Re: [PATCH] mm: sparse: clarify a variable name and its value

From: Andrew Morton
Date: Sun Jun 09 2024 - 17:04:01 EST


On Sun, 9 Jun 2024 00:21:14 +0900 Leesoo Ahn <lsahn@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Setting 'limit' variable to 0 might seem like it means "no limit". But
> in the memblock API, 0 actually means the 'MEMBLOCK_ALLOC_ACCESSIBLE'
> enum, which limits the physical address range based on
> 'memblock.current_limit'. This can be confusing.

Does it? From my reading, this meaning applies to the range end
address, in memblock_find_in_range_node()? If your interpretation is
correct, this should be documented in the relevant memblock kerneldoc.

> To make things clearer, I suggest renaming the variable to
> 'limit_or_flag'. This name shows that the variable can either be a
> number for limits or an enum for a flag. This way, readers will easily
> understand what kind of value is being passed to the memblock API and
> how it works without needing to look into the API details.
>

I think I'll cc Mike and run away ;)