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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v9 2/5] xen: introduce SYMBOLS_SUBTRACT and SYMBOLS_COMPARE
Jan Beulich writes ("Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v9 2/5] xen: introduce
SYMBOLS_SUBTRACT and SYMBOLS_COMPARE"):
> On 12.02.19 at 15:47, <ian.jackson@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > I didn't see your proposed inline function, but don't think it can
> > work correctly because it won't be type-generic. Ie, the requirement
> > is to use the same `SYMBOLS_DIFFERENCE(p, _foo_end)' for various
> > different `struct foo *p'. p is perhaps of different types in the
> > different invocations and the return value needs to have been divided
> > by sizeof(*p).
>
> Well, it wasn't a single inline function, but a macro defining an
> inline function suitable for a certain (start,end) tuple, at the
> same time giving both start and end suitable types which then
> also can't be used in the wrong context:
> https://lists.xenproject.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2019-02/msg00440.html
Ah. Right. Yes, that macro looks OK to me.
Although I really think it should use uintpr_t, not `unsigned long'.
IIRC there are special C language spec rules for conversion of
pointers to and from uintptr_t's. (They are probably applied anyway
for all pointer-to-sufficiently-large-integer conversions but I would
prefer not to bet on that.)
> > #define ALTER_PROVENANCE(value,provenance) ({
...
> I'm having trouble seeing how this would help with the issues
> at hand. Would you mind giving an example of how you'd see
> this used?
It may be a red herring. But you could, perhaps, have your WHATEVER
macro do something like this:
extern const type pfx##_end__wrong_provenance[];
static const type *const pfx##_end =
ALTER_PROVENANCE(pfx##_end__wrong_provenance, pfx##_start);
Ian.
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