* Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@xxxxxxx> wrote: > With some minimal CPP, it can be a lot more manageable: > > ---- > #define INSTR_ATOMIC_XCHG(order) \ > static __always_inline int atomic_xchg##order(atomic_t *v, int i) \ > { \ > kasan_check_write(v, sizeof(*v)); \ > arch_atomic_xchg##order(v, i); \ > } > > #define INSTR_ATOMIC_XCHG() > > #ifdef arch_atomic_xchg_relaxed > INSTR_ATOMIC_XCHG(_relaxed) > #define atomic_xchg_relaxed atomic_xchg_relaxed > #endif > > #ifdef arch_atomic_xchg_acquire > INSTR_ATOMIC_XCHG(_acquire) > #define atomic_xchg_acquire atomic_xchg_acquire > #endif > > #ifdef arch_atomic_xchg_relaxed > INSTR_ATOMIC_XCHG(_relaxed) > #define atomic_xchg_relaxed atomic_xchg_relaxed > #endif Yeah, small detail: the third one wants to be _release, right? > Is there any objection to some light CPP usage as above for adding the > {relaxed,acquire,release} variants? No objection from me to that way of writing it, this still looks very readable, and probably more readable than the verbose variants. It's similar in style to linux/atomic.h which has a good balance of C versus CPP. What I objected to was the deep nested code generation approach in the original patch. CPP is fine in many circumstances, but there's a level of (ab-)use where it becomes counterproductive. Thanks, Ingo -- 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>