On Wed, May 22, 2024 at 2:02 AM Barry Song <21cnbao@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > From: Barry Song <v-songbaohua@xxxxxxxx> > > dma_heap_allocation_data defines the UAPI as follows: > > struct dma_heap_allocation_data { > __u64 len; > __u32 fd; > __u32 fd_flags; > __u64 heap_flags; > }; > > However, dma_heap_buffer_alloc() casts them into unsigned int. It's unclear > whether this is intentional or what the purpose is, but it can be quite > confusing for users. > > Adding to the confusion, dma_heap_ops.allocate defines both of these as > unsigned long. Fortunately, since dma_heap_ops is not part of the UAPI, > it is less of a concern. > > struct dma_heap_ops { > struct dma_buf *(*allocate)(struct dma_heap *heap, > unsigned long len, > unsigned long fd_flags, > unsigned long heap_flags); > }; > > I am sending this RFC in hopes of clarifying these confusions. > > If the goal is to constrain both flags to 32 bits while ensuring the struct > is aligned to 64 bits, it would have been more suitable to define > dma_heap_allocation_data accordingly from the beginning, like so: > > struct dma_heap_allocation_data { > __u64 len; > __u32 fd; > __u32 fd_flags; > __u32 heap_flags; > __u32 padding; > }; So here, if I recall, the intent was to keep 64bits for potential future heap_flags. But your point above that we're inconsistent with types in the non UAPI arguments is valid. So I think your patch makes sense. Thanks for raising this issue! Acked-by: John Stultz <jstultz@xxxxxxxxxx>