On Thu, Oct 09, 2014 at 11:59:50AM +0100, Lee Jones wrote: > On Thu, 09 Oct 2014, Johan Hovold wrote: > > On Thu, Oct 09, 2014 at 08:40:29AM +0100, Lee Jones wrote: > > > On Mon, 06 Oct 2014, Muthu Mani wrote: > > > > diff --git a/include/linux/mfd/cyusbs23x.h b/include/linux/mfd/cyusbs23x.h > > > > > > +/* Serial interfaces (I2C, SPI, UART) differ in interface subclass */ > > > > +enum cy_scb_modes { > > > > + CY_USBS_SCB_DISABLED = 0, > > > > + CY_USBS_SCB_UART = 1, > > > > + CY_USBS_SCB_SPI = 2, > > > > + CY_USBS_SCB_I2C = 3 > > > > > > No need to number these. > > > > As it's not an arbitrary enumeration, I think they should be initialised > > explicitly. > > No need. You are protected by the C Standard: > > 6.7.2.2 Enumeration specifiers > > "If the first enumerator has no =, the value of its enumeration > constant is 0. Each subsequent enumerator with no = defines its > enumeration constant as the value of the constant expression obtained > by adding 1 to the value of the previous enumeration constant." > > There's nothing arbitrary about that. I obviously wasn't suggesting that the definition of an enum (and the values of its constants) in c was arbitrary. My point was that the values of the USB interface subclasses (defined through the enum) are not arbitrary. In this case they just happen to be zero-based and consecutive. You cannot reorder, or remove an unused item, without breaking the driver. By initialising each constant explicitly this would become apparent. Using preprocessor defines could be an alternative if you really do not like initialised enumeration constants. > > They could be defined in the mfd driver though, as they only > > appear to be needed during probe. Johan -- 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