[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH 21/21] xen: more substitutions
On Fri, 5 Oct 2012, Jan Beulich wrote: > >>> On 05.10.12 at 12:38, Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > @@ -4202,7 +4205,8 @@ static int handle_iomem_range(unsigned long s, > > unsigned long e, void *p) > > ent.addr = (uint64_t)ctxt->s << PAGE_SHIFT; > > ent.size = (uint64_t)(s - ctxt->s) << PAGE_SHIFT; > > ent.type = E820_RESERVED; > > - buffer = guest_handle_cast(ctxt->map.buffer, e820entry_t); > > + buffer_t = guest_handle_cast(ctxt->map.buffer, e820entry_t); > > + buffer = guest_handle_from_param(buffer_t, e820entry_t); > > So why is this needed in the first place? I suppose it's related > to guest_handle_cast() returning a _HANDLE_PARAM(), but > what's the reason for that? Because almost everywhere is useful to get an _HANDLE_PARAM from guest_handle_cast, except two cases, and this is one of them > Nor would I expect __copy_to_guest_offset() to by unable to > deal with one? I.e., can't the infrastructure be made capable > of dealing with both, so pointless conversions can be avoided? I would rather have one more line of code but being very obvious about what I am doing: guest_handle_cast returns a XEN_GUEST_HANDLE_PARAM so we need to cast that to XEN_GUEST_HANDLE. We do that in the traditional way: calling guest_handle_from_param. > Or if not, is there really a point in making these changes on the > x86 side (they're benign there, and hence only reduce > readability)? It makes the code more coherent. I like the principle of least surprise. Also I would like that changing the type of XEN_GUEST_HANDLE_PARAM on x86 would actually work. _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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