On Thu, 6 Sep 2007 15:30:25 -0700 Andrew Morton wrote:
> > On Thu, 6 Sep 2007 17:34:10 +0200 Matteo Croce <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Driver for the cpmac 100M ethernet driver.
> > It works fine disabling napi support, enabling it gives a kernel panic
> > when the first IPv6 packet has to be forwarded.
> > Other than that works fine.
> >
>
> I'm not too sure why I got cc'ed on this (and not on patches 1-6?) but
> whatever.
>
> This patch introduces quite a number of basic coding-style mistakes.
> Please run it through scripts/checkpatch.pl and review the output.
>
> The patch introduces vast number of volatile structure fields. Please see
> Documentation/volatile-considered-harmful.txt.
>
> The patch inroduces a modest number of unneeded (and undesirable) casts of
> void*, such as
>
> + struct cpmac_mdio_regs *regs = (struct cpmac_mdio_regs *)bus->priv;
>
> please check for those and fix them up.
>
> The driver implements a driver-private skb pool. I don't know if this is
> something which we like net drivers doing? If it is approved then surely
> there should be a common implementation for it somewhere?
>
> The driver does a lot of open-coded dma_cache_inv() calls (in a way which
> assumes a 32-bit bus, too). I assume that dma_cache_inv() is some mips
> thing. I'd have thought that it would be better to use the dma mapping API
> thoughout the driver, and its associated dma invalidation APIs.
>
> The driver has some LINUX_VERSION_CODE ifdefs. We usually prefer that such
> code not be present in a merged-up driver.
>
>
>
> > + priv->regs->mac_hash_low = 0xffffffff;
> > + priv->regs->mac_hash_high = 0xffffffff;
> > + } else {
> > + for (i = 0, iter = dev->mc_list; i < dev->mc_count;
> > + i++, iter = iter->next) {
> > + hash = 0;
> > + tmp = iter->dmi_addr[0];
> > + hash ^= (tmp >> 2) ^ (tmp << 4);
> > + tmp = iter->dmi_addr[1];
> > + hash ^= (tmp >> 4) ^ (tmp << 2);
> > + tmp = iter->dmi_addr[2];
> > + hash ^= (tmp >> 6) ^ tmp;
> > + tmp = iter->dmi_addr[4];
> > + hash ^= (tmp >> 2) ^ (tmp << 4);
> > + tmp = iter->dmi_addr[5];
> > + hash ^= (tmp >> 4) ^ (tmp << 2);
> > + tmp = iter->dmi_addr[6];
> > + hash ^= (tmp >> 6) ^ tmp;
> > + hash &= 0x3f;
> > + if (hash < 32) {
> > + hashlo |= 1<<hash;
> > + } else {
> > + hashhi |= 1<<(hash - 32);
> > + }
> > + }
> > +
> > + priv->regs->mac_hash_low = hashlo;
> > + priv->regs->mac_hash_high = hashhi;
> > + }
>
> Do we not have a library function anywhere which will perform this little
> multicasting hash?
Depends on the ethernet controller, but the ones that I know about
just use a CRC (crc-16 IIRC) calculation for the multicast hash.
---
~Randy
*** Remember to use Documentation/SubmitChecklist when testing your code ***
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html