Re: [PATCH] linux/bitmap.h: fix BITMAP_LAST_WORD_MASK
From: Wei Wang
Date: Thu Jul 26 2018 - 06:11:56 EST
On 07/26/2018 05:37 PM, Yury Norov wrote:
On Thu, Jul 26, 2018 at 04:07:51PM +0800, Wei Wang wrote:
The existing BITMAP_LAST_WORD_MASK macro returns 0xffffffff if nbits is
0. This patch changes the macro to return 0 when there is no bit needs to
be masked.
I think this is intentional behavour. Previous version did return ~0UL
explicitly in this case. See patch 89c1e79eb3023 (linux/bitmap.h: improve
BITMAP_{LAST,FIRST}_WORD_MASK) from Rasmus.
Yes, I saw that. But it seems confusing for the corner case that nbits=0
(no bits to mask), the macro returns with all the bits set.
Introducing conditional branch would affect performance. All existing
code checks nbits for 0 before handling last word where needed
explicitly. So I think we'd better change nothing here.
I think that didn't save the conditional branch essentially, because
it's just moved from inside this macro to the caller as you mentioned.
If callers missed the check for some reason and passed 0 to the macro,
they will get something unexpected.
Current callers like __bitmap_weight, __bitmap_equal, and others, they have
if (bits % BITS_PER_LONG)
w += hweight_long(bitmap[k] & BITMAP_LAST_WORD_MASK(bits));
we could remove the "if" check by "w += hweight_long(bitmap[k] &
BITMAP_LAST_WORD_MASK(bits % BITS_PER_LONG));" the branch is the same.
Best,
Wei