On Wed, Mar 5, 2014 at 11:19 AM, Joe Perches <joe@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, 2014-03-05 at 11:14 +0900, Alexandre Courbot wrote: >> On Wed, Mar 5, 2014 at 11:04 AM, Joe Perches <joe@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > On Wed, 2014-03-05 at 09:49 +0800, Linus Walleij wrote: >> >> On Wed, Feb 26, 2014 at 9:40 AM, Alexandre Courbot <acourbot@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> >> >> > Nothing prevents GPIO drivers from returning values outside the >> >> > boolean range, and as it turns out a few drivers are actually doing so. >> >> > These values were passed as-is to unsuspecting consumers and created >> >> > confusion. >> >> > >> >> > This patch makes the internal _gpiod_get_raw_value() function return a >> >> > bool, effectively clamping the GPIO value to the boolean range no >> >> > matter what the driver does. >> >> >> >> No, that will not be the semantic effect of this patch, bool is just >> >> another name for an int, maybe some static checkers will be able >> >> to use it however. >> > >> > No, a bool is not an int. >> > >> > It's really different. >> > include/linux/types.h:typedef _Bool bool; >> >> It indeed seems that _Bool is an actual boolean type in C99. However I >> could not find in the C99 standard how ints are supposed to be >> converted to it. > > 6.3.1.2 Boolean type > > When any scalar value is converted to _Bool, the result is 0 if the > value compares equal to 0; otherwise, the result is 1. > >> So in the end it is probably safer to perform this >> change the way Linus suggested. > > Not really. Ok, you are obviously correct here. Linus, what do you think? -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-gpio" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html