On Tue, Oct 24, 2017 at 05:25:16PM -0700, Andrei Vagin wrote: > On Wed, Oct 25, 2017 at 12:48:14AM +0300, Cyrill Gorcunov wrote: > > Currently unix_diag_vfs structure reports unix socket inode > > as u32 value which of course doesn't fit to ino_t type and > > BTW: As far as I understand, it is not a problem right now, because > get_next_ino returns int. And I'm agree that it maybe a problem in a > future and it is better to be ready. > > > the number may be trimmed. Lets rather deprecate old UDIAG_SHOW_VFS > > interface and provide UDIAG_SHOW_VFS2 (with one field "__zero" reserved > > which we could extend in future). > > There is one more place where we return ino as u32: > > static int sk_diag_dump_peer(struct sock *sk, struct sk_buff *nlskb) > .... > return nla_put_u32(nlskb, UNIX_DIAG_PEER, ino);
Managed to miss it, thanks! > > +struct unix_diag_vfs2 { > > + __u64 udiag_vfs_ino; > > + __u32 udiag_vfs_dev; > > + __u32 __zero; /* Reserve for future use */ > > How can a user understand whether this field is used or not? Checking out if it zero or not. > Each netlink attribute has its size in a header. Any attribute can be > extended, and users can understand which fields are filled by > a size of an attribute. Well, that's correct, but it implies that any extension has different size. I though of extending this structure (if ever needed) the way that same attribute may carry different structures equal in size and setting up @__zero field with some bit would help. On the other side it become more complex than needed, so now I think I should simply drop __zero out. Thanks for comments, Andrew! Cyrill