Hello, Thanks for your patch! However, it is badly line wrapped, you should consider sending your patch with "git send-email".
On Sat, 8 Apr 2017 15:07:14 +0200, Gerald Guillaume wrote: > --- linux-3.18/drivers/net/ethernet/marvell/mvpp2.c 2017-04-03 > 10:29:31.863264347 +0200 > +++ linux-3.x/drivers/net/ethernet/marvell/mvpp2.c 2017-04-03 > 10:45:23.008339453 +0200 > @@ -2997,7 +2997,7 @@ > struct mvpp2_prs_entry *pe; > int tid; > > - pe = kzalloc(sizeof(*pe), GFP_KERNEL); > + pe = kzalloc(sizeof(*pe), GFP_ATOMIC); > if (!pe) > return NULL; > mvpp2_prs_tcam_lu_set(pe, MVPP2_PRS_LU_MAC); > @@ -3059,7 +3059,7 @@ > if (tid < 0) > return tid; > > - pe = kzalloc(sizeof(*pe), GFP_KERNEL); > + pe = kzalloc(sizeof(*pe), GFP_ATOMIC); > if (!pe) > return -1; > mvpp2_prs_tcam_lu_set(pe, MVPP2_PRS_LU_MAC); I am wondering if doing a GFP_ATOMIC allocation for this is the right solution. Should it be pre-allocated instead? I would have to look at how other drivers typically do this. Perhaps allocating on the stack is reasonable? After all, sizeof(struct mvpp2_prs_entry) is only: 4 + 6 * 4 + 4 * 4 = 44 bytes. It's allocated at the beginning of the function, and freed at the end, so it really calls for a local variable. Anyway, I think it's worth investigating a different solution than blindly converting to a GFP_ATOMIC allocation. Best regards, Thomas -- Thomas Petazzoni, CTO, Free Electrons Embedded Linux and Kernel engineering http://free-electrons.com