On Fri, Jun 5, 2015 at 2:19 PM, Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > +enum { > +#if BITS_PER_LONG == 64 > + PFN_SHIFT = 3, > + /* device-pfn not covered by memmap */ > + PFN_DEV = (1UL << 2), > +#else > + PFN_SHIFT = 2, > +#endif > + PFN_MASK = (1UL << PFN_SHIFT) - 1, > + PFN_SG_CHAIN = (1UL << 0), > + PFN_SG_LAST = (1UL << 1), > +}; Ugh. Just make PFN_SHIFT unconditional. Make it 2, unconditionally. Or, if you want to have more bits, make it three unconditionally, and make 'struct page' just be at least 8-byte aligned even on 32-bit. Even on 32-bit architectures, there's plenty of bits. There's no reason to "pack" this optimally. Remember: it's a page frame number, so there's the page size shifting going on in physical memory, and even if you shift the PFN by 3 - or four of five - bits unconditionally (rather than try to shift it by some minimal number), you're covering a *lot* of physical memory. Say you're a 32-bit architecture with a 4k page size, and you lose three bits to "type" bits. You still have 32+12-3=41 bits of physical address space. Which is way more than realistic for a 32-bit architecture anyway, even with PAE (or PXE or whatever ARM calls it). Not that I see persistent memory being all that relevant on 32-bit hardware anyway. So I think if you actually do want that third bit, you're better off just marking "struct page" as being __aligned__((8)) and getting the three bits unconditionally. Just make the rule be that mem_map[] has to be 8-byte aligned. Even 16-byte alignment would probably be fine. No? Linus -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html