Re: Convert type of 'struct dmi_system_id -> driver_data' from 'void *' to kernel_ulong_t?

From: Hans de Goede
Date: Wed Jan 19 2022 - 05:20:49 EST


Hi Kai-Heng,

On 1/19/22 02:22, Kai-Heng Feng wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I wonder if there's any reason to use 'void *' instead of
> kernel_ulong_t for 'driver_data' in 'struct dmi_system_id'?
>
> I'd like to use the driver_data for applying quirk flags, and I found
> out unlike most other struct *_id, the dmi variant is using 'void *'
> for driver_data. Is there any technical reason for this?

I don't know if there is a technical reason for this, nor
why this choice was originally made.

But I do believe that changing this now will just lead to a lot
of unnecessary churn.

You can easily use the current void * for flags by doing;

#define FLAG1 BIT(0)
#define FLAG2 BIT(1)

...
.driver_data = (void *)(FLAG1 | FLAG20,

...

long quirks = (long)dmi_id->driver_data;


It is already used this way in many places. Have you done a grep
to see in how many places dmi_system_id is used? DMI based quirks
are used all over the place, changing this will cause a really
large amount of churn and for what?

So I just did a quick check and dmi_system_id is used in
*204* files in the kernel.

You are asking for a technical reason why "void *" was used,
but lets turn that around, why do you believe that "unsigned long"
is inherently a better type here ?

driver_data in most places in the kernel (like data for
all sort of callback functions) actually typically is a void *
already, because often people want to pass more data then what
fits in a single long and this also applies to driver-id attached
data.

Just a random example from: drivers/mmc/host/sdhci-pci.h

#define SDHCI_PCI_DEVICE(vend, dev, cfg) { \
.vendor = _PCI_VEND(vend), .device = _PCI_DEV(vend, dev), \
.subvendor = PCI_ANY_ID, .subdevice = PCI_ANY_ID, \
.driver_data = (kernel_ulong_t)&(sdhci_##cfg) \
}

So here the unsigned long is actually not what we want and
we have to do a cast the other way around; and again the
kernel is full of these examples. So arguably if anything we
should change the other driver_data fields from
include/linux/mod_devicetable.h
to avoid the need for these kinda casts all over the kernel
(but again that would not be worth the churn IMHO).

TL;DR: lets just leave this all as it is please.

Regards,

Hans