On Mon, May 06, 2019 at 11:42:06AM +0300, Kalle Valo wrote: > Hans de Goede <hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > >> @@ -99,6 +107,15 @@ static const struct dmi_system_id dmi_platform_data[] = { > >> {} > >> }; > >> +void brcmf_dmi_sanitize(char *dst, const unsigned char *allowed, > >> char safe) > >> +{ > >> + while (*dst) { > >> + if ((*dst < 0) || !(allowed[*dst / 8] & (1 << (*dst % 8)))) > > > > At a first look I have no clue what this code is doing and I honestly do not feel > > like figuring it out, this is clever, but IMHO not readable. > > > > Please just write this as if (*dst < 0x21 || (*dst > foo && < bar) || etc, > > so that a human can actually see in one look what the code is doing. > > Is there an existing function for sanitising filenames so that we don't > need to reinvent the wheel, maybe something like isalnum()? I would definitely prefer to use existing function, but I didn't find any suitable one. Suggestions are welcome. As for implementation details, the one I posted was optimized for both speed and size, and at least in my opinion this bit array driven parametric implementation is exactly what is needed here (using a string of allowed characters with strchr-style lookups would bring much worse complexity, and checking the characters using series of hardcoded if conditions could quickly grow to more than those 16 bytes used by the array). Regards, v.