On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 20:33:58 +0900 "Takashi Sato" <t-sato@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> case XFS_FSOP_GOING_FLAGS_DEFAULT: { > >> - struct super_block *sb = freeze_bdev(mp->m_super->s_bdev); > >> + struct super_block *sb = freeze_bdev(mp->m_super->s_bdev, 0); > > > > Using NULL here is clearer and will, I expect, avoid a sparse warning. > > I checked it but I couldn't find a sparse warning in xfs_fsops.c. > Can you tell me how to use NULL? struct super_block *sb = freeze_bdev(mp->m_super->s_bdev, NULL); :) It's much better to use NULL here rather than literal zero because the reader of this code can then say "ah-hah, we're passing in a pointer". Whereas plain old "0" could be a pointer or a scalar. We should always use NULL to represent a null pointer in the kernel. The one acceptable exception is when testing for nullness: if (ptr1) if (!ptr2) Often people will use if (ptr1 != NULL) if (ptr2 == NULL) in this case as well. (I prefer the shorter version personally, but either is OK). -- dm-devel mailing list dm-devel@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/dm-devel