On Wednesday, December 21, 2011 11:13:10 am Kostik Belousov wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 21, 2011 at 10:31:11AM -0500, John Baldwin wrote:
> > On Tuesday, December 20, 2011 5:18:58 pm m...@freebsd.org wrote:
> > > On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 1:49 PM, John Baldwin <j...@freebsd.org> wrote:
> > > > Hmm, if these functions are expected to operate like 'write(2)' and are
> > > > supposed to return the number of bytes written, shouldn't their return 
> > > > value
> > > > be 'ssize_t' instead of 'int'?  It looks like the system calls 
> > > > themselves
> > > > already do the right thing in setting td_retval[] (they assign a 
> > > > ssize_t to it
> > > > and td_retval[0] can hold a ssize_t on all of our current platforms).  
> > > > It
> > > > would seem that the only change would be to the header and probably
> > > > syscalls.master.  I guess this would require a symver bump to fix 
> > > > though.
> > > 
> > > An extended attribute larger than 2GB is a programming abuse, though.
> > > Technically int may not be 32 bits but it is on all supported
> > > platforms now.
> > 
> > Today it is an abuse.  In the 90's a 64-bit off_t was considered an abuse by
> > some. :)
> > 
> > The type should match the documented behavior.  On OS X the set operation
> > doesn't return a size but instead returns a simple success/failure (0 or -1)
> > for which an int is appropriate.  However, the FreeBSD API documents that it
> > operates like write and consumes the buffer.   Note that the size of the
> > buffer passed to the 'set' and 'get' operations is a size_t, not an int, and
> > the 'get' operations already return a ssize_t, not an int.
> 
> Note that read(2)/write(2) do return int. I still have WIP patch to fix
> this, but after some conversations with Bruce I am not sure it is worth
> finishing.

The manpages and /usr/include/unistd.h claim they return ssize_t.  Is this
related to the changes to make uio_resid a size_t (I thought that went into
the tree)?  If the problem is that the values read/write return may fall into
the range of only an int even on 64-bit platforms, that is different from the
return type which is part of the ABI.

-- 
John Baldwin
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