On Wed, 3 Sep 2008, James Bottomley wrote: > > Is that finally final? because the last time I tried to do the above > for a voyager override I was told weak functions were the preferred > method ... Weak functions are fine IF THEY DO SOMETHING REAL AND SHOULD BE FUNCTIONS IN THE FIRST PLACE! IOW, if the default behaviour is actually something that should be a function, then a weak function is the simplest and most appropriate way of doing thigns. But if the default behaviour is to not do anything at all, then a weak function simply doesn't work - because it will always generate that stupid and useless function call. And then you have to have per-architecture inline functions. And in order to avoid having all 99 architectures that don't care at all add an empty inline function, then you essentially have to use a #define to allow us to detect at compile-time that no function existed. > Anyway, it's easy to do (if a slightly larger diff) ... I have to move > the prototype from include/kernel.h to include/module.h because I need > an assured asm/xxx include before it to get the override. I don't really see what this has to do with module.h, though. Why do this in <linux/module.h>? Why not just do it in lib/vsptintf.c which is the only place that cares? None of this needs to pollute the generic header files that simply don't care. Linus -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-parisc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html