On Wed, Jan 19, 2005 at 01:42:33PM +1100, Rusty Russell wrote: > On Tue, 2005-01-18 at 16:47 -0800, Jean Tourrilhes wrote: > > Hi Rusty, > > > > (If you are not the culprit, please forward to the guilty party). > > Almost certainly me. We gave people warning, we even marked MODULE_PARM > deprecated, but eventually I had to roll through and try to autoconvert.
I have nothing against the change to module_param_array(), and I even think that it's a good idea. Just doing my job of peer review. > > I personally introduced the "double char array" module > > parameter, 'c', to fix that. I even sent you the patch to add 'c' > > support in your new module loader (see set_obsolete()). Would it be > > possible to carry this feature with the new module_param_array ? > > Thanks in advance... > > Actually, it's designed so you can extend it yourself: at its base, > module_param_call() is just a callback mechanism. Yes, I could do my little hack in my corner, but I think it would be counter productive. I'm sure that compared to adding a check on strlen, it would be more bloat. But, more importantly, I would make the code more obscure and unmaintanable. But, I think you are missing the point I'm making. We are striving to make APIs that are simple, efficient and avoid users to make stupid mistakes. The conversion from MODULE_PARM to module_param goes exactly in this direction, as it adds more type safety. This is good, as module_param is probably the most used user/kernel interface. I believe that buffer overrun is the number one security problem in Linux. It seems that it even happens to the best of us. So, it would seem to me that making the module_param API a bit more bullet proof with regard to buffer overrun might be a good idea. So, I'm not advocating that you build this feature just for me, but that you make it the standard and force people to use it. > Thanks! > Rusty. Have fun... Jean - 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/