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Re: [PATCH] block/copy-before-write: use uint64_t for timeout in nanosec
From: |
Kevin Wolf |
Subject: |
Re: [PATCH] block/copy-before-write: use uint64_t for timeout in nanoseconds |
Date: |
Mon, 3 Jun 2024 18:09:57 +0200 |
Am 03.06.2024 um 16:45 hat Fiona Ebner geschrieben:
> Am 28.05.24 um 18:06 schrieb Kevin Wolf:
> > Am 29.04.2024 um 16:19 hat Fiona Ebner geschrieben:
> >> rather than the uint32_t for which the maximum is slightly more than 4
> >> seconds and larger values would overflow. The QAPI interface allows
> >> specifying the number of seconds, so only values 0 to 4 are safe right
> >> now, other values lead to a much lower timeout than a user expects.
> >>
> >> The block_copy() call where this is used already takes a uint64_t for
> >> the timeout, so no change required there.
> >>
> >> Fixes: 6db7fd1ca9 ("block/copy-before-write: implement cbw-timeout option")
> >> Reported-by: Friedrich Weber <f.weber@proxmox.com>
> >> Signed-off-by: Fiona Ebner <f.ebner@proxmox.com>
> >
> > Thanks, applied to the block branch.
> >
> > But I don't think our job is done yet with this. Increasing the limit is
> > good and useful, but even if it's now unlikely to hit with sane values,
> > we should still catch integer overflows in cbw_open() and return an
> > error on too big values instead of silently wrapping around.
>
> NANOSECONDS_PER_SECOND is 10^9 and the QAPI type for cbw-timeout is
> uint32_t, so even with the maximum allowed value, there is no overflow.
> Should I still add such a check?
You're right, I missed that cbw_timeout is uint32_t. So uint64_t will be
always be enough to hold the result, and the calculation is also done in
64 bits because NANOSECONDS_PER_SECOND is long long. Then we don't need
a check.
Kevin