On Wed, 15 Jun 2022, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Wed, Jun 15, 2022 at 03:48:28PM +0300, Ilpo Järvinen wrote: > > Add support for RS-485 multipoint addressing using 9th bit [*]. The > > addressing mode is configured through .rs485_config(). > > > > ADDRB in termios indicates 9th bit addressing mode is enabled. In this > > mode, 9th bit is used to indicate an address (byte) within the > > communication line. ADDRB can only be enabled/disabled through > > .rs485_config() that is also responsible for setting the destination and > > receiver (filter) addresses. > > > > [*] Technically, RS485 is just an electronic spec and does not itself > > specify the 9th bit addressing mode but 9th bit seems at least > > "semi-standard" way to do addressing with RS485. > > > > Cc: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> > > Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@xxxxxxx> > > Cc: linux-api@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > Cc: linux-doc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > Cc: linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > Cc: linux-arch@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > Hmm... In order to reduce commit messages you can move these Cc:s after the > cutter line ('---'). Ok, although the toolchain I use didn't support preserving --- content so I had to create hack to preserve them, hopefully nothing backfires due to the hack. :-) > > - __u32 padding[5]; /* Memory is cheap, new structs > > - are a royal PITA .. */ > > + __u8 addr_recv; > > + __u8 addr_dest; > > + __u8 padding[2 + 4 * sizeof(__u32)]; /* Memory is cheap, new structs > > + * are a royal PITA .. */ > > I'm not sure it's an equivalent. I would leave u32 members untouched, so > something like > > __u8 addr_recv; > __u8 addr_dest; > __u8 padding0[2]; /* Memory is cheap, new structs > __u32 padding1[4]; * are a royal PITA .. */ > > And repeating about `pahole` tool which may be useful here to check for ABI > potential changes. I cannot take __u32 padding[] away like that, this is an uapi header. Or do you mean I should create anonymous union? ...I'm skeptical that can be pulled off w/o breaking user-space compile in some circumstances. Anon unions were only introduced by C11 but is it ok to rely on C11 in uapi/ headers? Even making padding smaller has some unwanted consequences if somebody is clearing just .padding. In retrospect, having padding as a direct member doesn't seem a good idea. That padding[5] should have been within an union right from the start to make this easily extendable. Maybe create a copy of that struct under another name which is just equal sized, that would give more freedom on member naming. But can I change ioctl's param type to another struct (in _IOR/_IOWR) w/o breaking something? -- i.