[RFC][PATCH] kernel.h: Add generic roundup_64() macro

Linus Torvalds torvalds at linux-foundation.org
Thu May 23 16:51:29 UTC 2019


On Thu, May 23, 2019 at 8:27 AM Steven Rostedt <rostedt at goodmis.org> wrote:
>
> I haven't yet tested this, but what about something like the following:

So that at least handles the constant case that the normal "roundup()"
case also handles.

At the same time, in the case you are talking about, I really do
suspect that we have a (non-constant) power of two, and that you
should have just used "round_up()" which works fine regardless of
size, and is always efficient.

On a slight tangent.. Maybe we should have something like this:

#define size_fn(x, prefix, ...) ({                      \
        typeof(x) __ret;                                \
        switch (sizeof(x)) {                            \
        case 1: __ret = prefix##8(__VA_ARGS__); break;  \
        case 2: __ret = prefix##16(__VA_ARGS__); break; \
        case 4: __ret = prefix##32(__VA_ARGS__); break; \
        case 8: __ret = prefix##64(__VA_ARGS__); break; \
        default: __ret = prefix##bad(__VA_ARGS__);      \
        } __ret; })

#define type_fn(x, prefix, ...) ({                              \
        typeof(x) __ret;                                        \
        if ((typeof(x))-1 > 1)                                  \
                __ret = size_fn(x, prefix##_u, __VA_ARGS__);    \
        else                                                    \
                __ret = size_fn(x, prefix##_s, __VA_ARGS__);    \
        __ret; })

which would allow typed integer functions like this. So you could do
something like

     #define round_up(x, y) size_fn(x, round_up_size, x, y)

and then you define functions for round_up_size8/16/32/64 (and you
have toi declare - but not define - round_up_sizebad()).

Of course, you probably want the usual "at least use 'int'" semantics,
in which case the "type" should be "(x)+0":

     #define round_up(x, y) size_fn((x)+0, round_up_size, x, y)

 and the 8-bit and 16-bit cases will never be used.

We have a lot of cases where we end up using "type overloading" by
size. The most explicit case is perhaps "get_user()" and "put_user()",
but this whole round_up thing is another example.

Maybe we never really care about "char" and "short", and always want
just the "int-vs-long-vs-longlong"? That would make the cases simpler
(32 and 64). And maybe we never care about sign. But we could try to
have some unified helper model like the above..

                  Linus


More information about the dri-devel mailing list