value exceeds the range limits. >>>> >>>> To provide this less restrictive form of range checking, a new flags >>>> field is added to the ctl_table structure. The new field is a 16-bit >>>> value that just fits into the hole left by the 16-bit umode_t field >>>> without increasing the size of the structure. >>>> >>>> When the CTL_FLAGS_CLAMP_RANGE flag is set in the ctl_table entry, >>>> any update from the userspace will be clamped to the given range >>>> without error. >>>> >>>> ... >>>> >>>> --- a/include/linux/sysctl.h >>>> +++ b/include/linux/sysctl.h >>>> @@ -116,6 +116,7 @@ struct ctl_table >>>> void *data; >>>> int maxlen; >>>> umode_t mode; >>>> + uint16_t flags; >>> It would be nice to make this have type `enum ctl_table_flags', but I >>> guess there's then no reliable way of forcing it to be 16-bit. >>> >>> I guess this is the best we can do... >>> >> We can add this to the enum: >> >> enum ctl_table_flags { >> CTL_FLAGS_CLAMP_RANGE = BIT(0), >> + __CTL_FLAGS_CLAMP_MAX = BIT(16), >> }; >> >> >> Then also: >> >> #define CTL_TABLE_FLAGS_ALL ((BIT(__CTL_FLAGS_CLAMP_MAX + 1))-1) >> >> at the end of the definition, then a helper which can be used during >> parsing: >> >> static int check_ctl_table_flags(u16 flags) >> { >> if (flags & ~(CTL_TABLE_FLAGS_ALL)) >> return -ERANGE; >> return 0; >> } >> >> Waiman please evaluate and add. > Also, I guess we have ... max bit used and max allowed (16) really, where one is the > max allowed bit field given current definitions, the other is the max flag possible > setting in the future. We might as well go with the smaller one, which is the current > max, so it can just be > > enum ctl_table_flags { > CTL_FLAGS_CLAMP_RANGE = BIT(0), > __CTL_FLAGS_CLAMP_MAX = BIT(1), > }; > > > #define CTL_TABLE_FLAGS_ALL ((BIT(__CTL_FLAGS_CLAMP_MAX))-1) > > That way we just check against the actual max defined, now the max allowed on > the entire flag setting. > > Luis Yes, I can certainly add check to see if the flags are out of range. However, I would like to know your opinion of what to do when an invalid flag bit is set. Do we just print a warning in the ring buffer or fail the registration of the ctl table? Cheers, Longman