On Mon, Jul 16 2007, Andrew Morton wrote: > > A belated review (I've never seen this before and there it is in mainline) > > > static char bsg_version[] = "block layer sg (bsg) 0.4"; > > `const' would be better. That moves it into a write-protected memory section.
Agree > > #define list_entry_bc(entry) list_entry((entry), struct bsg_command, > > list) > > This makes the code easier to write but harder to read. We should optimise > for readers. Please open-code this at callsites. > > Or at least convert it into a (commented) (possibly inlined) C function. list_entry_to_bc(), then? The main objective is to save on typing, and (just as important) make sure we don't bump over the 80 chars per line. > > /* > > * just for testing > > */ > > #define BSG_MAJOR (240) > > What's this doing in mainline? 240 is a "reserved for local use" major. > This will cause collisions. This code should be using dynamic major > assignment. Yeah, that's a big error on my part. Will get that fixed up right away. > > static DEFINE_MUTEX(bsg_mutex); > > static int bsg_device_nr, bsg_minor_idx; > > > > #define BSG_LIST_SIZE (8) > > afacit this isn't really the size of a list. It has something to do with > the number of minors which are attached to that illegitimate major? A > comment here would help. Perhaps this name is poorly chosen. Yeah, it's the size of the array of lists :-) > > #define bsg_list_idx(minor) ((minor) & (BSG_LIST_SIZE - 1)) > > Please prefer to write code in C, not in cpp. Agree, that will die. > > static struct hlist_head bsg_device_list[BSG_LIST_SIZE]; > > That is an array, not a list. It's an array of lists. > > static struct class *bsg_class; > > static LIST_HEAD(bsg_class_list); > > > > static struct kmem_cache *bsg_cmd_cachep; > > How many of these items do we expect to be simultaneously allocated? If > that number is small then a custom kmem_cache is probably not warranted. For your average desktop application, only a few are likely to be in flight at the same time. For higher end stuff, it could be thousands. > > /* > > * our internal command type > > */ > > struct bsg_command { > > struct bsg_device *bd; > > struct list_head list; > > struct request *rq; > > struct bio *bio; > > struct bio *bidi_bio; > > int err; > > struct sg_io_v4 hdr; > > struct sg_io_v4 __user *uhdr; > > char sense[SCSI_SENSE_BUFFERSIZE]; > > }; > > Comments here, please. Noted. > > static void bsg_free_command(struct bsg_command *bc) > > { > > struct bsg_device *bd = bc->bd; > > unsigned long flags; > > > > kmem_cache_free(bsg_cmd_cachep, bc); > > > > spin_lock_irqsave(&bd->lock, flags); > > bd->queued_cmds--; > > spin_unlock_irqrestore(&bd->lock, flags); > > > > wake_up(&bd->wq_free); > > } > > > > static struct bsg_command *bsg_alloc_command(struct bsg_device *bd) > > { > > struct bsg_command *bc = ERR_PTR(-EINVAL); > > > > spin_lock_irq(&bd->lock); > > > > if (bd->queued_cmds >= bd->max_queue) > > goto out; > > > > bd->queued_cmds++; > > spin_unlock_irq(&bd->lock); > > > > bc = kmem_cache_alloc(bsg_cmd_cachep, GFP_USER); > > This should be GFP_KERNEL. Fixed > > if (unlikely(!bc)) { > > spin_lock_irq(&bd->lock); > > bd->queued_cmds--; > > bc = ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM); > > goto out; > > } > > > > memset(bc, 0, sizeof(*bc)); > > Use kmem_cache_zalloc() above, remove this. Fixed > > bc->bd = bd; > > INIT_LIST_HEAD(&bc->list); > > dprintk("%s: returning free cmd %p\n", bd->name, bc); > > return bc; > > out: > > spin_unlock_irq(&bd->lock); > > return bc; > > } > > > > static inline void > > bsg_del_done_cmd(struct bsg_device *bd, struct bsg_command *bc) > > { > > bd->done_cmds--; > > list_del(&bc->list); > > } > > This only has a single caller. It would be clearer to move this code into > that caller. > > > static inline void > > bsg_add_done_cmd(struct bsg_device *bd, struct bsg_command *bc) > > { > > bd->done_cmds++; > > list_add_tail(&bc->list, &bd->done_list); > > wake_up(&bd->wq_done); > > } > > Ditto. Once this has been moved into the caller, that caller can then use > the neater list_move(). Sure, why not (to both). > > static inline int bsg_io_schedule(struct bsg_device *bd, int state) > > This is too large to inline. Fixed > > { > > DEFINE_WAIT(wait); > > int ret = 0; > > > > spin_lock_irq(&bd->lock); > > > > BUG_ON(bd->done_cmds > bd->queued_cmds); > > > > /* > > * -ENOSPC or -ENODATA? I'm going for -ENODATA, meaning "I have no > > * work to do", even though we return -ENOSPC after this same test > > * during bsg_write() -- there, it means our buffer can't have more > > * bsg_commands added to it, thus has no space left. > > */ > > if (bd->done_cmds == bd->queued_cmds) { > > ret = -ENODATA; > > goto unlock; > > } > > > > if (!test_bit(BSG_F_BLOCK, &bd->flags)) { > > ret = -EAGAIN; > > goto unlock; > > } > > > > prepare_to_wait(&bd->wq_done, &wait, state); > > spin_unlock_irq(&bd->lock); > > io_schedule(); > > finish_wait(&bd->wq_done, &wait); > > No, io_schedule() _must_ be called in state TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE. If it > gets called in state TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE then all the accounting which it > does becomes wrong. > > Fortunately the sole caller of this function _does_ use > TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE. The `state' arg to this function should be removed. Fixed > > if ((state == TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE) && signal_pending(current)) > > ret = -ERESTARTSYS; > > And this code should be deleted. Fixed > > return ret; > > unlock: > > spin_unlock_irq(&bd->lock); > > return ret; > > } > > > > static int blk_fill_sgv4_hdr_rq(request_queue_t *q, struct request *rq, > > struct sg_io_v4 *hdr, int has_write_perm) > > { > > memset(rq->cmd, 0, BLK_MAX_CDB); /* ATAPI hates garbage after CDB */ > > > > if (copy_from_user(rq->cmd, (void *)(unsigned long)hdr->request, > > hdr->request_len)) > > return -EFAULT; > > > > if (hdr->subprotocol == BSG_SUB_PROTOCOL_SCSI_CMD) { > > if (blk_verify_command(rq->cmd, has_write_perm)) > > return -EPERM; > > } else if (!capable(CAP_SYS_RAWIO)) > > return -EPERM; > > As a reader of this code I'm wondering "hm, why is > BSG_SUB_PROTOCOL_SCSI_CMD unprivileged, while other modes require > CAP_SYS_RAWIO"?. > > This design/policy decision maybe was discussed on a mailing list > somewhere, or even perhaps in a changelog (although I can't find it). But > it is so important, and is so unobvious from a reading of the code that I'd > suggest that it is worth some discussion right here, in a code comment. > It's not unprivileged, it goes through the blk_verify_command() check list. > > /* > > * fill in request structure > > */ > > rq->cmd_len = hdr->request_len; > > rq->cmd_type = REQ_TYPE_BLOCK_PC; > > > > rq->timeout = (hdr->timeout * HZ) / 1000; > > if (!rq->timeout) > > rq->timeout = q->sg_timeout; > > if (!rq->timeout) > > rq->timeout = BLK_DEFAULT_SG_TIMEOUT; > > > > return 0; > > } > > > > /* > > * Check if sg_io_v4 from user is allowed and valid > > */ > > static int > > bsg_validate_sgv4_hdr(request_queue_t *q, struct sg_io_v4 *hdr, int *rw) > > { > > int ret = 0; > > > > if (hdr->guard != 'Q') > > return -EINVAL; > > hm, "Q". What is the user interface to this new stuff? 