On 6/5/25 12:46, Stefano Garzarella wrote: > On Wed, Jun 04, 2025 at 09:10:19PM +0200, Michal Luczaj wrote: >> On 6/4/25 11:07, Stefano Garzarella wrote: >>> On Wed, May 28, 2025 at 10:44:42PM +0200, Michal Luczaj wrote: >>>> +static int __get_transports(void) >>>> +{ >>>> + /* Order must match transports defined in util.h. >>>> + * man nm: "d" The symbol is in the initialized data section. >>>> + */ >>>> + const char * const syms[] = { >>>> + "d loopback_transport", >>>> + "d virtio_transport", >>>> + "d vhost_transport", >>>> + "d vmci_transport", >>>> + "d hvs_transport", >>>> + }; >>> >>> I would move this array (or a macro that define it), near the transport >>> defined in util.h, so they are near and we can easily update/review >>> changes. >>> >>> BTW what about adding static asserts to check we are aligned? >> >> Something like >> >> #define KNOWN_TRANSPORTS \ > > What about KNOWN_TRANSPORTS(_) ? Ah, yeah. >> _(LOOPBACK, "loopback") \ >> _(VIRTIO, "virtio") \ >> _(VHOST, "vhost") \ >> _(VMCI, "vmci") \ >> _(HYPERV, "hvs") >> >> enum transport { >> TRANSPORT_COUNTER_BASE = __COUNTER__ + 1, >> #define _(name, symbol) \ >> TRANSPORT_##name = _BITUL(__COUNTER__ - TRANSPORT_COUNTER_BASE), >> KNOWN_TRANSPORTS >> TRANSPORT_NUM = __COUNTER__ - TRANSPORT_COUNTER_BASE, >> #undef _ >> }; >> >> static char * const transport_ksyms[] = { >> #define _(name, symbol) "d " symbol "_transport", >> KNOWN_TRANSPORTS >> #undef _ >> }; >> >> static_assert(ARRAY_SIZE(transport_ksyms) == TRANSPORT_NUM); >> >> ? > > Yep, this is even better, thanks :-) Although checkpatch complains: ERROR: Macros with complex values should be enclosed in parentheses #105: FILE: tools/testing/vsock/util.h:11: +#define KNOWN_TRANSPORTS(_) \ + _(LOOPBACK, "loopback") \ + _(VIRTIO, "virtio") \ + _(VHOST, "vhost") \ + _(VMCI, "vmci") \ + _(HYPERV, "hvs") BUT SEE: do {} while (0) advice is over-stated in a few situations: The more obvious case is macros, like MODULE_PARM_DESC, invoked at file-scope, where C disallows code (it must be in functions). See $exceptions if you have one to add by name. More troublesome is declarative macros used at top of new scope, like DECLARE_PER_CPU. These might just compile with a do-while-0 wrapper, but would be incorrect. Most of these are handled by detecting struct,union,etc declaration primitives in $exceptions. Theres also macros called inside an if (block), which "return" an expression. These cannot do-while, and need a ({}) wrapper. Enjoy this qualification while we work to improve our heuristics. ERROR: Macros with complex values should be enclosed in parentheses #114: FILE: tools/testing/vsock/util.h:20: + #define _(name, symbol) \ + TRANSPORT_##name = BIT(__COUNTER__ - TRANSPORT_COUNTER_BASE), WARNING: Argument 'symbol' is not used in function-like macro #114: FILE: tools/testing/vsock/util.h:20: + #define _(name, symbol) \ + TRANSPORT_##name = BIT(__COUNTER__ - TRANSPORT_COUNTER_BASE), WARNING: Argument 'name' is not used in function-like macro #122: FILE: tools/testing/vsock/util.h:28: + #define _(name, symbol) "d " symbol "_transport", Is it ok to ignore this? FWIW, I see the same ERRORs due to similarly used preprocessor directives in fs/bcachefs/alloc_background_format.h, and the same WARNINGs about unused macro arguments in arch/x86/include/asm/asm.h (e.g. __ASM_SEL).