On Fri, May 28, 2021 at 07:39:50PM +0800, Jia He wrote: > We have '%pD' for printing a filename. It may not be perfect (by > default it only prints one component.) > > As suggested by Linus at [1]: > A dentry has a parent, but at the same time, a dentry really does > inherently have "one name" (and given just the dentry pointers, you > can't show mount-related parenthood, so in many ways the "show just > one name" makes sense for "%pd" in ways it doesn't necessarily for > "%pD"). But while a dentry arguably has that "one primary component", > a _file_ is certainly not exclusively about that last component. > > Hence "file_dentry_name()" simply shouldn't use "dentry_name()" at all. > Despite that shared code origin, and despite that similar letter > choice (lower-vs-upper case), a dentry and a file really are very > different from a name standpoint. > > Here stack space is preferred for file_d_path_name() because it is > much safer. The stack size 256 is a compromise between stack overflow > and too short full path. How is it "safer"? You already have a buffer passed from the caller. Are you saying that d_path_fast() might overrun a really small buffer but won't overrun a 256 byte buffer? > @@ -920,13 +921,25 @@ char *dentry_name(char *buf, char *end, const struct dentry *d, struct printf_sp > } > > static noinline_for_stack > -char *file_dentry_name(char *buf, char *end, const struct file *f, > +char *file_d_path_name(char *buf, char *end, const struct file *f, > struct printf_spec spec, const char *fmt) > { > + const struct path *path; > + char *p; > + char full_path[256]; > + > if (check_pointer(&buf, end, f, spec)) > return buf; > > - return dentry_name(buf, end, f->f_path.dentry, spec, fmt); > + path = &f->f_path; > + if (check_pointer(&buf, end, path, spec)) > + return buf; > + > + p = d_path_fast(path, full_path, sizeof(full_path)); > + if (IS_ERR(p)) > + return err_ptr(buf, end, p, spec); > + > + return string_nocheck(buf, end, p, spec); > } > #ifdef CONFIG_BLOCK > static noinline_for_stack