On Fri, Dec 19, 2025 at 1:22 PM Michael Paquier <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Fri, Dec 19, 2025 at 11:00:54AM +0800, Chao Li wrote:
> > Given MAX_PHYSICAL_FILESIZE is just 1G (2^30), why availbytes has to
> > be pgoff_t instead of just int?
>
> The point of such changes would be to lift this barrier at some point,
> which is what the other thread I am mentioning upthread is also
> pointing at. It does not change the fact that this code is currently
> not portable as written: off_t can be 4 or 8 bytes depending on the
> environment, and pgoff_t exists to be a stable alternative. This
> relates as well to the use of long in the tree, all coming down to
> WIN32.
> --
> Michael
>
Sorry, I didn’t explain myself clearly earlier. My main point was to avoid
the awkward mixed-type casts here:
```
if ((pgoff_t) bytestowrite > availbytes)
bytestowrite = (int) availbytes;
```
I agree that changing availbytes to int would not be a good choice.
Instead, I tried making bytestowrite a pgoff_t, so that the comparison and
assignment can be done without casts, while still keeping the code correct
if MAX_PHYSICAL_FILESIZE is lifted in the future.
I’ve attached a small patch along these lines. It compiles without
warnings, and "make check" passes on my side. What do you think?
Best regards,
==
Chao Li (Evan)
---------------------
HighGo Software Co., Ltd.
https://www.highgo.com/
v1-0001-buffile-use-pgoff_t-for-bytestowrite-in-BufFileDu.patch
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