[patch 00/22] x86/treewide: Consolidate CPU match macro maze and get rid of C89 (sic!) initializers

Greg Kroah-Hartman gregkh at linuxfoundation.org
Fri Mar 20 15:59:06 CET 2020


On Fri, Mar 20, 2020 at 02:13:45PM +0100, Thomas Gleixner wrote:
> The x86 CPU matching based on struct x86_cpu_id:
> 
>   - is using an inconsistent macro mess with pointlessly duplicated and
>     slightly different local macros. Finding the places is an art as there
>     is no consistent name space at all.
> 
>   - is still mostly based on C89 struct initializers which rely on the
>     ordering of the struct members. That's proliferated forever as every
>     new driver just copies the mess from some exising one.
> 
> A recent offlist conversation about adding more match criteria to the CPU
> matching logic instead of creating yet another set of horrors, reminded me
> of a pile of scripts and patches which I hacked on a few years ago when I
> tried to add something to struct x86_cpu_id.
> 
> That stuff was finally not needed and ended up in my ever growing todo list
> and collected dust and cobwebs, but (un)surprisingly enough most of it
> still worked out of the box. The copy & paste machinery still works as it
> did years ago.
> 
> There are a few places which needed extra care due to new creative macros,
> new check combinations etc. and surprisingly ONE open coded proper C99
> initializer.
> 
> It was reasonably simple to make it at least compile and pass a quick
> binary equivalence check.
> 
> The result is a X86_MATCH prefix based set of macros which are reflecting
> the needs of the usage sites and shorten the base macro which takes all
> possible parameters (vendor, family, model, feature, data) and uses proper
> C99 initializers.
> 
> So extensions of the match logic are trivial after that.
> 
> The patch set is against Linus tree and has trivial conflicts against
> linux-next.
> 
> The diffstat is:
>  71 files changed, 525 insertions(+), 472 deletions(-)
> 
> but the extra lines are pretty much kernel-doc documentation which I added
> to each of the new macros. The usage sites diffstat is:
> 
>  70 files changed, 393 insertions(+), 471 deletions(-)
> 
> Thoughts?

Much nicer looking, thanks for cleaning up this mess:

Reviewed-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh at linuxfoundation.org>


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