Re: [PATCH 39/44] mm: use min() instead of min_t()

From: David Laight

Date: Thu Nov 20 2025 - 04:59:51 EST


On Thu, 20 Nov 2025 10:20:41 +0100
"David Hildenbrand (Red Hat)" <david@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On 11/19/25 23:41, david.laight.linux@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
> > From: David Laight <david.laight.linux@xxxxxxxxx>
> >
> > min_t(unsigned int, a, b) casts an 'unsigned long' to 'unsigned int'.
> > Use min(a, b) instead as it promotes any 'unsigned int' to 'unsigned long'
> > and so cannot discard significant bits.
>
> I thought using min() was frowned upon and we were supposed to use
> min_t() instead to make it clear which type we want to use.

I'm not sure that was ever true.
min_t() is just an accident waiting to happen.
(and I found a few of them, the worst are in sched/fair.c)

Most of the min_t() are there because of the rather overzealous type
check that used to be in min().
But even then it would really be better to explicitly cast one of the
parameters to min(), so min_t(T, a, b) => min(a, (T)b).
Then it becomes rather more obvious that min_t(u8, x->m_u8, expr)
is going mask off the high bits of 'expr'.

> Do I misremember or have things changed?
>
> Wasn't there a checkpatch warning that states exactly that?

There is one that suggests min_t() - it ought to be nuked.
The real fix is to backtrack the types so there isn't an error.
min_t() ought to be a 'last resort' and a single cast is better.

With the relaxed checks in min() most of the min_t() can just
be replaced by min(), even this is ok:
int len = fun();
if (len < 0)
return;
count = min(len, sizeof(T));

I did look at the history of min() and min_t().
IIRC some of the networking code had a real function min() with
'unsigned int' arguments.
This was moved to a common header, changed to a #define and had
a type added - so min(T, a, b).
Pretty much immediately that was renamed min_t() and min() added
that accepted any type - but checked the types of 'a' and 'b'
exactly matched.
Code was then changed (over the years) to use min(), but in many
cases the types didn't quite match - so min_t() was used a lot.

I keep spotting new commits that pass too small a type to min_t().
So this is the start of a '5 year' campaign to nuke min_t() (et al).

David