Hi, if a driver returns an error in fill_read_buffer(), the buffer will be marked as filled. Subsequent reads will return eof. But there is no data because of an error, not because it has been read. Not marking the buffer filled is the obvious fix.
Regards Oliver Signed-off-by: Oliver Neukum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- --- a/fs/sysfs/file.c 2006-12-24 05:00:32.000000000 +0100 +++ b/fs/sysfs/file.c 2007-01-01 15:03:14.000000000 +0100 @@ -70,7 +70,8 @@ * Allocate @buffer->page, if it hasn't been already, then call the * kobject's show() method to fill the buffer with this attribute's * data. - * This is called only once, on the file's first read. + * This is called only once, on the file's first read unless an error + * is returned. */ static int fill_read_buffer(struct dentry * dentry, struct sysfs_buffer * buffer) { @@ -88,12 +89,13 @@ buffer->event = atomic_read(&sd->s_event); count = ops->show(kobj,attr,buffer->page); - buffer->needs_read_fill = 0; BUG_ON(count > (ssize_t)PAGE_SIZE); - if (count >= 0) + if (count >= 0) { + buffer->needs_read_fill = 0; buffer->count = count; - else + } else { ret = count; + } return ret; } - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/