On 09/02/2007 10:15 PM, Satyam Sharma wrote:

sound/isa/sb16/sb16.c: In function ‘snd_sb16_isa_probe’:

Blah. Your message has:

        Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=iso-2022-jp

This apparently is caused by a combination of GCC using groovy UTF tickmarks in its error messages when in a UTF locale and alpine believing it to be a great idea to automatically try for the "simplest" character set it can encode the content in. No idea why that means that iso-2022-jp is picked, but it is.

While I could actually read the message this time you should see what iso-2022-jp does to my font. It's scary. Best solution as far as I'm concerned is slap a few GCC developers (not that it wil help, but it'll certainly feel good) and then teach alpine to go for UTF-8 directly if US-ASCII won't do.

As to the content of this patch -- I'd almost say it's better to live with the warning than with that unitialized_var() thing. That ARRAY_SIZE is very much a compile time constant, so exactly how dumb must GCC get before we get to say to here and no further?

--- linux-2.6.23-rc4-mm1/sound/isa/sb/sb16.c~fix        2007-09-02 
21:41:51.000000000 +0530
+++ linux-2.6.23-rc4-mm1/sound/isa/sb/sb16.c    2007-09-02 21:42:56.000000000 
+0530
@@ -556,7 +556,6 @@ static int __devinit snd_sb16_isa_match(
static int __devinit snd_sb16_isa_probe(struct device *pdev, unsigned int dev)
 {
-       int err;
        static int possible_irqs[] = {5, 9, 10, 7, -1};
        static int possible_dmas8[] = {1, 3, 0, -1};
        static int possible_dmas16[] = {5, 6, 7, -1};
@@ -585,6 +584,8 @@ static int __devinit snd_sb16_isa_probe(
        else {
                static int possible_ports[] = {0x220, 0x240, 0x260, 0x280};
                int i;
+               int uninitialized_var(err);
+
                for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(possible_ports); i++) {
                        port[dev] = possible_ports[i];
                        err = snd_sb16_isa_probe1(dev, pdev);

Rene.

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