On Mon, 2015-06-22 at 08:38 +0200, Krzysztof Hałasa wrote: > Joe Perches <j...@perches.com> writes: > > > It might be better to use some base + index macro > > as it could be smaller object code. > > > > Something like: > > > > #define REG_NO(base, multiplier, index) (base + (multiplier * index)) > > > > reg_write(vc->dev, REG_NO(0x10, 1, vc->ch), dma_cfg); > > or > > > > #define VDMA_CHANNEL_CONFIG 0x10 > > > > reg_write(vc->dev, REG_NO(VDMA_CHANNEL_CONFIG, 1, vc->ch), dma_cfg); > > Wouldn't work, the register map is a bit messy. > E.g. > > #define DMA_PAGE_TABLE0_ADDR ((const u16[8]){0x08, 0xD0, 0xD2, 0xD4, 0xD6, > 0xD8, 0xDA, 0xDC}) > #define DMA_PAGE_TABLE1_ADDR ((const u16[8]){0x09, 0xD1, 0xD3, 0xD5, 0xD7, > 0xD9, 0xDB, 0xDD})
Erk, yes, a bit messy. You could elide the 8 and checkpatch wouldn't emit a warning. #define VDREG8(a0) ((const u16[]){ \ a0 + 0x000, a0 + 0x010, a0 +0x020, a0 + 0x030, \ a0 + 0x100, a0 + 0x110, a0 +0x120, a0 + 0x130}) as "const u16[]" is a $Type but "const u16[<digits>]" is not. Still, as written, the code seems fragile as MACRO[index] allows index to be any value, maybe larger than the array. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/