[PATCH 1/2] Move the pt_regs_offset struct definition from arch to common include file
David Long
dave.long at linaro.org
Tue Jul 21 21:46:47 PDT 2015
On 06/29/15 23:29, Michael Ellerman wrote:
> On Wed, 2015-06-17 at 14:30 -0400, David Long wrote:
>> On 06/16/15 09:17, Rob Herring wrote:
>>> On Mon, Jun 15, 2015 at 11:42 AM, David Long <dave.long at linaro.org> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> #define REG_OFFSET_NAME(r) \
>>>> {.name = #r, .offset = offsetof(struct pt_regs, ARM_##r)}
>>>> #define REG_OFFSET_END {.name = NULL, .offset = 0}
>>>
>>> Can't you also move these? ARM is complicated with the "ARM_"
>>> prefixing, but the others appear to be the same. Maybe you can remove
>>> the prefix or redefine the macro for ARM.
>>
>> That would mandate that all the architecture-specific pt_regs structures
>> would have to use a top-level named field for each named register.
>
> Why does it mandate that?
>
> See eg. powerpc where we use REG_OFFSET_NAME for the top-level named fields and
> then a different macro for the array elements:
>
> #define REG_OFFSET_NAME(r) {.name = #r, .offset = offsetof(struct pt_regs, r)}
> #define GPR_OFFSET_NAME(num) \
> {.name = STR(gpr##num), .offset = offsetof(struct pt_regs, gpr[num])}
>
> static const struct pt_regs_offset regoffset_table[] = {
> GPR_OFFSET_NAME(0),
> GPR_OFFSET_NAME(1),
> GPR_OFFSET_NAME(2),
> GPR_OFFSET_NAME(3),
> ...
> REG_OFFSET_NAME(nip),
> REG_OFFSET_NAME(msr),
>
>
> So I don't see why REG_OFFSET_NAME couldn't be common.
>
Sorry for the delay in responding to this.
OK, so you're saying architectures that don't want this constraint can
make their own macro. Seems to make this whole exercise slightly less
useful, but whatever.
I see three ways to go here:
1) Leave it as is.
2) Force all architectures to use a common definition.
3) Provide a common definition that all architectures (except "arm")
currently using this functionality will use.
I have a v2 patch to implement #3, ready to post. Do we think this is
the way to go? I don't like #2 because I really don't want to rename all
uses of the current register fields for arm since this is
architecture-specific code to begin with and since it affects code in 39
arm source files.
> cheers
>
Thanks,
-dl
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list