Dave Hansen wrote: > On 10/14/24 04:31, Kai Huang wrote: > > +#define READ_SYS_INFO(_field_id, _member) \ > > + ret = ret ?: read_sys_metadata_field16(MD_FIELD_ID_##_field_id, \ > > + &sysinfo_tdmr->_member) > > > > - return 0; > > + READ_SYS_INFO(MAX_TDMRS, max_tdmrs); > > + READ_SYS_INFO(MAX_RESERVED_PER_TDMR, max_reserved_per_tdmr); > > + READ_SYS_INFO(PAMT_4K_ENTRY_SIZE, pamt_entry_size[TDX_PS_4K]); > > + READ_SYS_INFO(PAMT_2M_ENTRY_SIZE, pamt_entry_size[TDX_PS_2M]); > > + READ_SYS_INFO(PAMT_1G_ENTRY_SIZE, pamt_entry_size[TDX_PS_1G]); > > I know what Dan asked for here, but I dislike how this ended up. > > The existing stuff *has* type safety, despite the void*. It at least > checks the size, which is the biggest problem. > > Also, this isn't really an unrolled loop. It still effectively has > gotos, just like the for loop did. It just buries the goto in the "ret > = ret ?: " construct. It hides the control flow logic. > > Logically, this whole function is > > ret = read_something1(); > if (ret) > goto out; > > ret = read_something2(); > if (ret) > goto out; > > ... > > I'd *much* rather have that goto be: > > for () { > ret = read_something(); > if (ret) > break; // aka. goto out > } > > Than have something *look* like straight control flow when it isn't. Yeah, the hiding of the control flow was the weakest part of the suggestion. My main gripe was runtime validation of details that could be validated at compile time. There is no real need for control flow at all, i.e. early exit is not needed as these are not resources that need to be unwound. It simply needs to count whether all of the reads happened, so something like this is sufficient: success += READ_SYS_INFO(MAX_TDMRS, max_tdmrs); success += READ_SYS_INFO(MAX_RESERVED_PER_TDMR, max_reserved_per_tdmr); success += READ_SYS_INFO(PAMT_4K_ENTRY_SIZE, pamt_entry_size[TDX_PS_4K]); success += READ_SYS_INFO(PAMT_2M_ENTRY_SIZE, pamt_entry_size[TDX_PS_2M]); success += READ_SYS_INFO(PAMT_1G_ENTRY_SIZE, pamt_entry_size[TDX_PS_1G]); if (success != 5) return false;