On 2021/12/30 10:39, Leizhen (ThunderTown) wrote: > > > On 2021/12/30 0:51, Borislav Petkov wrote: >> On Wed, Dec 29, 2021 at 11:04:21PM +0800, Leizhen (ThunderTown) wrote: >>> Chen Zhou and I tried to share the code because of a suggestion. After so many >>> attempts, it doesn't seem to fit to make generic. Or maybe I haven't figured >>> out a good solution yet. >> >> Well, you learned a very important lesson and the many attempts are not >> in vain: code sharing does not make sense in every case. >> >>> I will put the patches that make arm64 support crashkernel...high,low to >>> the front, then the parse_crashkernel() unification patches. Even if the >>> second half of the patches is not ready for v5.18, the first half of the >>> patches is ready. >> >> I think you should concentrate on the arm64 side which is, AFAICT, what >> you're trying to achieve. > > Right, a patchset should focus on just one thing. > >> >> The "parse_crashkernel() unification" needs more thought because, as I >> said already, that doesn't make a whole lot of sense to me. > > Yes, because it's not a functional improvement, it's not a performance optimization, > it's also not a fix for a known bug, it's just a programmer's artistic pursuit. > >> >> If you want to enforce the fact that "low" makes sense only when "high" >> is supplied, parse_crashkernel_high_low() is not the right thing to do. >> You need to have a *single* function which does all the parsing where >> you can decide what to do: "if high, parse low", "if no high supplied, >> ignore low" and so on. In fact, this is how my current function parse_crashkernel_high_low() is implemented. + /* crashkernel=X,high */ + ret = parse_crashkernel_high(cmdline, 0, high_size, &base); + if (ret) //crashkernel=X,high is not specified + return ret; + + if (*high_size <= 0) //crashkernel=X,high is specified but the value is invalid + return -EINVAL; //Sorry, the type of high_size is "unsigned long long *", so less than zero is impossible + + /* crashkernel=Y,low */ + ret = parse_crashkernel_low(cmdline, 0, low_size, &base); //If crashkernel=Y,low is specified, the parsed value is stored in *low_size + if (ret) + *low_size = -1; //crashkernel=Y,low is not specified > > I understand your proposal, but parse_crashkernel_high_low() is a cost-effective > and profitable change, it makes the current code a little clearer, and avoid passing > unnecessary parameters "system_ram" and "crash_base" when other architectures use > parse_crashkernel_{high|low}(). > > I actually followed your advice in the beginning to do "parse_crashkernel() and > parse_crashkernel_{high|low}() unification". But I found it's difficult and the > end result may not be as good as expected. So I introduced parse_crashkernel_high_low(). > > The parameter "system_ram" and "crash_base" of parse_crashkernel() is not need by > "crashkernel=X,[high,low]". And parameter "low_size" of parse_crashkernel_high_low() > is not need by "crashkernel=X[@offset]". The "parse_crashkernel() unification" > complicates things. For example, the parameter "crash_size" means "low or high" memory > size for "crashkernel=X[@offset]", but only means "high" memory size for "crashkernel=X,high". > So we'd better give it two names with union. > >> >> And if those are supported on certain architectures only, you can do >> ifdeffery... > > I don't think so. These __init functions are small and architecture-independent, and do not > affect compilation of other architectures. There may be other architectures that use > it in the future, such as the current arm64. > >> >> But I think I already stated that I don't like such unifications which >> introduce unnecessary dependencies between architectures. Therefore, I >> won't accept them into x86 unless there's a strong compelling reason. >> Which I don't see ATM. > > OK. > >> >> Thx. >> > -- Regards, Zhen Lei