On Wed, 2019-05-08 at 14:28 +0300, Alexandru Ardelean wrote: > The documentation the `_match_string()` helper mentions that `n` > should be: > * @n: number of strings in the array or -1 for NULL terminated arrays > > The behavior of the function is different, in the sense that it exits on > the first NULL element in the array, regardless of whether `n` is -1 or a > positive number. > > This patch changes the behavior, to exit the loop when a NULL element is > found and n == -1. Essentially, this aligns the behavior with the > doc-string. > > There are currently many users of `match_string()`, and so, in order to > go > through them, the next patches in the series will focus on doing some > cosmetic changes, which are aimed at grouping the users of > `match_string()`. > This is the duplicate & should be dropped. Sorry for this. > Signed-off-by: Alexandru Ardelean <alexandru.ardelean@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- > lib/string.c | 5 ++++- > 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) > > diff --git a/lib/string.c b/lib/string.c > index 3ab861c1a857..76edb7bf76cb 100644 > --- a/lib/string.c > +++ b/lib/string.c > @@ -648,8 +648,11 @@ int match_string(const char * const *array, size_t > n, const char *string) > > for (index = 0; index < n; index++) { > item = array[index]; > - if (!item) > + if (!item) { > + if (n != (size_t)-1) > + continue; > break; > + } > if (!strcmp(item, string)) > return index; > }