--- Al Viro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Sat, Oct 27, 2007 at 11:01:12AM +0200, Ahmed S. Darwish wrote: > > The problem here (As discussed in private mails) is that the for loop > > assumes that the beginning of given user-space buffer is the beginning > > of a rule. This leads to situations where the rule becomes "ecret 20", > > or "cret 20" instead of "Secret 20". Big input buffers/files leads > > smack to recieve a rule like "Secret 20" in fragmented chunks like: > > > > write("<lots of rules before ours>\nSec", ..) > > write("r", 1, ..) > > write("et 20\n<remaing rules after ours>", ..) > > > > Parsing a rule in such tough conditions in _kernel space_ is very > > hard. I began to feel that it will be much easier if we do the parsing > > in a userspace utility and let smack accept only small buffers (80 char). > > For crying out louf, all it takes is a finite state machine... BTW, folks, > your parser *and* input language suck. Really. Silently allowing noise > is Dumb(tm).
I was planning to patient Dumb, but if you've already got a copywrite on it I'll have to go a different route. Carp. > Please, write the grammar down and _follow_ _it_. Good idea. I'll do it. > ... > > Come on, people, this is ridiculous - why bother reinventing the wheels for > the stuff that belongs to exercises halfway through any self-respecting > introductory textbook? Scary parser, my arse... That code is in need of cleansing. With bleach. Yes, it's on my list. I managed to get my virtual disk back, found how I messed up on v9, and now have a (long) list of improvements and fixes. No rest for the wicked. Casey Schaufler [EMAIL PROTECTED] - 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/