+/*
+ * We do not care about correctness. We just sanitize the values so
+ * the ktime_t operations which expect normalized values do not
+ * break. This converts negative values to long timeouts similar to
+ * the code in kernel versions < 2.6.16
+ *
+ * Print a limited number of warning messages when an invalid timeval
+ * is detected.
+ */
+static void fixup_timeval(struct timeval *tv, int interval)
+{
+ static int warnlimit = 10;
+ unsigned long tmp;
+
+ if (warnlimit > 0) {
+ warnlimit--;
+ printk(KERN_WARNING
+ "setitimer: %s (pid = %d) provided "
+ "invalid timeval %s: tv_sec = %ld tv_usec = %ld\n",
+ current->comm, current->pid,
+ interval ? "it_interval" : "it_value",
+ tv->tv_sec, (long) tv->tv_usec);
+ }
+
+ tmp = tv->tv_usec;
+ if (tmp >= USEC_PER_SEC) {
+ tv->tv_usec = tmp % USEC_PER_SEC;
+ tv->tv_sec += tmp / USEC_PER_SEC;
+ }
+
+ tmp = tv->tv_sec;
+ if (tmp > LONG_MAX)
+ tv->tv_sec = LONG_MAX;
+}
+
+/*
+ * Returns true if the timeval is in canonical form
+ */
+#define timeval_valid(t) \
+ (((t)->tv_sec >= 0) && (((unsigned long) (t)->tv_usec) < USEC_PER_SEC))
+
+/*
+ * Check for invalid timevals, sanitize them and print a limited
+ * number of warnings.
+ */
+static void check_itimerval(struct itimerval *value) {
+
+ if (unlikely(!timeval_valid(&value->it_value)))
+ fixup_timeval(&value->it_value, 0);
+
+ if (unlikely(!timeval_valid(&value->it_interval)))
+ fixup_timeval(&value->it_interval, 1);
+}
+