'Q' is just the magic identifier, like 'S' for sg v4. > What does the code in bsg.c _do_, anyway?? Ho hum. It's a driver for transporting sg v4 commands. > > if (hdr->request_len > BLK_MAX_CDB) > > return -EINVAL; > > if (hdr->dout_xfer_len > (q->max_sectors << 9) || > > hdr->din_xfer_len > (q->max_sectors << 9)) > > Are we sure that nothing here can exceed 4GB now and in the future? We are far away from that in a single command currently and probably ever. > > return -EIO; > > > > switch (hdr->protocol) { > > case BSG_PROTOCOL_SCSI: > > switch (hdr->subprotocol) { > > case BSG_SUB_PROTOCOL_SCSI_CMD: > > case BSG_SUB_PROTOCOL_SCSI_TRANSPORT: > > break; > > default: > > ret = -EINVAL; > > } > > break; > > default: > > ret = -EINVAL; > > } > > > > *rw = hdr->dout_xfer_len ? WRITE : READ; > > return ret; > > } > > > > /* > > * map sg_io_v4 to a request. > > */ > > static struct request * > > bsg_map_hdr(struct bsg_device *bd, struct sg_io_v4 *hdr) > > { > > request_queue_t *q = bd->queue; > > struct request *rq, *next_rq = NULL; > > int ret, rw = 0; /* shut up gcc */ > > The modern way of shutting up gcc is uninitialized_var(). OK, I'll do that. > > unsigned int dxfer_len; > > void *dxferp = NULL; > > > > dprintk("map hdr %llx/%u %llx/%u\n", (unsigned long long) > > hdr->dout_xferp, > > hdr->dout_xfer_len, (unsigned long long) hdr->din_xferp, > > hdr->din_xfer_len); > > > > ret = bsg_validate_sgv4_hdr(q, hdr, &rw); > > if (ret) > > return ERR_PTR(ret); > > > > /* > > * map scatter-gather elements seperately and string them to request > > */ > > rq = blk_get_request(q, rw, GFP_KERNEL); > > if (!rq) > > return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM); > > ret = blk_fill_sgv4_hdr_rq(q, rq, hdr, test_bit(BSG_F_WRITE_PERM, > > &bd->flags)); > > if (ret) > > goto out; > > > > if (rw == WRITE && hdr->din_xfer_len) { > > if (!test_bit(QUEUE_FLAG_BIDI, &q->queue_flags)) { > > ret = -EOPNOTSUPP; > > goto out; > > } > > > > next_rq = blk_get_request(q, READ, GFP_KERNEL); > > if (!next_rq) { > > ret = -ENOMEM; > > goto out; > > } > > rq->next_rq = next_rq; > > > > dxferp = (void*)(unsigned long)hdr->din_xferp; > > So... sg_io_v4.din_xferp is a user virtual address? > > And `struct sg_io_v4' has just become part of the kernel ABI? Beware that > there is a move afoot to require test code, manpages and even LTP testcases > for new ABI extensions. Is this interface documented anywhere? The documentation is likely very scarce atm, if anything. The command layout was discussed at the storage summit and on linux-scsi. > > ret = blk_rq_map_user(q, next_rq, dxferp, hdr->din_xfer_len); > > if (ret) > > goto out; > > } > > > > if (hdr->dout_xfer_len) { > > dxfer_len = hdr->dout_xfer_len; > > dxferp = (void*)(unsigned long)hdr->dout_xferp; > > } else if (hdr->din_xfer_len) { > > dxfer_len = hdr->din_xfer_len; > > dxferp = (void*)(unsigned long)hdr->din_xferp; > > } else > > dxfer_len = 0; > > > > if (dxfer_len) { > > ret = blk_rq_map_user(q, rq, dxferp, dxfer_len); > > if (ret) > > goto out; > > } > > return rq; > > out: > > blk_put_request(rq); > > if (next_rq) { > > blk_rq_unmap_user(next_rq->bio); > > blk_put_request(next_rq); > > } > > return ERR_PTR(ret); > > } > > > > ... > > > > static inline struct bsg_command *bsg_next_done_cmd(struct bsg_device *bd) > > { > > struct bsg_command *bc = NULL; > > > > spin_lock_irq(&bd->lock); > > if (bd->done_cmds) { > > bc = list_entry_bc(bd->done_list.next); > > bsg_del_done_cmd(bd, bc); > > } > > spin_unlock_irq(&bd->lock); > > > > return bc; > > } > > This is too large to inline. Fixed > > static int blk_complete_sgv4_hdr_rq(struct request *rq, struct sg_io_v4 > > *hdr, > > struct bio *bio, struct bio *bidi_bio) > > { > > int ret = 0; > > > > dprintk("rq %p bio %p %u\n", rq, bio, rq->errors); > > /* > > * fill in all the output members > > */ > > hdr->device_status = status_byte(rq->errors); > > hdr->transport_status = host_byte(rq->errors); > > hdr->driver_status = driver_byte(rq->errors); > > hdr->info = 0; > > if (hdr->device_status || hdr->transport_status || hdr->driver_status) > > hdr->info |= SG_INFO_CHECK; > > hdr->din_resid = rq->data_len; > > hdr->response_len = 0; > > > > if (rq->sense_len && hdr->response) { > > int len = min((unsigned int) hdr->max_response_len, > > rq->sense_len); > > Use min_t here Fixed > > ret = copy_to_user((void*)(unsigned long)hdr->response, > > rq->sense, len); > > if (!ret) > > hdr->response_len = len; > > else > > ret = -EFAULT; > > } > > > > if (rq->next_rq) { > > blk_rq_unmap_user(bidi_bio); > > blk_put_request(rq->next_rq); > > } > > > > blk_rq_unmap_user(bio); > > blk_put_request(rq); > > > > return ret; > > } > > > > ... > > > > static ssize_t > > __bsg_read(char __user *buf, size_t count, struct bsg_device *bd, > > const struct iovec *iov, ssize_t *bytes_read) > > { > > struct bsg_command *bc; > > int nr_commands, ret; > > > > if (count % sizeof(struct sg_io_v4)) > > return -EINVAL; > > > > ret = 0; > > nr_commands = count / sizeof(struct sg_io_v4); > > while (nr_commands) { > > bc = bsg_get_done_cmd(bd); > > if (IS_ERR(bc)) { > > ret = PTR_ERR(bc); > > break; > > } > > > > /* > > * this is the only case where we need to copy data back > > * after completing the request. so do that here, > > * bsg_complete_work() cannot do that for us > > */ > > ret = blk_complete_sgv4_hdr_rq(bc->rq, &bc->hdr, bc->bio, > > bc->bidi_bio); > > > > if (copy_to_user(buf, (char *) &bc->hdr, sizeof(bc->hdr))) > > ret = -EFAULT; > > Unneeded cast. Fixed > > bsg_free_command(bc); > > > > if (ret) > > break; > > > > buf += sizeof(struct sg_io_v4); > > *bytes_read += sizeof(struct sg_io_v4); > > nr_commands--; > > } > > > > return ret; > > } > > This function returns zero or a negative errno (as should have been > explainined in its covering comment). Hence its return type of ssize_t is > misleading. It should return `int'. Which is in fact the type of the > local variable which it returns. Fixed > > static inline void bsg_set_block(struct bsg_device *bd, struct file *file) > > { > > if (file->f_flags & O_NONBLOCK) > > clear_bit(BSG_F_BLOCK, &bd->flags); > > else > > set_bit(BSG_F_BLOCK, &bd->flags); > > } > > > > static inline void bsg_set_write_perm(struct bsg_device *bd, struct file > > *file) > > { > > if (file->f_mode & FMODE_WRITE) > > set_bit(BSG_F_WRITE_PERM, &bd->flags); > > else > > clear_bit(BSG_F_WRITE_PERM, &bd->flags); > > } > > Still wondering what all