on 2007-11-8 20:11 WANG Cong wrote:
On Thu, Nov 08, 2007 at 07:47:41PM +0800, WANG Cong wrote:
Yes, snprintf is safer than sprintf. But here, the 'count' will be
mis-pointed when snprintf returns no less than PAGE_SIZE (what you called
overflow). So you may also need:

        if (unlikely(count >= PAGE_SIZE))
                count = PAGE_SIZE - 1;

Just a simple guess. ;)

Or try scnprintf. ;)

We have discussed this problem. We think that it is better to return the return
value of kernel directly because this is the specification of the sysfs.

  (Version:2.6.24-rc2,File:Documentation/filesystems/sysfs.txt:198-201):
  198 - show() methods should return the number of bytes printed into the
  199   buffer. This is the return value of snprintf().
  200
  201 - show() should always use snprintf().

And the function which calls the show() methods uses BUG_ON() to check the
return value. If the return value is too big,it means something wrong.

If we use scnprintf, we may not know whether the resulting string is truncated
or not. Maybe A big bug is ignored.

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