[PATCH v2 01/11] mm/ioremap: change the return value of io[re|un]map_allowed and rename

Alexander Gordeev agordeev at linux.ibm.com
Sun Aug 28 01:36:23 PDT 2022


On Sat, Aug 20, 2022 at 08:31:15AM +0800, Baoquan He wrote:

Hi Baoquan,

>  arch_ioremap() return a bool,
>    - IS_ERR means return an error
>    - NULL means continue to remap
>    - a non-NULL, non-IS_ERR pointer is returned directly
>  arch_iounmap() return a bool,
>    - 0 means continue to vunmap
>    - error code means skip vunmap and return directly

It would make more sense if the return values were described
from the prospective of an architecture, not the caller.
I.e true - unmapped, false - not supported, etc.

> diff --git a/mm/ioremap.c b/mm/ioremap.c
> index 8652426282cc..99fde69becc7 100644
> --- a/mm/ioremap.c
> +++ b/mm/ioremap.c
> @@ -17,6 +17,13 @@ void __iomem *ioremap_prot(phys_addr_t phys_addr, size_t size,
>  	unsigned long offset, vaddr;
>  	phys_addr_t last_addr;
>  	struct vm_struct *area;
> +	void __iomem *ioaddr;
> +
> +	ioaddr = arch_ioremap(phys_addr, size, prot);
> +	if (IS_ERR(ioaddr))
> +		return NULL;
> +	else if (ioaddr)
> +		return ioaddr;

It seems to me arch_ioremap() could simply return an address
or an error. Then IOMEM_ERR_PTR(-ENOSYS) if the architecture
does not support it reads much better than the cryptic NULL.

Probably arch_iounmap() returning error would look better too,
though not sure about that.

Thanks!



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