Re: [PATCH] drivers/char/specialix.c: stop inlining largish static functions

From: Denys Vlasenko
Date: Tue Apr 08 2008 - 18:19:27 EST


On Tuesday 08 April 2008 23:38, Jiri Slaby wrote:
> > drivers/char/specialix.c has unusually large number
> > of static inline functions - 22.
> >
> > I looked through them. The file is positively inline-happy.
> > Inlines with udelay() calls. Inlines with complex loops.
> > Nested inlines. Rarely called inlines (e.g. with request_region
> > inside).
> >
> > This patch removes "inline" from 15 static functions
> > (regardless of number of callsites - gcc nowadays auto-inlines
> > statics with one callsite).
> >
> > Size difference for 32bit x86:
> > text data bss dec hex filename
> > 21669 204 8780 30653 77bd linux-2.6-ALLYES/drivers/char/specialix.o
> > 18470 204 8780 27454 6b3e linux-2.6.inline-ALLYES/drivers/char/specialix.o
> >
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Denys Vlasenko <vda.linux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>
> - static const char *badmagic =
> + static const char badmagic[] =
> KERN_ERR "sx: Warning: bad specialix port magic number for device %s in %s\n";
> - static const char *badinfo =
> + static const char badinfo[] =
> KERN_ERR "sx: Warning: null specialix port for device %s in %s\n";
>
>
> BTW what's this good for? I mean, why we need this as a variable not directly as
> a parameter?
>
> if (!port) {
> printk(badinfo, name, routine);
> return 1;
> }
> if (port->magic != SPECIALIX_MAGIC) {
> printk(badmagic, name, routine);
> return 1;
> }

I am sure these strings can be used directly in printk,
there should be no size difference (sans gcc adding padding
to string arrays "just because").

I chose to make minimal change which only eliminates the waste
of having a pinter to these strings (char *msg = "xxx"
versus char msg[] = "xxx"), leaving more extensive editing
to someone who wants to attack specialix.c on the wider front.
--
vda
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/