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Date:      Sat, 31 Oct 1998 12:32:34 +1030
From:      Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
To:        Archie Cobbs <archie@whistle.com>, mike@smith.net.au
Cc:        hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: scanf in the kernel?
Message-ID:  <19981031123234.A5846@freebie.lemis.com>
In-Reply-To: <199810302100.NAA18888@bubba.whistle.com>; from Archie Cobbs on Fri, Oct 30, 1998 at 01:00:58PM -0800
References:  <199810301814.KAA16349@bubba.whistle.com> <199810302100.NAA18888@bubba.whistle.com>

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On Friday, 30 October 1998 at 13:00:58 -0800, Archie Cobbs wrote:
> Archie Cobbs writes:
>>> Just wondering what the general feeling would be about having scanf in
>>> the kernel?  As we move towards more abstract representations of things
>>> (eg. device names), it's becoming more important to be able to parse
>>> strings inside the kernel.
>>>
>>> Doing this in hand-rolled code is tedious, error-prone and results in
>>> code that can be hard to read and maintain (as everyone does it their
>>> own way).
>>>
>>> If this isn't totally repulsive, I'll roll a somewhat smaller version
>>> of the libc vfscanf for general approval.
>
> Also-
> Seems like the kernel was missing memmove(), memcpy(), and/or memset()
> at some point. I like using these better than bcopy()/bzero() because
> they are more ANSI and portable...

I don't see that that's an issue within the kernel.

> And what about snprintf()? Would that be hard to add to the existing
> printf() functionality? The kernel is definitely one place you
> don't want to overflow string buffers...

One thing I *could* do with (and will do if people agree) is a %qd
modifier for kernel *printf.  I need that for vinum, and I currently
have a horrible kludge to do it.

Greg
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