Pete Popov wrote: > > // in au1000.h > > #define Au1500_PCI_MEM_START 0x440000000ULL > > #define Au1500_PCI_MEM_END 0x44FFFFFFFULL > > > > // in setup.c > > start = (u32)Au1500_PCI_MEM_START; > > end = (u32)Au1500_PCI_MEM_END; > > /* check for pci memory window */ > > if ((phys_addr >= start) && ((phys_addr + size) < end)) { > > return (phys_addr - start) + Au1500_PCI_MEM_START; > > } > > > >For the (unlikely?) case that I want to use a size of 0x0 1000 0000, > >'phys_addr+size == end+1'. IOW I need 'phys_addr+size-1' to get the last > >address and use '<= end' to compare with the last valid address in the > > range. > > > >Right? > > But the a size of 0x0 1000 0001 would pass the test since phys_addr + > 1000 0001 - 1 <= end. Really? 0x4 4000 0000 + 0x0 1000 0001 - 1 = 0x4 5000 0000 > 0x4 ffff ffff ;) > How about if I just make MEM_END 0x450000000 and the check " <= end" ? I'm not sure, it's a question of consistency: that solution would be the one-past-the-end address, which I'm fine with (being used to C++'s STL-style iterators..). The only problem I see arises if that one-past-the-end actually wraps around. Other than that, what is used generally, first and last valid address or first valid address and first not valid address? Or first valid address and size? Uli