[PATCH 4/8] v2 Allow memory block to span multiple memory sections
Dave Hansen
dave at linux.vnet.ibm.com
Tue Sep 28 09:55:07 EST 2010
On Mon, 2010-09-27 at 14:25 -0500, Nathan Fontenot wrote:
> +static inline int base_memory_block_id(int section_nr)
> +{
> + return section_nr / sections_per_block;
> +}
...
> - mutex_lock(&mem_sysfs_mutex);
> -
> - mem->phys_index = __section_nr(section);
> + scn_nr = __section_nr(section);
> + mem->phys_index = base_memory_block_id(scn_nr) * sections_per_block;
I'm really regretting giving this variable such a horrid name. I suck.
I think this is correct now:
mem->phys_index = base_memory_block_id(scn_nr) * sections_per_block;
mem->phys_index = section_nr / sections_per_block * sections_per_block;
mem->phys_index = section_nr
Since it gets exported to userspace this way:
> +static ssize_t show_mem_start_phys_index(struct sys_device *dev,
> struct sysdev_attribute *attr, char *buf)
> {
> struct memory_block *mem =
> container_of(dev, struct memory_block, sysdev);
> - return sprintf(buf, "%08lx\n", mem->phys_index / sections_per_block);
> + unsigned long phys_index;
> +
> + phys_index = mem->start_phys_index / sections_per_block;
> + return sprintf(buf, "%08lx\n", phys_index);
> +}
The only other thing I'd say is that we need to put phys_index out of
its misery and call it what it is now: a section number. I think it's
OK to call them "start/end_section_nr", at least inside the kernel. I
intentionally used "phys_index" terminology in sysfs so that we _could_
eventually do this stuff and break the relationship between sections and
the sysfs dirs, but I think keeping the terminology around inside the
kernel is confusing now.
-- Dave
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