As noted by Per Cederqvist, new_buffersize() sometimes returns the
buffer increment, and sometimes the new buffer size.  Make it do what
its name says, and fix the one place where this matters to the caller.

Also add a comment explaining why we call lseek() and then ftell().
diff --git a/Objects/fileobject.c b/Objects/fileobject.c
index d3b9894..b9fa0fc 100644
--- a/Objects/fileobject.c
+++ b/Objects/fileobject.c
@@ -422,13 +422,22 @@
 	struct stat st;
 	if (fstat(fileno(f->f_fp), &st) == 0) {
 		end = st.st_size;
+		/* The following is not a bug: we really need to call lseek()
+		   *and* ftell().  The reason is that some stdio libraries
+		   mistakenly flush their buffer when ftell() is called and
+		   the lseek() call it makes fails, thereby throwing away
+		   data that cannot be recovered in any way.  To avoid this,
+		   we first test lseek(), and only call ftell() if lseek()
+		   works.  We can't use the lseek() value either, because we
+		   need to take the amount of buffered data into account.
+		   (Yet another reason why stdio stinks. :-) */
 		pos = lseek(fileno(f->f_fp), 0L, SEEK_CUR);
 		if (pos >= 0)
 			pos = ftell(f->f_fp);
 		if (pos < 0)
 			clearerr(f->f_fp);
 		if (end > pos && pos >= 0)
-			return end - pos + 1;
+			return currentsize + end - pos + 1;
 		/* Add 1 so if the file were to grow we'd notice. */
 	}
 #endif
@@ -482,7 +491,7 @@
 		if (bytesread < buffersize)
 			break;
 		if (bytesrequested < 0) {
-			buffersize = bytesread + new_buffersize(f, buffersize);
+			buffersize = new_buffersize(f, buffersize);
 			if (_PyString_Resize(&v, buffersize) < 0)
 				return NULL;
 		}