Thank you Andreas for pointing that out at this moment "total" is READ_BUF_SIZE ```c /* emacs/src/fileio.c:4613 */ /* In the following loop, HOW_MUCH contains the total bytes read so far for a regular file, and not changed for a special file. But, before exiting the loop, it is set to a negative value if I/O error occurs. */ how_much = 0; ``` I have confirmed the file is not seekable on my side using, which is different from /proc files ```c /* test.c:11 */ int fd = open("/proc/2051/arch_status", O_RDONLY); int sek = lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_CUR); printf("proc file is seekable %d\n", sek); // returns 0 fd = open("/run/test.json", O_RDONLY); sek = lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_CUR); printf("fuse file is seekable %d\n", sek); // returns -1 ``` I think it hits this block. But I don't see anything special to increase the count. Could that mean emacs only reads "READ_BUF_SIZE" amount of data? ```c /* emacs/src/fileio.c:4627 */ while (how_much < total) { /* `try' is reserved in some compilers (Microsoft C). */ ptrdiff_t trytry = min (total - how_much, READ_BUF_SIZE); ptrdiff_t this; if (!seekable && NILP (end)) ``` should the fix be quitting at actual io? Best, Binbin On Thu, Nov 17, 2022 at 7:15 PM Andreas Schwab wrote: > On Nov 17 2022, Binbin YE wrote: > > > /* emacs/src/fileio.c:4587 */ > > > > if (seekable || !NILP (end)) > > total = end_offset - beg_offset; > > else > > /* For a special file, all we can do is guess. */ > > total = READ_BUF_SIZE; > > ``` > > Judging from the code, it assume the total size would be READ_BUF_SIZE > > For a non-seekable file this is just a buffer size, see the read loop > later in the function (how_much stays zero then). > > If the file is seekable, the important part is this: > > /* The file size returned from fstat may be zero, but data > may be readable nonetheless, for example when this is a > file in the /proc filesystem. */ > if (end_offset == 0) > end_offset = READ_BUF_SIZE; > > -- > Andreas Schwab, schwab@linux-m68k.org > GPG Key fingerprint = 7578 EB47 D4E5 4D69 2510 2552 DF73 E780 A9DA AEC1 > "And now for something completely different." >