On Wed, May 6, 2020 at 6:29 PM Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed 06-05-20 17:51:39, Souptick Joarder wrote: > > On Wed, May 6, 2020 at 3:36 PM Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > On Wed 06-05-20 02:06:56, Souptick Joarder wrote: > > > > On Wed, May 6, 2020 at 1:08 AM John Hubbard <jhubbard@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > On 2020-05-05 12:14, Souptick Joarder wrote: > > > > > > Currently {get|pin}_user_pages_fast() have 3 return value 0, -errno > > > > > > and no of pinned pages. The only case where these two functions will > > > > > > return 0, is for nr_pages <= 0, which doesn't find a valid use case. > > > > > > But if at all any, then a -ERRNO will be returned instead of 0, which > > > > > > means {get|pin}_user_pages_fast() will have 2 return values -errno & > > > > > > no of pinned pages. > > > > > > > > > > > > Update all the callers which deals with return value 0 accordingly. > > > > > > > > > > Hmmm, seems a little shaky. In order to do this safely, I'd recommend > > > > > first changing gup_fast/pup_fast so so that they return -EINVAL if > > > > > the caller specified nr_pages==0, and of course auditing all callers, > > > > > to ensure that this won't cause problems. > > > > > > > > While auditing it was figured out, there are 5 callers which cares for > > > > return value > > > > 0 of gup_fast/pup_fast. What problem it might cause if we change > > > > gup_fast/pup_fast > > > > to return -EINVAL and update all the callers in a single commit ? > > > > > > Well, first I'd ask a different question: Why do you want to change the > > > current behavior? It's not like the current behavior is confusing. Callers > > > that pass >0 pages can happily rely on the simple behavior of < 0 return on > > > error or > 0 return if we mapped some pages. Callers that can possibly ask > > > to map 0 pages can get 0 pages back - kind of expected - and I don't see > > > any benefit in trying to rewrite these callers to handle -EINVAL instead... > > > > Callers with a request to map 0 pages doesn't have a valid use case. But if any > > caller end up doing it mistakenly, -errno should be returned to caller > > rather than 0 > > which will indicate more precisely that map 0 pages is not a valid > > request from caller. > > Well, I believe this depends on the point of view. Similarly as reading 0 > bytes is successful, we could consider mapping 0 pages successful as well. > And there can be valid cases where number of pages to map is computed from > some input and when 0 pages should be mapped, it is not a problem and your > change would force such callers to special case this with explicitely > checking for 0 pages to map and not calling GUP in that case at all. > > I'm not saying what you propose is necessarily bad, I just say I don't find > it any better than the current behavior and so IMO it's not worth the > churn. Now if you can come up with some examples of current in-kernel users > who indeed do get the handling of the return value wrong, I could be > convinced otherwise. There are 5 callers of {get|pin}_user_pages_fast(). arch/ia64/kernel/err_inject.c#L145 staging/gasket/gasket_page_table.c#L489 Checking return value 0 doesn't make sense for above 2. drivers/platform/goldfish/goldfish_pipe.c#L277 net/rds/rdma.c#L165 drivers/tee/tee_shm.c#L262 These 3 callers have calculated the no of pages value before passing it to {get|pin}_user_pages_fast(). But if they end up passing nr_pages <= 0, a return value of either 0 or -EINVAL doesn't going to harm any existing behavior of callers. IMO, it is safe to return -errno for nr_pages <= 0, for {get|pin}_user_pages_fast().