Le mercredi 30 mai 2018 à 14:17:25 (+0300), Dan Carpenter a écrit : > On Tue, May 29, 2018 at 09:11:43PM +0200, Thibaut Robert wrote: > > diff --git a/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wfi_cfgoperations.c b/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wfi_cfgoperations.c > > index e248702ee519..745bf5ca2622 100644 > > --- a/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wfi_cfgoperations.c > > +++ b/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wfi_cfgoperations.c > > @@ -1431,7 +1431,7 @@ void wilc_wfi_p2p_rx(struct net_device *dev, u8 *buff, u32 size) > > > > freq = ieee80211_channel_to_frequency(curr_channel, NL80211_BAND_2GHZ); > > > > - if (!ieee80211_is_action(buff[FRAME_TYPE_ID])) { > > + if (!ieee80211_is_action(cpu_to_le16(buff[FRAME_TYPE_ID]))) { > > "buff" comes from the network, it's going to be little endian, not cpu > endian. The rest of the function treats it as CPU endian but I'm pretty > sure it's wrong... buff comes from the network but we are looking at single byte here. ieee80211_is_action expects an le16, so we I added this to extend an u8 to an le16. Is this incorrect ? Or maybe we the buff has the second byte ? but that I can't tell. > > > cfg80211_rx_mgmt(priv->wdev, freq, 0, buff, size, 0); > > return; > > } > > > > diff --git a/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wlan.c b/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wlan.c > > index 28c93f3f846e..a5ac1d26590b 100644 > > --- a/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wlan.c > > +++ b/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wlan.c > > @@ -560,7 +560,8 @@ int wilc_wlan_handle_txq(struct net_device *dev, u32 *txq_count) > > int ret = 0; > > int counter; > > int timeout; > > - u32 vmm_table[WILC_VMM_TBL_SIZE]; > > + __le32 vmm_table[WILC_VMM_TBL_SIZE]; > > + u32 table_entry; > > struct wilc_vif *vif; > > struct wilc *wilc; > > const struct wilc_hif_func *func; > > @@ -598,10 +599,10 @@ int wilc_wlan_handle_txq(struct net_device *dev, u32 *txq_count) > > if ((sum + vmm_sz) > LINUX_TX_SIZE) > > break; > > > > - vmm_table[i] = vmm_sz / 4; > > + table_entry = vmm_sz / 4; > > if (tqe->type == WILC_CFG_PKT) > > - vmm_table[i] |= BIT(10); > > - vmm_table[i] = cpu_to_le32(vmm_table[i]); > > + table_entry |= BIT(10); > > + vmm_table[i] = cpu_to_le32(table_entry); > > > > i++; > > sum += vmm_sz; > > @@ -704,8 +705,7 @@ int wilc_wlan_handle_txq(struct net_device *dev, u32 *txq_count) > > if (vmm_table[i] == 0) > > break; > > > > - vmm_table[i] = cpu_to_le32(vmm_table[i]); > > - vmm_sz = (vmm_table[i] & 0x3ff); > > + vmm_sz = (le32_to_cpu(vmm_table[i]) & 0x3ff); > > vmm_sz *= 4; > > header = (tqe->type << 31) | > > (tqe->buffer_size << 15) | > > @@ -715,8 +715,7 @@ int wilc_wlan_handle_txq(struct net_device *dev, u32 *txq_count) > > else > > header &= ~BIT(30); > > > > - header = cpu_to_le32(header); > > - memcpy(&txb[offset], &header, 4); > > + *((__le32 *)&txb[offset]) = cpu_to_le32(header); > > I worry about alignment issues here. That might be the reason for the > memcpy(). (I'm reading as fast as I can and don't the code so I may > be wrong). > > > if (tqe->type == WILC_CFG_PKT) { > > buffer_offset = ETH_CONFIG_PKT_HDR_OFFSET; > > } else if (tqe->type == WILC_NET_PKT) { > > @@ -770,8 +769,7 @@ static void wilc_wlan_handle_rx_buff(struct wilc *wilc, u8 *buffer, int size) > > > > do { > > buff_ptr = buffer + offset; > > - memcpy(&header, buff_ptr, 4); > > - header = cpu_to_le32(header); > > + header = le32_to_cpup((__le32 *)buff_ptr); > > Maybe the same, whenever you see a memcpy(). > > > > > is_cfg_packet = (header >> 31) & 0x1; > > pkt_offset = (header >> 22) & 0x1ff; > > @@ -942,6 +940,7 @@ int wilc_wlan_firmware_download(struct wilc *wilc, const u8 *buffer, > > u32 offset; > > u32 addr, size, size2, blksz; > > u8 *dma_buffer; > > + const __le32 *header; > > int ret = 0; > > > > blksz = BIT(12); > > @@ -952,10 +951,9 @@ int wilc_wlan_firmware_download(struct wilc *wilc, const u8 *buffer, > > > > offset = 0; > > do { > > - memcpy(&addr, &buffer[offset], 4); > > - memcpy(&size, &buffer[offset + 4], 4); > > - addr = cpu_to_le32(addr); > > - size = cpu_to_le32(size); > > + header = (__le32 *)buffer + offset; > > + addr = le32_to_cpu(header[0]); > > + size = le32_to_cpu(header[1]); > > acquire_bus(wilc, ACQUIRE_ONLY); > > offset += 8; > > while (((int)size) && (offset < buffer_size)) { > > diff --git a/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wlan_cfg.c b/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wlan_cfg.c > > index c0b9b700f4d7..4a914d8572aa 100644 > > --- a/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wlan_cfg.c > > +++ b/drivers/staging/wilc1000/wilc_wlan_cfg.c > > @@ -275,14 +275,14 @@ static int wilc_wlan_cfg_set_bin(u8 *frame, u32 offset, u16 id, u8 *b, u32 size) > > > > static void wilc_wlan_parse_response_frame(u8 *info, int size) > > { > > - u32 wid, len = 0, i = 0; > > + u32 wid; > > + int len = 0, i = 0; > > Why did we make these int now? > > > > > while (size > 0) { > > i = 0; > > - wid = info[0] | (info[1] << 8); > > - wid = cpu_to_le32(wid); > > + wid = le16_to_cpup((__le16 *)info); > > > > - switch ((wid >> 12) & 0x7) { > > + switch (info[1] >> 4) { > > Why do we not need to mask by 0x7? Anyway, I feel like this isn't > beautiful. We should be using a macro and "wid" instead of magically > poking into info[1]. > > switch(SOME_MACRO(wid)) { > > > regards, > dan carpenter _______________________________________________ devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://driverdev.linuxdriverproject.org/mailman/listinfo/driverdev-devel