Re: [PATCH 01/18] block/rnbd: fix mixed module-builtin object

From: Andrew Davis
Date: Tue Nov 29 2022 - 13:25:53 EST


On 11/21/22 11:59 PM, Masahiro Yamada wrote:
On Tue, Nov 22, 2022 at 6:18 AM Andrew Davis <afd@xxxxxx> wrote:

On 11/19/22 5:04 PM, Alexander Lobakin wrote:
From: Masahiro Yamada <masahiroy@xxxxxxxxxx>

With CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RNBD_CLIENT=m and CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RNBD_SERVER=y
(or vice versa), rnbd-common.o is linked to a module and also to
vmlinux even though CFLAGS are different between builtins and modules.

This is the same situation as fixed by commit 637a642f5ca5 ("zstd:
Fixing mixed module-builtin objects").

Turn rnbd_access_mode_str() into an inline function.


Why inline? All you should need is "static" to keep these internal to
each compilation unit. Inline also bloats the object files when the
function is called from multiple places. Let the compiler decide when
to inline.

Andrew


Since it is a header file.


In header files, "static inline" should be always used.
Never "static".


My comment was more "why"?


If a header is included from a C file and there is a function
that is not used from that C file,
"static" would emit -Wunused-function warning
(-Wunused-function is enabled by -Wall, which is the case
for the kernel build).



Inline still hints to the compiler to inline, causing unneeded
object size bloat. Using "inline" to signal something else (that
the function may be unused) when we already have a flag for that
(__maybe_unused) feels wrong.

Seems this was already debated way back in 2006.. So maybe not
worth revisiting today, but still a cleanup that could be good
to think more about later.

Andrew