On Fri, Dec 15, 2017 at 10:49:15AM -0800, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > Here's the API I'm looking at right now. The user need take no lock; > the locking (spinlock) is handled internally to the implementation. I looked at the API some more and found some flaws: - how does xbit_alloc communicate back which bit it allocated? - What if xbit_find_set() is called on a completely empty array with a range of 0, ULONG_MAX -- there's no invalid number to return. - xbit_clear() can't return an error. Neither can xbit_zero(). - Need to add __must_check to various return values to discourage sloppy programming So I modify the proposed API we compete with thusly: bool xbit_test(struct xbitmap *, unsigned long bit); int __must_check xbit_set(struct xbitmap *, unsigned long bit, gfp_t); void xbit_clear(struct xbitmap *, unsigned long bit); int __must_check xbit_alloc(struct xbitmap *, unsigned long *bit, gfp_t); int __must_check xbit_fill(struct xbitmap *, unsigned long start, unsigned long nbits, gfp_t); void xbit_zero(struct xbitmap *, unsigned long start, unsigned long nbits); int __must_check xbit_alloc_range(struct xbitmap *, unsigned long *bit, unsigned long nbits, gfp_t); bool xbit_find_clear(struct xbitmap *, unsigned long *start, unsigned long max); bool xbit_find_set(struct xbitmap *, unsigned long *start, unsigned long max); (I'm a little sceptical about the API accepting 'max' for the find functions and 'nbits' in the fill/zero/alloc_range functions, but I think that matches how people want to use it, and it matches how bitmap.h works)