Re: [PATCH 2/3] flex_arrays: allow zero length flex arrays

From: Dave Hansen
Date: Tue Apr 26 2011 - 16:39:26 EST


On Mon, 2011-04-25 at 21:45 -0400, Eric Paris wrote:
> Just like kmalloc will allow one to allocate a 0 length segment of memory
> flex arrays should do the same thing. It should bomb if you try to use
> something, but it should at least allow the allocation.
>
> Based-on-patch-by: Steffen Klassert <steffen.klassert@xxxxxxxxxxx>
> Signed-off-by: Eric Paris <eparis@xxxxxxxxxx>
> ---
>
> lib/flex_array.c | 11 ++++++++++-
> 1 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/lib/flex_array.c b/lib/flex_array.c
> index 0c33b24..2554a5f 100644
> --- a/lib/flex_array.c
> +++ b/lib/flex_array.c
> @@ -253,9 +253,16 @@ int flex_array_prealloc(struct flex_array *fa, unsigned int start,
> unsigned int end;
> struct flex_array_part *part;
>
> + if (!fa->total_nr_elements && !start)
> + return 0;

I guess it works either way, but I'd say that checking for a zero 'len'
prealloc would be more important (and meaningful) than checking a zero
'start'.

If someone passed start=0 and len=44 for a fa->total_nr_elements=0
array, I'd expect -ENOSPC, but this would return 0.

-- Dave

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