Re: [PATCH 6/6] DVB API: LNA documentation

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Em 12-09-2012 08:01, David Waring escreveu:
> On 11/09/12 19:38, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:
>> Em 16-08-2012 22:35, Antti Palosaari escreveu:
>>> [snip]
>>> +	<para>Possible values: 0, 1, INT_MIN</para>
>>
>> Hmm... INT_MIN... are you sure it is portable on all Linux compilers?
>>
>> I don't like the idea on trusting on whatever C/C++/Java/... compiler (or some interpreter)
>> would define as "INT_MIN".
>>
>> The better is to define a value for that, or, instead, to define something
>> at the API header file that won't cause troubles with 32 bits or 64 bits
>> userspace, like defining it as:
>>
>> #define DVB_AUTO_LNA ((u32)~0)
>>
> INT_MIN is defined in limits.h which is an ISO standard header. Other
> parts of the kernel also use INT_MIN, e.g. linux/cpu.h and
> linux/netfilter_ipv4.h both reference INT_MIN from limits.h.

The linux/cpu.h is a Kernel internal header. There's no public userspace API 
there. So, it uses kernel's own definition for INT_MIN.

You're right with regards to netfilter. Btw, it is only places where INT_MIN 
is used on an userspace-filtered headers are at the netfilter interface :

/usr/include/linux/netfilter_ipv6.h:#include <limits.h> /* for INT_MIN, INT_MAX */
/usr/include/linux/netfilter_ipv6.h:	NF_IP6_PRI_FIRST = INT_MIN,
/usr/include/linux/netfilter_ipv4.h:#include <limits.h> /* for INT_MIN, INT_MAX */
/usr/include/linux/netfilter_ipv4.h:	NF_IP_PRI_FIRST = INT_MIN,
/usr/include/linux/netfilter_decnet.h:#include <limits.h> /* for INT_MIN, INT_MAX */
/usr/include/linux/netfilter_decnet.h:	NF_DN_PRI_FIRST = INT_MIN,

Even so, it got renamed inside a priorities enum:

enum nf_ip_hook_priorities {
	NF_IP_PRI_FIRST = INT_MIN,

In the case of netfilter, as this is just a priority number, it actually
make sense to use INT_MIN as the lowest priority, as INT_MIN is the lowest
number that can be represented there.

What we're doing here is something else: we're defining a special value to be 
interpreted as "AUTO". In this case, if Kernel and userspace disagrees on what
value should be used, the KAPI will be deadly broken.

I might be wrong, but some C compilers on a few architectures (Tru64 C compiler comes
on my mind) define "int" as 64 bit integers, with will affect the definition of INT_MIN.
Ok, in this case, the definition will be compatible, but I'm wondering if some other
compiler might be doing something else here.

That's why I'm in favor of defining some constant for "AUTO" at the kernel headers,
in a way that we'll be sure that we won't have any bad surprises on userspace.

Regards,
Mauro


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