On Tue, Dec 17, 2019 at 11:39 AM Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > 'loff_t length' is not right. Looking around, it does seem to get used that way. Too much, though. > > + loff_t pos = data->pos; > > + loff_t length = pos + data->len; > > And WTH is that? "pos + data->len" is not "length", that's end. And this: > > > loff_t end = pos + length, done = 0; > > What? Now 'end' is 'pos+length', which is 'pos+pos+data->len'. But this is unrelated to the crazy types. That just can't bve right. > Is there some reason for this horrible case of "let's allow 64-bit sizes?" > > Because even if there is, it shouldn't be "loff_t". That's an > _offset_. Not a length. We do seem to have a lot of these across filesystems. And a lot of confusion. Most of the IO reoutines clearly take or return a size_t (returning ssize_t) as the IO size. And then you have the zeroing/truncation stuff that tends to take loff_t. Which still smells wrong, and s64 would look like a better case, but whatever. The "iomap_zero_range() for truncate" case really does seem to need a 64-bit value, because people do the difference of two loff_t's for it. In fact, it almost looks like that function should take a "start , end" pair, which would make loff_t be the _right_ thing. Because "length" really is just (a positive) size_t normally. Linus