On Tue, 19 Sept 2023 at 23:28, Matthew House <mattlloydhouse@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > More generally speaking, the biggest reason I dislike the current single- > buffer interface is that the output is "all or nothing": either the caller > has enough space in the buffer to store every single string, or it's unable > to get any fields at all, just an -EOVERFLOW. There's no room for the > caller to say that it just wants the integer fields and doesn't care about > the strings. Thus, to reliably call statmnt() on an arbitrary mount, the > ability to dynamically allocate memory is effectively mandatory. The only > real solution to this would be additional statx-like flags to select the > returned strings. It's already there: #define STMT_MNT_ROOT 0x00000008U /* Want/got mnt_root */ #define STMT_MNT_POINT 0x00000010U /* Want/got mnt_point */ #define STMT_FS_TYPE 0x00000020U /* Want/got fs_type */ For example, it's perfectly fine to do the following, and it's guaranteed not to return EOVERFLOW: struct statmnt st; unsigned int mask = STMT_SB_BASIC | STMT_MNT_BASIC; ret = statmount(mnt_id, mask, &st, sizeof(st), flags); > Besides that, if the caller is written in standard C but doesn't want to > use malloc(3) to allocate the buffer, then its helper function must be > written very carefully (with a wrapper struct around the header and data) > to satisfy the aliasing rules, which forbid programs from using a struct > statmnt * pointer to read from a declared char[N] array. I think you interpret aliasing rules incorrectly. The issue with aliasing is if you access the same piece of memory though different types. Which is not the case here. In fact with the latest incarnation of the interface[1] there's no need to access the underlying buffer at all: printf("mnt_root: <%s>\n", st->str + st->mnt_root); So the following is perfectly safe to do (as long as you don't care about buffer overflow): char buf[10000]; struct statmnt *st = (void *) buf; ret = statmount(mnt_id, mask, st, sizeof(buf), flags); If you do care about handling buffer overflows, then dynamic allocation is the only sane way. And before you dive into how this is going to be horrible because the buffer size needs to be doubled an unknown number of times, think a bit: have you *ever* seen a line in /proc/self/mountinfo longer than say 1000 characters? So if the buffer starts out at 64k, how often will this doubling happen? Right: practically never. Adding complexity to handle this case is nonsense, as I've said many times. And there is definitely nonzero complexity involved (just see the special casing in getxattr and listxattr implementations all over the place). Thanks, Miklos [1] git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mszeredi/vfs.git#statmount-v2