On Tue, 2012-12-18 at 03:06 -0500, Tomas Hozza wrote: > ----- Original Message ----- > > > This is just for sanity. The value PATH_MAX was chosen after > > > discussion > > > with K. Y. Srinivasan and Olaf Hering instead of some "magic" > > > number like > > > 256 or 512. > > > > PATH_MAX is a magic name. > > It is defined in "limits.h". I would welcome some more constructive > argumentation and critics.
It still bears no relation to any actual limit in the C library or Linux
kernel. So it's no more valid than the previous number.
In the current context we're enumerating /sys/class/net and we know that
all the interface names in there are limited to IFNAMSIZ-1 = 15 (there
is also potentially "bonding_masters"). The longest path name we need
to use is definitely much shorter than even 256 bytes.
> > > > Using snprintf() is a good idea, but you need to check the return
> > > > value and handle the truncation case somehow.
> > >
> > > By using PATH_MAX sized buffer there is no need for handling the
> > > truncation
> > > case.
> >
> > You are claiming two contradictory things: sprintf() may overrun the
> > buffer, so we need the length check provided by snprintf(), but there
> > is no need to check for truncation because we know the length is
> > sufficient.
>
> So what do you propose? How should it be solved?
if (snprintf(dev_id, sizeof(dev_id), ...) >= sizeof(dev_id))
continue;
Possibly logging a warning.
Ben.
--
Ben Hutchings
Life is like a sewer:
what you get out of it depends on what you put into it.
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