diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/filesystems/seq_file.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/seq_file.rst | 20 |
1 files changed, 19 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/seq_file.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/seq_file.rst index 7f7ee06b2693..56856481dc8d 100644 --- a/Documentation/filesystems/seq_file.rst +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/seq_file.rst @@ -129,7 +129,9 @@ also a special value which can be returned by the start() function called SEQ_START_TOKEN; it can be used if you wish to instruct your show() function (described below) to print a header at the top of the output. SEQ_START_TOKEN should only be used if the offset is zero, -however. +however. SEQ_START_TOKEN has no special meaning to the core seq_file +code. It is provided as a convenience for a start() funciton to +communicate with the next() and show() functions. The next function to implement is called, amazingly, next(); its job is to move the iterator forward to the next position in the sequence. The @@ -145,6 +147,22 @@ complete. Here's the example version:: return spos; } +The next() function should set ``*pos`` to a value that start() can use +to find the new location in the sequence. When the iterator is being +stored in the private data area, rather than being reinitialized on each +start(), it might seem sufficient to simply set ``*pos`` to any non-zero +value (zero always tells start() to restart the sequence). This is not +sufficient due to historical problems. + +Historically, many next() functions have *not* updated ``*pos`` at +end-of-file. If the value is then used by start() to initialise the +iterator, this can result in corner cases where the last entry in the +sequence is reported twice in the file. In order to discourage this bug +from being resurrected, the core seq_file code now produces a warning if +a next() function does not change the value of ``*pos``. Consequently a +next() function *must* change the value of ``*pos``, and of course must +set it to a non-zero value. + The stop() function closes a session; its job, of course, is to clean up. If dynamic memory is allocated for the iterator, stop() is the place to free it; if a lock was taken by start(), stop() must release |