If recvmsg is called with a destination buffer that is too small to
receive the contents of skb in its entirety, the return value from
recvmsg was inconsistent with common SOCK_SEQPACKET or SOCK_DGRAM
semantics.
If destination buffer provided by userspace is too small (e.g. len <
copied), then MSG_TRUNC flag is set and copied is returned. Instead, it
should return the length of the message, which is consistent with how
other datagram based sockets act. Quoting 'man recv':
"All three calls return the length of the message on successful compleā
tion. If a message is too long to fit in the supplied buffer, excess
bytes may be discarded depending on the type of socket the message is
received from."
and
"MSG_TRUNC (since Linux 2.2)
For raw (AF_PACKET), Internet datagram (since Linux
2.4.27/2.6.8), netlink (since Linux 2.6.22), and UNIX datagram
(since Linux 3.4) sockets: return the real length of the packet
or datagram, even when it was longer than the passed buffer."
Signed-off-by: Denis Kenzior <denkenz@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
struct sock *sk = sock->sk;
struct sk_buff *skb;
size_t copied;
+ size_t skblen;
int err;
BT_DBG("sock %p sk %p len %zu", sock, sk, len);
return err;
}
+ skblen = skb->len;
copied = skb->len;
if (len < copied) {
msg->msg_flags |= MSG_TRUNC;
skb_free_datagram(sk, skb);
+ if (msg->msg_flags & MSG_TRUNC)
+ copied = skblen;
+
return err ? : copied;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bt_sock_recvmsg);