On Tue, Jun 14, 2016 at 02:11:48PM +0800, xinhui wrote: > > On 2016年06月08日 17:22, Will Deacon wrote: > >On Thu, Jun 02, 2016 at 06:09:08PM +0800, Pan Xinhui wrote: > >>strcut __qrwlock has different layout in big endian machine. we need set > >>the __qrwlock->wmode to NULL, and the address is not &lock->cnts in big > >>endian machine. > >> > >>Do as what read unlock does. we are lucky that the __qrwlock->wmode's > >>val is _QW_LOCKED. > > > >Doesn't this have wider implications for the qrwlocks, for example: > > > > while ((cnts & _QW_WMASK) == _QW_LOCKED) { ... } > > > >would actually end up looking at the wrong field of the lock? > > > I does not clearly understand your idea. :( That's because I'm talking rubbish :) Sorry, I completely confused myself. Locking is bad enough on its own, but add big-endian to the mix and I'm all done. > >Shouldn't we just remove the #ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN stuff from __qrwlock, > >given that all the struct members are u8? > > > No. that makes codes complex. for example > > struct __qrwlock lock; > > WRITE_ONCE(lock->wmode, _QW_WAITING); > if (atomic_(&lock->cnts) == _QW_WAITING) { > do_something(); > } > > IF you remove the #ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN stuff from __qrwlock. > codes above obviously will break. And we already have such code. I was wondering more along the lines of having one definition of the data structure, but then defining _QW_* differently depending on endianness (i.e. add a << 24 when big-endian). That way queued_write_unlock can stay like it is (having an arch override to handle the big-endian case is incredibly ugly). Will -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-arch" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html