On 06/14/10 20:43, Kostik Belousov wrote:
On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 08:34:15PM +1000, Lawrence Stewart wrote:
On 06/14/10 18:52, Kostik Belousov wrote:
On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 11:52:49AM +1000, Lawrence Stewart wrote:
On 06/13/10 20:10, Pawel Jakub Dawidek wrote:
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 02:39:55AM +0000, Lawrence Stewart wrote:
[snip]
Modified: head/sys/sys/pcpu.h
==============================================================================
--- head/sys/sys/pcpu.h Sun Jun 13 01:27:29 2010 (r209118)
+++ head/sys/sys/pcpu.h Sun Jun 13 02:39:55 2010 (r209119)
@@ -106,6 +106,17 @@ extern uintptr_t dpcpu_off[];
#define DPCPU_ID_GET(i, n) (*DPCPU_ID_PTR(i, n))
#define DPCPU_ID_SET(i, n, v) (*DPCPU_ID_PTR(i, n) = v)
+/*
+ * Utility macros.
+ */
+#define DPCPU_SUM(n, var, sum) \
+do { \
+ (sum) = 0; \
+ u_int i; \
+ CPU_FOREACH(i) \
+ (sum) += (DPCPU_ID_PTR(i, n))->var; \
+} while (0)
I'd suggest first swapping variable declaration and '(sum) = 0;'.
Also using 'i' as a counter in macro can easly lead to name collision.
If you need to do it, I'd suggest '_i' or something.
Given that the DPCPU variable name space is flat and variable names have
to be unique, perhaps something like the following would address the
concerns raised?
#define DPCPU_SUM(n, var, sum) \
do { \
u_int _##n##_i; \
(sum) = 0; \
CPU_FOREACH(_##n##_i) \
(sum) += (DPCPU_ID_PTR(_##n##_i, n))->var; \
} while (0)
You do not have to jump through this. Mostly by convention, in our kernel
sources, names with "_" prefix are reserved for the infrastructure (cannot
say implementation). I think it is quite safe to use _i for the iteration
variable.
As an example of this, look at sys/sys/mount.h, implementation of
VFS_NEEDGIANT, VFS_LOCK_GIANT etc macros. They do use gcc ({}) extension
to provide function-like macros, but this is irrelevant. Or, look at
the VFS_ASSERT_GIANT that is exactly like what you need.
Ok cool, thanks for the info and pointers (I didn't know about the ({})
extension or that "_" prefix was definitely reserved). I'm happy to use
_i. Does the following diff against head look suitable to commit?
--- a/sys/sys/pcpu.h Sun Jun 13 02:39:55 2010 +0000
+++ b/sys/sys/pcpu.h Mon Jun 14 20:12:27 2010 +1000
@@ -111,10 +111,10 @@
*/
#define DPCPU_SUM(n, var, sum) \
do { \
+ u_int _i; \
(sum) = 0; \
- u_int i; \
- CPU_FOREACH(i) \
- (sum) += (DPCPU_ID_PTR(i, n))->var; \
+ CPU_FOREACH(_i) \
+ (sum) += (DPCPU_ID_PTR(_i, n))->var; \
} while (0)
You might want to introduce local accumulator to prevent several evaluations
of sum, to avoid possible side-effects. Then, after, the loop, do single
asignment to the the sum.
Or, you could ditch the sum at all, indeed using ({}) and returning the
result. __typeof is your friend to select proper type of accumulator.
So, something like this?
#define DPCPU_SUM(n, var) __extension__ \
({ \
u_int _i; \
__typeof((DPCPU_PTR(n))->var) sum; \
\
sum = 0; \
CPU_FOREACH(_i) { \
sum += (DPCPU_ID_PTR(_i, n))->var; \
} \
sum; \
})
Which can be used like this:
totalss.n_in = DPCPU_SUM(ss, n_in);
I've tested the above and it works. I also prefer the idea of having
DPCPU_SUM return the sum so that you can do "var = DPCPU_SUM(...)". My
only concern with this method is that the caller no longer has the
choice to make the sum variable a larger type to avoid overflow. It
would be nice to be able to have the DPCPU vars be uint32_t but be able
to sum them into a uint64_t accumulator for example. Perhaps this isn't
really an issue though... I'm not sure.
Thoughts?
Cheers,
Lawrence
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