Re: [PATCH v6 10/10] mm/memory_hotplug: Cleanup __remove_pages()

From: Segher Boessenkool
Date: Wed Feb 05 2020 - 07:53:24 EST


On Tue, Feb 04, 2020 at 02:38:51PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> On 04.02.20 14:13, Segher Boessenkool wrote:
> > On Tue, Feb 04, 2020 at 01:41:06PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> >> It's a pattern commonly used in compilers and emulators to calculate the
> >> number of bytes to the next block/alignment. (we're missing a macro
> >> (like we have ALIGN_UP/IS_ALIGNED) for that - but it's hard to come up
> >> with a good name (e.g., SIZE_TO_NEXT_ALIGN) .

> > You can just write the easy to understand
> >
> > ... ALIGN_UP(x) - x ...
>
> you mean
>
> ALIGN_UP(x, PAGES_PER_SECTION) - x
>
> but ...
>
> > which is better *without* having a separate name. Does that not
> > generate good machine code for you?
>
> 1. There is no ALIGN_UP. "SECTION_ALIGN_UP(x) - x" would be possible

Erm, you started it ;-)

> 2. It would be wrong if x is already aligned.
>
> e.g., let's use 4096 for simplicity as we all know that value by heart
> (for both x and the block size).
>
> a) -(4096 | -4096) -> 4096
>
> b) #define ALIGN_UP(x, a) ((x + a - 1) & -(a))
>
> ALIGN_UP(4096, 4096) - 4096 -> 0
>
> Not as easy as it seems ...

If you always want to return a number >= 1, it it simply
ALIGN_UP(x + 1) - x
(and replace 1 by any other minimum size required). This *also* is
easy to read, without having to have any details (and quirks :-/ )
of those utility functions memorised.


Segher