On Fri, Aug 30, 2019 at 09:45:05 +0000, Peter Zijlstra wrote... > On Thu, Aug 22, 2019 at 02:28:06PM +0100, Patrick Bellasi wrote: >> +#define _POW10(exp) ((unsigned int)1e##exp) >> +#define POW10(exp) _POW10(exp) > > What is this magic? You're forcing a float literal into an integer. > Surely that deserves a comment! Yes, I'm introducing the two constants: UCLAMP_PERCENT_SHIFT, UCLAMP_PERCENT_SCALE similar to what we have for CAPACITY. Moreover, I need both 100*100 (for the scale) and 100 further down in the code for the: percent = div_u64_rem(percent, POW10(UCLAMP_PERCENT_SHIFT), &rem); used in cpu_uclamp_print(). That's why adding a compile time support to compute a 10^N is useful. C provides the "1eN" literal, I just convert it to integer and to do that at compile time I need a two level macros. What if I add this comment just above the macro definitions: /* * Integer 10^N with a given N exponent by casting to integer the literal "1eN" * C expression. Since there is no way to convert a macro argument (N) into a * character constant, use two levels of macros. */ is this clear enough? > >> +struct uclamp_request { >> +#define UCLAMP_PERCENT_SHIFT 2 >> +#define UCLAMP_PERCENT_SCALE (100 * POW10(UCLAMP_PERCENT_SHIFT)) >> + s64 percent; >> + u64 util; >> + int ret; >> +}; >> + >> +static inline struct uclamp_request >> +capacity_from_percent(char *buf) >> +{ >> + struct uclamp_request req = { >> + .percent = UCLAMP_PERCENT_SCALE, >> + .util = SCHED_CAPACITY_SCALE, >> + .ret = 0, >> + }; >> + >> + buf = strim(buf); >> + if (strncmp("max", buf, 4)) { > > That is either a bug, and you meant to write: strncmp(buf, "max", 3), > or it is not, and then you could've written: strcmp(buf, "max") I don't think it's a bug. The usage of 4 is intentional, to force a '\0' check while using strncmp(). Otherwise, strncmp(buf, "max", 3) would accept also strings starting by "max", which we don't want. > But as written it doesn't make sense. The code is safe but I agree that strcmp() does just the same and it does not generate confusion. That's actually a pretty good example on how it's not always better to use strncmp() instead of strcmp(). Cheers, Patrick