Hi Christophe,

> +#else /* !CONFIG_PPC64 */
> +#define ___get_user_instr(gu_op, dest, ptr)                          \
> +     gu_op((dest).val, (u32 __user *)(ptr))
> +#endif /* CONFIG_PPC64 */
>  
>  #define get_user_instr(x, ptr) \
>       ___get_user_instr(get_user, x, ptr)
> @@ -91,18 +95,6 @@ static inline bool __access_ok(unsigned long addr, 
> unsigned long size)
>  #define __get_user_instr_inatomic(x, ptr) \
>       ___get_user_instr(__get_user_inatomic, x, ptr)
>  
> -#else /* !CONFIG_PPC64 */
> -#define get_user_instr(x, ptr) \
> -     get_user((x).val, (u32 __user *)(ptr))
> -
> -#define __get_user_instr(x, ptr) \
> -     __get_user_nocheck((x).val, (u32 __user *)(ptr), sizeof(u32), true)
> -
> -#define __get_user_instr_inatomic(x, ptr) \
> -     __get_user_nosleep((x).val, (u32 __user *)(ptr), sizeof(u32))
> -
> -#endif /* CONFIG_PPC64 */

The previous version of __get_user_instr called __get_user_nocheck,
this version calls __get_user. Likewise __get_user_instr_inatomic called
__get_user_nosleep and now it calls __get_user_inatomic. I was confused
by this until I chased the macro definitions and realised that both
names refer to the same thing:

#define __get_user(x, ptr) \
        __get_user_nocheck((x), (ptr), sizeof(*(ptr)), true)

#define __get_user_inatomic(x, ptr) \
        __get_user_nosleep((x), (ptr), sizeof(*(ptr)))

(I don't think you need to do anything here, I'm just documenting what I
considered while reviewing your patch.)

As such:
Reviewed-by: Daniel Axtens <[email protected]>

Kind regards,
Daniel


> -
>  extern long __put_user_bad(void);
>  
>  #define __put_user_size(x, ptr, size, retval)                        \
> -- 
> 2.25.0

Reply via email to