Re: about relocs.c on x86
From: Ingo Molnar
Date: Thu Jan 31 2008 - 05:11:36 EST
* Harvey Harrison <harvey.harrison@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > during the big first phase of unification we generally kept file
> > names untouched if they were only present in one of the previous
> > architectures. I.e. pure 32-bit and pure 64-bit files were not
> > renamed to _32/_64.
> >
> > Now that we've got lots of unified 32/64-bit files it might make
> > sense to rename the 'standalone' ones into _32/_64 if they share the
> > same directory with 32/64-bit source files - to reduce the
> > confusion. And given that for example
> > arch/x86/boot/compressed/misc.c is unified while
> > arch/x86/boot/compressed/relocs.c is 32-bit only, i'd agree with
> > your observation. Feel free to send a rename patch for such cases.
>
> I'd argue that eliminating the _32/_64 suffixes through unification
> and not adding any more would be better. Renaming at this point seems
> like the wrong side of the cost/benefit line. When the makefiles
> finally get unified, that would be a natural list of what is 32
> bit-only and what is 64 bit-only, and additional suffixes wouldn't add
> much to that.
no strong opinion from me - but i think it should be obvious to the
developer when they are looking at a .c file that it's 32-bit only (or
64-bit only). I.e. the default is that whatever .c file we look at is
unified - and in that sense relocs.c breaks that general expectation.
In fact renaming it to _32.c might spur its unification: people might
say "hm, this would be handy on 64-bit as well". We might even do that
to directories - so that for example arch/x86/math-emu/ would become
arch/x86/match-emu_32/.
( Hey, and maybe someone is crazy enough to try to port the math-emu
code to 64-bit and boot Linux up on 64-bit with all user-space FPU ops
emulated. It would be one of the most useless hacks of all times, and
that certainly has a certain kind of sick appeal to it, doesnt it? ;-))
but it's really not a big issue, we can certainly leave it alone and
observe the situation as more stuff gets unified. I'd expect it all fall
into place naturally.
Ingo
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