On Thu, 25 Sep 2008, Rusty Russell wrote:
> 
>     This turns out to be awful in practice, mainly due to const.  Consider:
> 
>       #ifdef CONFIG_CPUMASK_OFFSTACK
>       typedef unsigned long *cpumask_t;
>       #else
>       typedef unsigned long cpumask_t[1];
>       #endif
> 
>       cpumask_t returns_cpumask(void);

No. That's already broken. You cannot return a cpumask_t, regardless of 
interface. We must not do it regardless of how we pass those things 
around, since it generates _yet_ another temporary on the stack for the 
return slot for any kind of structure.

So all cpumask functions should always return pointers and/or take 
pointers to be filled in. That's true *regardless* of how we actually are 
to then allocate them.

So forget returning cpumasks. It's irrelevant.

What _is_ relevant is how we allocate them when we need temporary CPU 
masks. And _that_ is where my suggestion comes in. For small NR_CPUS, we 
really do want to allocate them on the stack, because calling kmalloc for 
a 4- or 8-byte allocation is just _stupid_.

So all your arguments are invalid, because you're looking at the wrong 
thing. The thing that I was talking about is converting current code that 
has

   random_function(..)
   {
        cpumask_t mask;

        .. do something with mask ...
   }

which has to be converted some way. And I think it needs to be converted 
in a way that does *not* force us to call kmalloc() for idiotically small 
values.

                        Linus
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kernel-testers" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

Reply via email to