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authorMatt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>2010-01-29 21:50:36 +1300
committerHerbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>2010-02-02 06:50:23 +1100
commita996996dd75a9086b12d1cb4010f26e1748993f0 (patch)
tree3a65c1d6636f24e3edc175b54fabfdfd1fed91ef /drivers/char
parent92dcffb916d309aa01778bf8963a6932e4014d07 (diff)
random: drop weird m_time/a_time manipulation
No other driver does anything remotely like this that I know of except for the tty drivers, and I can't see any reason for random/urandom to do it. In fact, it's a (trivial, harmless) timing information leak. And obviously, it generates power- and flash-cycle wasting I/O, especially if combined with something like hwrngd. Also, it breaks ubifs's expectations. Signed-off-by: Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> Signed-off-by: Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/char')
-rw-r--r--drivers/char/random.c8
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/char/random.c b/drivers/char/random.c
index 8258982b49e..3495d6486b7 100644
--- a/drivers/char/random.c
+++ b/drivers/char/random.c
@@ -1051,12 +1051,6 @@ random_read(struct file *file, char __user *buf, size_t nbytes, loff_t *ppos)
/* like a named pipe */
}
- /*
- * If we gave the user some bytes, update the access time.
- */
- if (count)
- file_accessed(file);
-
return (count ? count : retval);
}
@@ -1116,8 +1110,6 @@ static ssize_t random_write(struct file *file, const char __user *buffer,
if (ret)
return ret;
- inode->i_mtime = current_fs_time(inode->i_sb);
- mark_inode_dirty(inode);
return (ssize_t)count;
}