Re: [PATCH 00/10] sg buffer copy helper functions

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On Fri, 14 Mar 2008 10:46:52 -0400 (EDT)
Alan Stern <stern@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Fri, 14 Mar 2008, FUJITA Tomonori wrote:
> 
> > > If nents doesn't change then for_each_sg() won't work right.  There 
> > > could be an alternative macro:
> > 
> > Oops, I thought that for_each_sg is defined like:
> > 
> > #define for_each_sg(sglist, sg, nr, __i)	\
> > 	for (__i = 0, sg = (sglist); __i < (nr) && sg; __i++, sg = sg_next(sg))
> > 
> > 
> > > /*
> > >  * Loop over each sg element, stopping at the end of the chain
> > >  */
> > > #define for_each_sg_all(sglist, sg, __i)	\
> > > 	for (__i = 0, sg = (sglist); sg; __i++, sg = sg_next(sg))
> > > 
> > > If you added this macro to include/linux/scatterlist.h and used it
> > > instead of for_each_sg() then you can get rid of nents entirely.  
> > > However I'm not sure whether this would be safe.  Do people sometimes 
> > > use a subset of the entries in a scatterlist?
> > 
> > IIRC, some drivers do that (though they might use sg_next).
> 
> But will usb-storage ever receive a scatterlist like that?  For 
> example, if there are three 4096-byte entries in the list, but the 
> transfer length is 8192 and nents is 2, then there could be a problem.

If LLDs don't use the padding or drain buffer feature (USB uses
neither), scsi midlayer doesn't send such (that is, the block layer
doesn't create such).


> (This could happen if some software layer preallocated an sg chain and
> used it over and over again, each time setting nents to whatever value
> was needed for a particular transfer.)
> 
> > I don't think that we add a new macro just for this function. We could
> > change for_each_sg in the above way or we could just do in
> > usb_stor_access_xfer_buf
> > 
> > for (i = 0, sg = *sgl; i < nents && sg; i++, sg = sg_next(sg))
> 
> This wouldn't be safe in the example I just mentioned if the
> usb-storage driver tried to do three transfers, each of 4096 bytes.  
> All three would succeed, but in fact the third call shouldn't transfer
> any data.

As I explained above, it should be safe with USB. But in general, LLDs
should not rely on a scatterlist about how much data they transfer.
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