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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v3 4/6] xen: introduce XEN_GUEST_HANDLE_PARAM
>>> On 17.08.12 at 16:50, Ian Campbell <Ian.Campbell@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Fri, 2012-08-17 at 14:58 +0100, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> >>> On 17.08.12 at 15:47, Stefano Stabellini
>> >>> <stefano.stabellini@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>> wrote:
>> > On Fri, 17 Aug 2012, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> >> >>> On 17.08.12 at 10:02, Ian Campbell <Ian.Campbell@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >> > On Thu, 2012-08-16 at 18:10 +0100, Stefano Stabellini wrote:
>> >> >> On Thu, 16 Aug 2012, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> >> >> > >>> On 16.08.12 at 17:54, "Jan Beulich" <JBeulich@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >> >> > > Seeing the patch I btw realized that there's no easy way to
>> >> >> > > avoid having the type as a second argument in the conversion
>> >> >> > > macros. Nevertheless I still don't like the explicitly specified
>> >> >> > > type
>> >> >> > > there.
>> >> >> >
>> >> >> > Btw - on the architecture(s) where the two handles are identical
>> >> >> > I would prefer you to make the conversion functions trivial (and
>> >> >> > thus avoid making use of the "type" parameter), thus allowing
>> >> >> > the type checking to occur that you currently circumvent.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> OK, I can do that.
>> >> >
>> >> > Will this result in the type parameter potentially becoming stale?
>> >> >
>> >> > Adding a redundant pointer compare is a good way to get the compiler to
>> >> > catch this. Smth like;
>> >> >
>> >> > /* Cast a XEN_GUEST_HANDLE_PARAM to XEN_GUEST_HANDLE */
>> >> > #define guest_handle_from_param(hnd, type) ({
>> >> > typeof((hnd).p) _x = (hnd).p;
>> >> > XEN_GUEST_HANDLE(type) _y;
>> >> > &_y == &_x;
>> >> > hnd;
>> >> > })
>> >>
>> >> Ah yes, that's a good suggestion.
>> >>
>> >> > I'm not sure which two pointers of members of the various structs need
>> >> > to be compared, maybe it's actually &_y.p and &hnd.p, but you get the
>> >> > idea...
>> >>
>> >> Right, comparing (hnd).p with _y.p would be the right thing; no
>> >> need for _x, but some other (mechanical) adjustments would be
>> >> necessary.
>> >
>> > The _x variable is still useful to avoid multiple evaluations of hnd,
>> > even though I know that this is not a public header.
>>
>> But we had settled on returning hnd unmodified when both
>> handle types are the same.
>>
>> > What about the following:
>> >
>> > /* Cast a XEN_GUEST_HANDLE to XEN_GUEST_HANDLE_PARAM */
>> > #define guest_handle_to_param(hnd, type) ({ \
>> > typeof((hnd).p) _x = (hnd).p; \
>> > XEN_GUEST_HANDLE_PARAM(type) _y = { _x }; \
>> > if (&_x != &_y.p) BUG(); \
>> > _y; \
>> > })
>>
>> Since this is not a public header, something like this (untested,
>> so may not compile as is)
>>
>> #define guest_handle_to_param(hnd, type) ({ \
>> (void)(typeof((hnd).p)0 == (XEN_GUEST_HANDLE_PARAM(type){}).p); \
>> (hnd); \
>> })
>>
>> is what I was thinking of.
>
> This evaluates hnd twice, or do we only care about that in public
> headers for some reason? (personally I think principal of least surprise
> suggests avoiding it wherever possible)
No, it doesn't - like sizeof(), typeof() doesn't evaluate its
argument.
Jan
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