Jamie Lokier <jamie@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: >> revoked_file_ops return 0 from reads (aka EOF). Tell poll the file is >> always ready for I/O and return -EIO from all other operations. > > I think read should return -EIO too. If a program is reading from a > /proc file (say), and the thing it's reading suddenly disappears, EOF > gives the false impression that it's read to the end of formatted data > from that file and it can process the data as if it's complete, which > is wrong. Good point EIO is the current read return value for a removed proc file. For closed pipes, and hung up ttys the read return value is 0, and from my reading that is what bsd returns after a sys_revoke. The reason I have f_op settable is because I never expected complete agreement on the return codes, and because it makes auditing and spotting this kind of thing easier. I guess I should make two variations on revoked_file_ops then. Say eof_file_ops, eio_file_ops. Identical except for their treatment of reads. Eric -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-pci" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html