On Fri, Dec 21, 2018 at 08:14:14PM +0200, Igor Stoppa wrote:
+static inline int memtst(void *p, int c, __kernel_size_t len)
I don't understand why you're verifying that writes actually happen
in production code. Sure, write lib/test_wrmem.c or something, but
verifying every single rare write seems like a mistake to me.
+#ifndef CONFIG_PRMEM
So is this PRMEM or wr_mem? It's not obvious that CONFIG_PRMEM controls
wrmem.
+#define wr_assign(var, val) ((var) = (val))
The hamming distance between 'var' and 'val' is too small. The convention
in the line immediately below (p and v) is much more readable.
+#define wr_rcu_assign_pointer(p, v) rcu_assign_pointer(p, v)
+#define wr_assign(var, val) ({ \
+ typeof(var) tmp = (typeof(var))val; \
+ \
+ wr_memcpy(&var, &tmp, sizeof(var)); \
+ var; \
+})
Doesn't wr_memcpy return 'var' anyway?
+/**
+ * wr_memcpy() - copyes size bytes from q to p
typo
+ * @p: beginning of the memory to write to
+ * @q: beginning of the memory to read from
+ * @size: amount of bytes to copy
+ *
+ * Returns pointer to the destination
+ * The architecture code must provide:
+ * void __wr_enable(wr_state_t *state)
+ * void *__wr_addr(void *addr)
+ * void *__wr_memcpy(void *p, const void *q, __kernel_size_t size)
+ * void __wr_disable(wr_state_t *state)
This section shouldn't be in the user documentation of wr_memcpy().
+ */
+void *wr_memcpy(void *p, const void *q, __kernel_size_t size)
+{
+ wr_state_t wr_state;
+ void *wr_poking_addr = __wr_addr(p);
+
+ if (WARN_ONCE(!wr_ready, "No writable mapping available") ||
Surely not. If somebody's called wr_memcpy() before wr_ready is set,
that means we can just call memcpy().