On Sun, 15 May 2016 23:29:27 +0200, Robert Jarzmik wrote: > > Takashi Iwai <tiwai@xxxxxxx> writes: > > > On Sat, 14 May 2016 11:50:50 +0200, > > Robert Jarzmik wrote: > >> >> +unsigned int ac97_bus_scan_one(struct ac97_controller *ac97, > >> >> + int codec_num) > >> >> +{ > >> >> + struct ac97_codec_device codec; > >> >> + unsigned short vid1, vid2; > >> >> + int ret; > >> >> + > >> >> + codec.dev = *ac97->dev; > >> >> + codec.num = codec_num; > >> >> + ret = ac97->ops->read(&codec, AC97_VENDOR_ID1); > >> >> + vid1 = (ret & 0xffff); > >> >> + if (ret < 0) > >> >> + return 0; > >> > > >> > Hmm. This looks pretty hackish and dangerous. > >> You mean returning 0 even if the read failed, right ? > > > > No, my concern is that it's creating a dummy codec object temporarily > > on the stack just by copying some fields and calling the ops with it. > > (And actually the current code may work wrongly because lack of > > zero-clear of the object.) > Ah yes, I remember now, the on-stack generated device, indeed ugly. > > > IMO, a cleaner way would be to define the ops passed with both > > controller and codec objects as arguments, and pass NULL codec here. > It's rather unusual to need both the device and its controller in bus > operations. I must admit I have no better idea so far, so I'll try that just to > see how it looks like, and let's see next ... Thinking of this again, I wonder now why we need to pass the codec object at all. It's the read/write ops via ac97, so we just need the ac97_controller object and the address slot of the accessed codec? Takashi _______________________________________________ Alsa-devel mailing list Alsa-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://mailman.alsa-project.org/mailman/listinfo/alsa-devel