On Tue, Dec 01, 2020 at 01:19:30PM +0200, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Tue, Dec 1, 2020 at 1:04 PM Johan Hovold <johan@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > 0x01 is 1 and is generally treated as boolean true as you know. > > Depends how you interpret this. kstrtobool() uses one character (and > in some cases two) of the input. Everything else is garbage. > Should we interpret garbage? No, ideally we should reject the input. > > So why should a sysfs-interface accept it as valid input and treat it as > > false? That's just bad design. > > I can agree with this. Looks like part of the problem are commits like 4cc7ecb7f2a6 ("param: convert some "on"/"off" users to strtobool") which destroyed perfectly well-defined interfaces. > > You miss the point; kstrobool accepts "12" today and treats it as true. > > You cannot extend such an interface to later accept a larger range than > > 0 and 1 as you didn't return an error for "12" from the start (as someone > > might now rely on "12" being treated as "1"). > > Somehow cifs uses kstrtobool() in conjunction with the wider ranges. Nobody > complained so far. But maybe they had it from day 1. Wow, that's pretty nasty. > So, we have two issues here: kstrtobool() doesn't report an error of > input when it has garbage, the user may rely on garbage to be > discarded. Right, parsing is too allowing and there are too many ways to say true/false. The power-management attributes use 0 and 1 for boolean like I do here, and I'd prefer to stick to that until we have deprecated the current kstrtobool. Johan