On Tue, May 16, 2023 at 06:44:34PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > On Tue, May 16, 2023, at 18:29, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > > On Tue, May 16, 2023 at 01:00:31PM +0200, Niklas Schnelle wrote: > > >> #ifndef CONFIG_USB_UHCI_SUPPORT_NON_PCI_HC > >> /* Support PCI only */ > >> static inline u32 uhci_readl(const struct uhci_hcd *uhci, int reg) > >> { > >> - return inl(uhci->io_addr + reg); > >> + return UHCI_IN(inl(uhci->io_addr + reg)); > >> } > >> > >> static inline void uhci_writel(const struct uhci_hcd *uhci, u32 val, int reg) > >> { > >> - outl(val, uhci->io_addr + reg); > >> + UHCI_OUT(outl(val, uhci->io_addr + reg)); > > > > I'm confused now. > > > > So if CONFIG_HAS_IOPORT is enabled, wonderful, all is good. > > > > But if it isn't, then these are just no-ops that do nothing? So then > > the driver will fail to work? Why have these stubs at all? > > > > Why not just not build the driver at all if this option is not enabled? > > If I remember correctly, the problem here is the lack of > abstractions in the uhci driver, it instead supports all > combinations of on-chip non-PCI devices using readb()/writeb() > and PCI devices using inb()/outb() in a shared codebase. Isn't that an abstraction? A single set of operations (uhci_readl(), uhci_writel(), etc.) that always does the right sort of I/O even when talking to different buses? So I'm not sure what you mean by "the lack of abstractions". > A particularly tricky combination is a kernel that supports on-chip > UHCI as well as CONFIG_USB_PCI (for EHCI/XHCI) but does not support > I/O ports because of platform limitations. The trick is to come up > with a set of changes that doesn't have to rewrite the entire logic > but also doesn't add an obscene number of #ifdef checks. Indeed, in a kernel supporting that tricky combination the no-op code would be generated. But it would never execute at runtime because the uhci_has_pci_registers(uhci) test would always return 0, and so the driver wouldn't fail. > That said, there is a minor problem with the empty definition > > +#define UHCI_OUT(x) > > I think this should be "do { } while (0)" to avoid warnings > about empty if/else blocks. I'm sure Niklas wouldn't mind making such a change. But do we really get such warnings? Does the compiler really think that this kind of (macro-expanded) code: if (uhci_has_pci_registers(uhci)) ; else if (uhci_is_aspeed(uhci)) writel(val, uhci->regs + uhci_aspeed_reg(reg)); deserves a warning? I write stuff like that fairly often; it's a good way to showcase a high-probability do-nothing pathway at the start of a series of conditional cases. And I haven't noticed any complaints from the compiler. Alan Stern