Both of alloca() and automatic variables keep storages on stack, while the former generates more instructions than the latter. It's better to use the latter if the size of storage is computable at pre-compile or compile time; i.e. just for structures.
This commit obsolete usages of alloca() with automatic variables.
Signed-off-by: Takashi Sakamoto o-takashi@sakamocchi.jp --- src/mixer/simple_none.c | 7 +++---- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/src/mixer/simple_none.c b/src/mixer/simple_none.c index 39be2d1..b32bd81 100644 --- a/src/mixer/simple_none.c +++ b/src/mixer/simple_none.c @@ -441,17 +441,16 @@ static int selem_read(snd_mixer_elem_t *elem) return err; } if (s->ctls[CTL_CAPTURE_SOURCE].elem) { - snd_ctl_elem_value_t *ctl; + snd_ctl_elem_value_t ctl = {0}; selem_ctl_t *c = &s->ctls[CTL_CAPTURE_SOURCE]; - snd_ctl_elem_value_alloca(&ctl); - err = snd_hctl_elem_read(c->elem, ctl); + err = snd_hctl_elem_read(c->elem, &ctl); if (err < 0) return err; for (idx = 0; idx < s->str[SM_CAPT].channels; idx++) { unsigned int idx1 = idx; if (idx >= c->values) idx1 = 0; - if (snd_ctl_elem_value_get_enumerated(ctl, idx1) != + if (snd_ctl_elem_value_get_enumerated(&ctl, idx1) != s->capture_item) s->str[SM_CAPT].sw &= ~(1 << idx); }