Re: [PATCHv2] hw_random: add timeriomem-rng driver

From: Alexander Clouter
Date: Tue Feb 10 2009 - 14:50:15 EST


Hi,

* Alexander Clouter <alex@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> [2009-02-10 19:39:04+0000]:
>
> * Herbert Xu <herbert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> [2009-02-10 15:57:49+1100]:
> >
> > Sorry, but this just doesn't work for O_NONBLOCK reads. What'll
> > happen is that the first failed read will return -EAGAIN, and when
> > we're called again immediately (because hwrng polling support is
> > non-existant), it'll just read the data right away because now
> > there is no timer.
> >
> My original code[1] approach, with timer_pending() in there, would have
> been okay then, right?
> ----
> if (timer_pending(&timeriomem_rng_timer)) {
> if (!wait)
> return 0;
>
> del_timer_sync(&timeriomem_rng_timer);
> delay = timeriomem_rng_timer.expires - jiffies;
>
> schedule_timeout_uninterruptible(delay);
> }
> ----
>
> [snipped]
> >
> > Instead of deleting the timer above, why not create a rng->present
> > variable which you set to zero here, and the timer sets it to
> > non-zero. Then you just need to return rng->present in your
> > data_present function.
> >
> Sounds fair, better than the timer_pending approach and easier to
> understand.
>
Actually, as timer_pending() just reads a field in timer_list (or so
says the 'manual'), would it not be a waste to have a second effectively
duplicate variable? In a blocking read of data_presnt you would have to
have del_timer_sync() anyway...the two approaches would be identical
except for the rng->present variable approach would force us to waste a
whole extra bit of ram?

Should I keep with my old original timer_pending() approach?

Of course I could be talking rubbish...

Cheers

--
Alexander Clouter
.sigmonster says: So many men; so little time.
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