Akihiko Odaki <akihiko.od...@daynix.com> writes: > On 2025/05/06 21:57, Alex Bennée wrote: >> It's easy to get lost in zeros while setting the numbers of >> instructions per second. Add a scaling suffix to make things simpler. >> Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.ben...@linaro.org> >> Reviewed-by: Pierrick Bouvier <pierrick.bouv...@linaro.org> >> --- >> v2 >> - normalise the suffix before a full strcmp0 >> - check endptr actually set >> - fix checkpatch >> --- >> contrib/plugins/ips.c | 36 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- >> 1 file changed, 35 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) >> diff --git a/contrib/plugins/ips.c b/contrib/plugins/ips.c >> index e5297dbb01..9b166a7d6c 100644 >> --- a/contrib/plugins/ips.c >> +++ b/contrib/plugins/ips.c >> @@ -20,6 +20,8 @@ >> QEMU_PLUGIN_EXPORT int qemu_plugin_version = >> QEMU_PLUGIN_VERSION; >> +#define ARRAY_SIZE(x) (sizeof(x) / sizeof((x)[0])) >> + > > G_N_ELEMENTS() is already available. > >> /* how many times do we update time per sec */ >> #define NUM_TIME_UPDATE_PER_SEC 10 >> #define NSEC_IN_ONE_SEC (1000 * 1000 * 1000) >> @@ -129,6 +131,18 @@ static void plugin_exit(qemu_plugin_id_t id, void >> *udata) >> qemu_plugin_scoreboard_free(vcpus); >> } >> +typedef struct { >> + const char *suffix; >> + unsigned long multipler; > > I prefer to have an explicitly-sized type: uint32_t in this case. It > also saves typing several characters as a bonus.
4Ghz would be a reasonable size and that would overflow a simple uint32_t unless we start casting. > >> +} scale_entry; > > docs/devel/style.rst says >> Structured type names are in CamelCase; harder to type but standing >> out. > >> + >> +/* a bit like units.h but not binary */ >> +static scale_entry scales[] = { >> + { "khz", 1000 }, >> + { "mhz", 1000 * 1000 }, >> + { "ghz", 1000 * 1000 * 1000 }, > > Having "hz" as suffixes look a bit awkard. "1 giga instructions per > second" sounds natural, but "1 gigahertz instructions per second" > doesn't to me. Practically, it would be easier to just type "g" > instead of "ghz". > > util/cutils.c has similar code though I guess a plugin cannot be > linked to it. > >> +}; >> + >> QEMU_PLUGIN_EXPORT int qemu_plugin_install(qemu_plugin_id_t id, >> const qemu_info_t *info, int >> argc, >> char **argv) >> @@ -137,12 +151,32 @@ QEMU_PLUGIN_EXPORT int >> qemu_plugin_install(qemu_plugin_id_t id, >> char *opt = argv[i]; >> g_auto(GStrv) tokens = g_strsplit(opt, "=", 2); >> if (g_strcmp0(tokens[0], "ips") == 0) { >> - max_insn_per_second = g_ascii_strtoull(tokens[1], NULL, 10); >> + char *endptr = NULL; >> + max_insn_per_second = g_ascii_strtoull(tokens[1], &endptr, 10); >> if (!max_insn_per_second && errno) { >> fprintf(stderr, "%s: couldn't parse %s (%s)\n", >> __func__, tokens[1], g_strerror(errno)); >> return -1; >> } >> + >> + if (endptr && *endptr != 0) { >> + g_autofree gchar *lower = g_utf8_strdown(endptr, -1); >> + unsigned long scale = 0; >> + >> + for (int j = 0; j < ARRAY_SIZE(scales); j++) { >> + if (g_strcmp0(lower, scales[j].suffix) == 0) { >> + scale = scales[j].multipler; >> + break; >> + } >> + } >> + >> + if (scale) { >> + max_insn_per_second *= scale; >> + } else { >> + fprintf(stderr, "bad suffix: %s\n", endptr); >> + return -1; >> + } >> + } >> } else { >> fprintf(stderr, "option parsing failed: %s\n", opt); >> return -1; I've fixed the other cases. -- Alex Bennée Virtualisation Tech Lead @ Linaro