On 11/5/2025 9:34 AM, Nate Karstens wrote: > All right, one more time using `git send-email` (plainly I don't do this every day)... > > Sabrina, > > Thanks for looking at this! > > I'm seeing this on kernel version 5.10.244. I know that ktls on the mainline kernel has moved away from strparser, but I think the change would be useful for anyone still using strparser (both for ktls on old kernels and other users as well). It seems that, because head->len was cast to ssize_t, it was an oversight that skb->len wasn't as well (if the intention was to use unsigned arithmetic, then there would be no need to cast head-> len). > Right. > Here is an example of the values involved with the test I'm running: > > len = 16406 > head->len = 1448 > skb->len = 1448 > stm->strp.offset = 478 > (ssize_t)head->len - skb->len - stm.strp.offset = 4294966818 So, without the ssize_t, I guess everything switches back to unsigned here when subtracting skb->len.. I don't quite recall the signed vs unsigned rules for this. Is stm.strp.offset also unsigned? which means that after head->len - skb->len resolves to unsigned 0 then we underflow? > (ssize_t)head->len - (ssize_t)skb->len - stm.strp.offset = -478 Where as here, it resolves to signed 0, so we go ultimately resolve to a signed result? > > I'm happy to update the patch, how much of this information would be useful to include in the commit message? > If we don't actually use the strparser code anywhere then it could be dropped? But otherwise I agree with Nate that we shouldn't leave this mistake in place, even if its not actually used by kTLS anymore. Thanks, Jake