On Wed, Aug 15, 2007 at 02:37:41PM +0800, Fengguang Wu wrote:
> static void *ct_seq_next(struct seq_file *s, void *v, loff_t *pos)
> {
> loff_t *spos = (loff_t *) v;
> *pos = ++(*spos);
> return spos;
> }
>
> I mean 'pos' is sometimes increased in ct_seq_next(), and sometimes from
> seq_file.c/seq_read(), too. Thus we cannot reliably do this:
>
> *pos = (*spos) + some_variable_offset;
Of course we can. These guys can be sparse - note that ->start()
takes a pointer, and for a good reason. ->start(m, p, pos) should
get the first entry with offset >= *pos (or NULL if we are done) and
set *pos accordingly.
That m->index++ is "we are done with the partial, step just past it, so
that ->start() will pick the first real entry after it the next time it's
called".
For dense case we don't need to update *pos in ->start() - either
we already have one with offset == *pos (and no update is needed),
or we are finished and should return NULL.
However, we have every right to live with sparse offsets; prototype of
->start() had been done the way it's done exactly to allow that kind
of use.
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