this code does. It _appears_ that the chosen user > interface is via some device-special file? And that an O_NONBLOCK open of > that file has some special (undocumented?) significance? There's no special meaning. IIRC, it's to avoid passing the file around. > > static inline int err_block_err(int ret) > > { > > if (ret && ret != -ENOSPC && ret != -ENODATA && ret != -EAGAIN) > > return 1; > > > > return 0; > > } > > What a strange function. The name is fairly meaningless. A little comment > would help decrease the mystery. It is crap, will fix that. > > static ssize_t > > bsg_read(struct file *file, char __user *buf, size_t count, loff_t *ppos) > > { > > struct bsg_device *bd = file->private_data; > > int ret; > > ssize_t bytes_read; > > > > dprintk("%s: read %Zd bytes\n", bd->name, count); > > > > bsg_set_block(bd, file); > > bytes_read = 0; > > ret = __bsg_read(buf, count, bd, NULL, &bytes_read); > > *ppos = bytes_read; > > > > if (!bytes_read || (bytes_read && err_block_err(ret))) > > bytes_read = ret; > > return bytes_read; > > } > > > > static ssize_t __bsg_write(struct bsg_device *bd, const char __user *buf, > > size_t count, ssize_t *bytes_read) > > { > > struct bsg_command *bc; > > struct request *rq; > > int ret, nr_commands; > > > > if (count % sizeof(struct sg_io_v4)) > > return -EINVAL; > > > > nr_commands = count / sizeof(struct sg_io_v4); > > rq = NULL; > > bc = NULL; > > ret = 0; > > while (nr_commands) { > > request_queue_t *q = bd->queue; > > > > bc = bsg_alloc_command(bd); > > if (IS_ERR(bc)) { > > ret = PTR_ERR(bc); > > bc = NULL; > > break; > > } > > > > bc->uhdr = (struct sg_io_v4 __user *) buf; > > if (copy_from_user(&bc->hdr, buf, sizeof(bc->hdr))) { > > ret = -EFAULT; > > break; > > } > > > > /* > > * get a request, fill in the blanks, and add to request queue > > */ > > rq = bsg_map_hdr(bd, &bc->hdr); > > if (IS_ERR(rq)) { > > ret = PTR_ERR(rq); > > rq = NULL; > > break; > > } > > > > bsg_add_command(bd, q, bc, rq); > > bc = NULL; > > rq = NULL; > > nr_commands--; > > buf += sizeof(struct sg_io_v4); > > *bytes_read += sizeof(struct sg_io_v4); > > } > > > > if (bc) > > bsg_free_command(bc); > > > > return ret; > > } > > Return type should be `int'. Fixed > > static ssize_t > > bsg_write(struct file *file, const char __user *buf, size_t count, loff_t > > *ppos) > > { > > struct bsg_device *bd = file->private_data; > > ssize_t bytes_read; > > This variable should be called bytes_written. Indeed, probably a copy-paste from bsg_read(). > > int ret; > > > > dprintk("%s: write %Zd bytes\n", bd->name, count); > > > > bsg_set_block(bd, file); > > bsg_set_write_perm(bd, file); > > > > bytes_read = 0; > > ret = __bsg_write(bd, buf, count, &bytes_read); > > *ppos = bytes_read; > > > > /* > > * return bytes written on non-fatal errors > > */ > > if (!bytes_read || (bytes_read && err_block_err(ret))) > > bytes_read = ret; > > dprintk("%s: returning %Zd\n", bd->name, bytes_read); > > return bytes_read; > > } > > > > ... > > > > > static struct bsg_device *bsg_add_device(struct inode *inode, > > struct request_queue *rq, > > struct file *file) > > { > > struct bsg_device *bd = NULL; > > Unneeded initialisation. Fixed > > #ifdef BSG_DEBUG > > unsigned char buf[32]; > > #endif > > > > bd = bsg_alloc_device(); > > if (!bd) > > return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM); > > > > bd->queue = rq; > > kobject_get(&rq->kobj); > > bsg_set_block(bd, file); > > > > atomic_set(&bd->ref_count, 