[PATCH v5 03/10] kexec_file: factor out arch_kexec_kernel_*() from x86, powerpc
Julien Thierry
julien.thierry at arm.com
Wed Oct 11 01:24:16 PDT 2017
On 11/10/17 06:07, AKASHI Takahiro wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 10, 2017 at 12:02:01PM +0100, Julien Thierry wrote:
>
> [snip]
>
>>> --- a/kernel/kexec_file.c
>>> +++ b/kernel/kexec_file.c
>>> @@ -26,30 +26,79 @@
>>> #include <linux/vmalloc.h>
>>> #include "kexec_internal.h"
>>>
>>> +const __weak struct kexec_file_ops * const kexec_file_loaders[] = {NULL};
>>> +
>>> static int kexec_calculate_store_digests(struct kimage *image);
>>>
>>> +int _kexec_kernel_image_probe(struct kimage *image, void *buf,
>>> + unsigned long buf_len)
>>> +{
>>> + const struct kexec_file_ops *fops;
>>> + int ret = -ENOEXEC;
>>> +
>>> + for (fops = kexec_file_loaders[0]; fops && fops->probe; ++fops) {
>>
>> Hmm, that's not gonna work (and I see that what I said in the previous
>> patch was not 100% correct either).
>
> Can you elaborate this a bit more?
>
Yes. With the current state of the loop, you are going to check the
first element of kexec_file_loaders[0], and what will get incremented is
the pointer contained in kexec_file_loaders rather than a pointer
pointer pointing at an element of kexec_file_loaders.
> I'm sure that, with my code, any member of fops, cannot be changed;
> "const struct kexec_file_ops *fops" means that fops is a pointer to
> "constant sturct kexec_file_ops," while "struct kexec_file_ops *
> const kexec_file_loaders[]" means that kexec_file_loaders is a "constant
> array" of pointers to "constant struct kexec_file_ops."
>
Hmm, right, my suggestion below doesn't have the right constness, fops
should be declared as:
const struct kexec_file_ops * const * fops;
This can point at elements of kexec_file_loaders.
Hope this makes more sense.
Cheers,
> Thanks,
> -Takahiro AKASHI
>
>
>> 'fops' should be of type 'const struct kexec_file_ops **', and the loop
>> should be:
>>
>> for (fops = &kexec_file_loaders[0]; *fops && (*fops)->probe; ++fops)
>>
>> With some additional dereferences in the body of the loop.
>>
>> Unless you prefer the previous state of the loop (with i and the break
>> inside), but I still think this looks better.
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
--
Julien Thierry
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list