Re: Insane kfifo_put API

From: Stefani Seibold
Date: Sun Jun 16 2013 - 09:16:50 EST


I have cross checked this use case. This was tested, but i doesn't work
any more. So i need a little bit time to fix it. The macro for this are
a little bit tricky, but i think there is a way to solve this issue.

For the next two weeks i am heavy busy in a final project stage, so
please be patient.

BTW: Insane is a hard word for an API which was reviewed by a lot of
people.

Am Sonntag, den 16.06.2013, 12:59 +0100 schrieb Russell King - ARM
Linux:
> So, this kfifo API... Here's an example:
>
> Let's say that we want a kfifo of structure pointers:
>
> DECLARE_KFIFO(my_ptr_kfifo, struct my_struct *, SIZE);
>
> Now, to extract pointers from this, it's relatively straight forward:
>
> struct my_struct *ptr;
>
> success = kfifo_get(&my_ptr_kfifo, &ptr);
>
> Nothing wrong with that - kfifo_get looks just like a normal C function
> which is good. However, what about adding pointers? This is where things
> become really quite horrid. It took many attempts to find out what the
> API requires - and that's a sign of a bad API IMHO.
>
> So, this is what the kfifo API requires:
>
> struct my_struct *ptr = something;
> const struct my_struct *my_other_ptr = ptr;
>
> success = kfifo_put(&my_ptr_kfifo, &my_other_ptr);
>
> But... why? This is wrong because:
>
> 1. the const-ness of 'my_other_ptr' is not saying that the value of the
> pointer is const, it's saying that the data pointed to by the pointer
> is const.
> 2. the kfifo API should have no regard for the const-ness of the data
> pointed to by the object its storing (in this case, the value of
> the pointer, not the data itself).
> 3. it forces users to jump through unnecessary hoops to use this API.
> 4. in any case, the data's const-ness is lost through the put to the
> get operation!
>
> I almost gave up with it and rolled my own over this, trying to get the
> compiler not to warn (which it was obviously doing because something
> was wrong with the code) - it was only through lots of experimentation
> and reading other users that I found something which worked through this
> obscure API (as above).
>
> So, what should the API be?
>
> success = kfifo_put(&my_ptr_kfifo, ptr);
>
> To get there means every user needs to change, thankfully there are not
> that many. In doing so, we can also get rid of one unnecessary members
> of the kfifo struct, namely ptr_const.
>
> What's more is that those using it for integers also get a sane API:
>
> unsigned my_uint;
>
> kfifo_get(&my_uint_fifo, &my_uint)
>
> kfifo_put(&my_uint_fifo, my_uint);
>
> rather than also having to take the address in the _put API. And it
> could work that way for structures too:
>
> struct my_struct my_str;
>
> kfifo_get(&my_struct_fifo, &my_str);
>
> kfifo_put(&my_struct_fifo, my_str);
>
> The last is probably the only questionable one, as it looks like passing
> a structure through a function argument, but as kfifo_put() is already a
> (huge) macro, that's not really a problem.
>
> Here's some of the examples of code in drivers which suffer with the
> current API:
>
> OMAP drm:
> DECLARE_KFIFO_PTR(unpin_fifo, struct drm_gem_object *);
> ...
> if (kfifo_put(&omap_plane->unpin_fifo,
> (const struct drm_gem_object **)&bo)) {
> ...
> struct drm_gem_object *bo = NULL;
>
> while (kfifo_get(&omap_plane->unpin_fifo, &bo)) {
> omap_gem_put_paddr(bo);
> drm_gem_object_unreference_unlocked(bo);
> }
> ...
> ret = kfifo_alloc(&omap_plane->unpin_fifo, 16, GFP_KERNEL);
>
> tildc:
>
> struct drm_framebuffer *fb;
>
> while (kfifo_get(&tilcdc_crtc->unref_fifo, &fb))
> drm_framebuffer_unreference(fb);
> ...
> if (kfifo_put(&tilcdc_crtc->unref_fifo,
> (const struct drm_framebuffer **)&tilcdc_crtc->scanout[n])) {
> ...
> ret = kfifo_alloc(&tilcdc_crtc->unref_fifo, 16, GFP_KERNEL);
>
> This API is luckily only about six users of this macro in the mainline
> kernel, so it shouldn't be that big a change to change this to be sane.
>
> Comments?


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