1); > > bd->minor = iminor(inode); > > mutex_lock(&bsg_mutex); > > hlist_add_head(&bd->dev_list, > > &bsg_device_list[bsg_list_idx(bd->minor)]); > > > > strncpy(bd->name, rq->bsg_dev.class_dev->class_id, sizeof(bd->name) - > > 1); > > dprintk("bound to <%s>, max queue %d\n", > > format_dev_t(buf, inode->i_rdev), bd->max_queue); > > > > mutex_unlock(&bsg_mutex); > > return bd; > > } > > > > ... > > > > static int > > bsg_ioctl(struct inode *inode, struct file *file, unsigned int cmd, > > unsigned long arg) > > This is an file_operations.ioctl() method. It should instead have been > implemented as an unlocked_ioctl handler. Fixed. > > { > > struct bsg_device *bd = file->private_data; > > int __user *uarg = (int __user *) arg; > > > > if (!bd) > > return -ENXIO; > > This cannot happen, surely? Nope, removed. > > switch (cmd) { > > /* > > * our own ioctls > > */ > > case SG_GET_COMMAND_Q: > > return put_user(bd->max_queue, uarg); > > case SG_SET_COMMAND_Q: { > > int queue; > > > > if (get_user(queue, uarg)) > > return -EFAULT; > > if (queue < 1) > > return -EINVAL; > > > > spin_lock_irq(&bd->lock); > > bd->max_queue = queue; > > spin_unlock_irq(&bd->lock); > > return 0; > > } > > > > /* > > * SCSI/sg ioctls > > */ > > case SG_GET_VERSION_NUM: > > case SCSI_IOCTL_GET_IDLUN: > > case SCSI_IOCTL_GET_BUS_NUMBER: > > case SG_SET_TIMEOUT: > > case SG_GET_TIMEOUT: > > case SG_GET_RESERVED_SIZE: > > case SG_SET_RESERVED_SIZE: > > case SG_EMULATED_HOST: > > case SCSI_IOCTL_SEND_COMMAND: { > > void __user *uarg = (void __user *) arg; > > return scsi_cmd_ioctl(file, bd->queue, NULL, cmd, uarg); > > } > > case SG_IO: { > > struct request *rq; > > struct bio *bio, *bidi_bio = NULL; > > struct sg_io_v4 hdr; > > > > if (copy_from_user(&hdr, uarg, sizeof(hdr))) > > return -EFAULT; > > > > rq = bsg_map_hdr(bd, &hdr); > > if (IS_ERR(rq)) > > return PTR_ERR(rq); > > > > bio = rq->bio; > > if (rq->next_rq) > > bidi_bio = rq->next_rq->bio; > > blk_execute_rq(bd->queue, NULL, rq, 0); > > blk_complete_sgv4_hdr_rq(rq, &hdr, bio, bidi_bio); > > > > if (copy_to_user(uarg, &hdr, sizeof(hdr))) > > return -EFAULT; > > > > return 0; > > } > > /* > > * block device ioctls > > */ > > default: > > #if 0 > > return ioctl_by_bdev(bd->bdev, cmd, arg); > > #else > > return -ENOTTY; > > #endif > > } > > } > > So we perform IO operations on this "device" by opening it and running > ioctls, the args to which point to fairly complex data structures which lie > in userspace and which contain addresses and lengths of userspace IO > buffers? > > What did Christoph think of this? :) The sg v3 duplicates should go, it's remnant of when bsg was a sg v3 driver. > > static struct file_operations bsg_fops = { > > .read = bsg_read, > > .write = bsg_write, > > .poll = bsg_poll, > > .open = bsg_open, > > .release = bsg_release, > > .ioctl = bsg_ioctl, > > unlocked_ioctl, please. Fixed > > .owner = THIS_MODULE, > > }; > > > > void bsg_unregister_queue(struct request_queue *q) > > { > > struct bsg_class_device *bcd = &q->bsg_dev; > > > > if (!bcd->class_dev) > > return; > > Can this happen? Probably only for double unregister, which means it should probably just be a WARN_ON() or something instead. > > mutex_lock(&bsg_mutex); > > sysfs_remove_link(&q->kobj, "bsg"); > > class_device_destroy(bsg_class, MKDEV(BSG_MAJOR, bcd->minor)); > > bcd->class_dev = NULL; > > list_del_init(&bcd->list); > > bsg_device_nr--; > > mutex_unlock(&bsg_mutex); > > } > > EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(bsg_unregister_queue); > > <still wondering what all this code does> > > Would I be correct in assuming that it offers services to device drivers, > which have yet to be hooked up? Yes. As mentioned many lines up, it is a SCSI generic type driver that uses the (now) defined version 4 command structure. So it'll get hooked up to ny capable device. > > int bsg_register_queue(struct request_queue *q, const char *name) > > { > > struct bsg_class_device *bcd, *__bcd; > > dev_t dev; > > int ret = -EMFILE; > > struct class_device *class_dev = NULL; > > > > /* > > * we need a proper transport to send commands, not a stacked device > > */ > > if (!q->request_fn) > > return 0; > > > > bcd = &q->bsg_dev; > > memset(bcd, 0, sizeof(*bcd)); > > INIT_LIST_HEAD(&bcd->list); > > > > mutex_lock(&bsg_mutex); > > if (bsg_device_nr == BSG_MAX_DEVS) { > > printk(KERN_ERR "bsg: too many bsg devices\n"); > > 32768 is a lot of devices. Why is there any limit at all? It is pretty pointless killed. > > goto err; > > } > > > > retry: > > list_for_each_entry(__bcd, &bsg_class_list, list) { > > if (__bcd->minor == bsg_minor_idx) { > > bsg_minor_idx++; > > if (bsg_minor_idx == BSG_MAX_DEVS) > > bsg_minor_idx = 0; > > goto retry; > > } > > } > > > > bcd->minor = bsg_minor_idx++; > > if (bsg_minor_idx == BSG_MAX_DEVS) > > bsg_minor_idx = 0; > > So what's happening here? We're doing a linear, potentially O(n^2) search > for a unique minor number? > > I expect that you'll find that lib/idr.c provides a more elegant solution. > The tty code uses this, and there are other examples around the place. idr will do nicely I think. I'll punt that to Tomo, he is the bsg maintainer. > > bcd->queue = q; > > dev = MKDEV(BSG_MAJOR, bcd->minor); > > class_dev = class_device_create(bsg_class, NULL, dev, bcd->dev, "%s", > > name); > > if (IS_ERR(class_dev)) { > > ret = PTR_ERR(class_dev); > > goto err; > > } > > bcd->class_dev = class_dev; > > > > if (q->kobj.sd) { > > ret = sysfs_create_link(&q->kobj, &bcd->class_dev->kobj, "bsg"); > > if (ret) > > goto err; > > } > > > > list_add_tail(&bcd->list, &bsg_class_list); > > bsg_device_nr++; > > > > mutex_unlock(&bsg_mutex); > > return 0; > > err: > > if (class_dev) > > class_device_destroy(bsg_class, MKDEV(BSG_MAJOR, bcd->minor)); > > mutex_unlock(&bsg_mutex); > > return ret; > > } > > EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(bsg_register_queue); > > > > ... > > > > > In terms of presentation: this code hit the tree as base patch plus what > appear to be 20 bugfixes, none of which are really interesting or relevant > to mainline. Personally I think it would be nicer if all that out-of-tree > development work was cleaned up and the new code goes in as a single hit. > > This makes it a lot easier to find out "wtf does this code all do". One > finds the first commit and reads the changlog. But this algorithm yields: > > bsg: support for full generic block layer SG v3 > > which is not helpful. I agree, I did consider rebasing the merging all patches into a single commit prior to submission. In retrospect that would have been better, the bug fixes commits prior to inclusion is not that interesting. -- Jens Axboe - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-scsi" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html