Re: [patch 1/6] mempolicy: convert MPOL constants to enum

From: David Rientjes
Date: Mon Feb 25 2008 - 22:36:56 EST


On Mon, 25 Feb 2008, Paul Jackson wrote:

> +enum {
> + MPOL_DEFAULT,
> + MPOL_PREFERRED,
> + MPOL_BIND,
> + MPOL_INTERLEAVE,
> + MPOL_MAX, /* always last member of enum */
>
> Aren't the values that these constants take part of the
> user visible kernel API?
>
> In other words, if someone added another MPOL_* in the middle
> of this enum, it would break mbind/set_mempolicy/get_mempolicy
> users, right:
>
> +enum {
> + MPOL_DEFAULT,
> + MPOL_PREFERRED,
> + MPOL_YET_ANOTHER_FLAG, /* <== added flag ... oops */
> + MPOL_BIND,
> + MPOL_INTERLEAVE,
> + MPOL_MAX, /* always last member of enum */
>

I don't suspect that a kernel developer is going to make such an egregious
error. The user would need to be using a new linux/mempolicy.h with an
old kernel to get the wrong behavior.

> I'm thinking that we should still specify the specific value
> of each of these flags, by way of documenting these necessary
> values, as in:
>
> +enum {
> + MPOL_DEFAULT = 0,
> + MPOL_PREFERRED = 1,
> + MPOL_BIND = 2,
> + MPOL_INTERLEAVE = 3,
> + MPOL_MAX, /* always last member of enum */
>

That looks overly redundant to me and doesn't protect against adding
MPOL_YET_ANOTHER_FLAG in the middle of preferred and bind to get two mode
values with the int value of 1.

David
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