On Wed, 15 Jan 2014, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
{,set}page_address() are macros if WANT_PAGE_VIRTUAL. If !WANT_PAGE_VIRTUAL, they're plain C functions. If someone calls them with a void *, this pointer is auto-converted to struct page * if !WANT_PAGE_VIRTUAL, but causes a build failure on architectures using WANT_PAGE_VIRTUAL (arc, m68k and sparc):
s/sparc/sparc64/
drivers/md/bcache/bset.c: In function ‘__btree_sort’: drivers/md/bcache/bset.c:1190: warning: dereferencing ‘void *’ pointer drivers/md/bcache/bset.c:1190: error: request for member ‘virtual’ in something not a structure or union Convert them to static inline functions to fix this. There are already plenty of users of struct page members inside <linux/mm.h>, so there's no reason to keep them as macros. Signed-off-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Tested-by: David Rientjes <rientjes@xxxxxxxxxx> I'm cringing at the page_address(mempool_alloc(..., GFP_NOIO)) in drivers/md/bcache/bset.c, though. It's relying on that fact that mempool_alloc() can never return NULL if __GFP_WAIT but I think this could have all been avoided with struct page *page = mempool_alloc(state->pool, GFP_NOIO); out = page_address(page); instead of burying the mempool_alloc() in page_address() for what I think is cleaner code. Owell, it fixes the issue.