Hi Greg, First of all thanks for your reply. On Tue, 14 Mar 2017, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > On Mon, Mar 13, 2017 at 03:14:12PM -0700, Till Smejkal wrote: > > There's no way with that many cc: lists and people that this is really > making it through very many people's filters and actually on a mailing > list. Please trim them down. I am sorry that the patch's cc-list is too big. This was the list of people that the get_maintainers.pl script produced. I already recognized that it was a huge number of people, but I didn't want to remove anyone from the list because I wasn't sure who would be interested in this patch set. Do you have any suggestion who to remove from the list? I don't want to annoy anyone with useless emails. > Minor sysfs questions/issues: > > > +struct vas { > > + struct kobject kobj; /* < the internal kobject that we use * > > + * for reference counting and sysfs * > > + * handling. */ > > + > > + int id; /* < ID */ > > + char name[VAS_MAX_NAME_LENGTH]; /* < name */ > > The kobject has a name, why not use that? The reason why I don't use the kobject's name is that I don't restrict the names that are used for VAS/VAS segments. Accordingly, it would be allowed to use a name like "foo/bar/xyz" as VAS name. However, I am not sure what would happen in the sysfs if I would use such a name for the kobject. Especially, since one could think of another VAS with the name "foo/bar" whose name would conflict with the first one although it not necessarily has any connection with it. > > + > > + struct mutex mtx; /* < lock for parallel access. */ > > + > > + struct mm_struct *mm; /* < a partial memory map containing * > > + * all mappings of this VAS. */ > > + > > + struct list_head link; /* < the link in the global VAS list. */ > > + struct rcu_head rcu; /* < the RCU helper used for * > > + * asynchronous VAS deletion. */ > > + > > + u16 refcount; /* < how often is the VAS attached. */ > > The kobject has a refcount, use that? Don't have 2 refcounts in the > same structure, that way lies madness. And bugs, lots of bugs... > > And if this really is a refcount (hint, I don't think it is), you should > use the refcount_t type. I actually use both the internal kobject refcount to keep track of how often a VAS/VAS segment is referenced and this 'refcount' variable to keep track how often the VAS is actually attached to a task. They not necessarily must be related to each other. I can rename this variable to attach_count. Or if preferred I can alternatively only use the kobject reference counter and remove this variable completely though I would loose information about how often the VAS is attached to a task because the kobject reference counter is also used to keep track of other variables referencing the VAS. > > +/** > > + * The sysfs structure we need to handle attributes of a VAS. > > + **/ > > +struct vas_sysfs_attr { > > + struct attribute attr; > > + ssize_t (*show)(struct vas *vas, struct vas_sysfs_attr *vsattr, > > + char *buf); > > + ssize_t (*store)(struct vas *vas, struct vas_sysfs_attr *vsattr, > > + const char *buf, size_t count); > > +}; > > + > > +#define VAS_SYSFS_ATTR(NAME, MODE, SHOW, STORE) \ > > +static struct vas_sysfs_attr vas_sysfs_attr_##NAME = \ > > + __ATTR(NAME, MODE, SHOW, STORE) > > __ATTR_RO and __ATTR_RW should work better for you. If you really need > this. Thank you. I will have a look at these functions. > Oh, and where is the Documentation/ABI/ updates to try to describe the > sysfs structure and files? Did I miss that in the series? Oh sorry, I forgot to add this file. I will add the ABI descriptions for future submissions. > > +static ssize_t __show_vas_name(struct vas *vas, struct vas_sysfs_attr *vsattr, > > + char *buf) > > +{ > > + return scnprintf(buf, PAGE_SIZE, "%s", vas->name); > > It's a page size, just use sprintf() and be done with it. No need to > ever check, you "know" it will be correct. OK. I was following the sysfs example in the documentation that used scnprintf, but if sprintf is preferred, I can change this. > Also, what about a trailing '\n' for these attributes? I will change this. > Oh wait, why have a name when the kobject name is already there in the > directory itself? Do you really need this? See above. > > +/** > > + * The ktype data structure representing a VAS. > > + **/ > > +static struct kobj_type vas_ktype = { > > + .sysfs_ops = &vas_sysfs_ops, > > + .release = __vas_release, > > Why the odd __vas* naming? What's wrong with vas_release? I was using the __* naming scheme for functions that have no other meaning outside of my source file. But I can change this if people don't like it. I have no strong feelings about the names of the functions. > > + .default_attrs = vas_default_attr, > > +}; > > + > > + > > +/*** > > + * Internally visible functions > > + ***/ > > + > > +/** > > + * Working with the global VAS list. > > + **/ > > +static inline void vas_remove(struct vas *vas) > > <snip> > > You have a ton of inline functions, for no good reason. Make them all > "real" functions please. Unless you can measure the size/speed > differences? If so, please say so. There was no specific reason why I declared the functions as inline except my hope to reduce the function call for some of my very small functions. I can look more closely at this and check whether there is some real benefit in inlining them and if not remove it. Thank you very much. Till -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxx. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>