* Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The coretemp driver supports up to a hard-coded limit of 128 cores. > > Today, the driver can not support a core with an id above that limit. > Yet, the encoding of core_id's is arbitrary (BIOS APIC-id) and so they > may be sparse and they may be large. > > Update the driver to map arbitrary core_id numbers into appropriate > array indexes so that 128 cores can be supported, no matter the encoding > of core_ids's. Please capitalize 'ID' consistently throughout the series. > - attr_no = pkg_flag ? PKG_SYSFS_ATTR_NO : TO_ATTR_NO(cpu); > + if (pkg_flag) > + attr_no = PKG_SYSFS_ATTR_NO; > + else { > + index = ida_alloc(&pdata->ida, GFP_KERNEL); > + if (index < 0) > + return index; > + pdata->cpu_map[index] = topology_core_id(cpu); > + attr_no = index + BASE_SYSFS_ATTR_NO; > + } Unbalanced curly braces. > - int err, attr_no; > + int err, index, attr_no; So it's 'index' here. > @@ -524,6 +538,8 @@ static void coretemp_remove_core(struct platform_data *pdata, int indx) But 'indx' here. > - int indx, target; > + int i, indx = -1, target; And 'indx' again. Did we run out of the letter 'e'? Either use 'index' naming consistently, or 'idx' if it has to be abbreviated. Thanks, Ingo