Re: [PATCH 1/2 v4] cleanup: Add cond_guard() to conditional guards

From: Jonathan Cameron
Date: Wed Feb 14 2024 - 13:10:58 EST


On Tue, 13 Feb 2024 17:51:26 +0100
"Fabio M. De Francesco" <fabio.maria.de.francesco@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Thursday, 8 February 2024 14:04:23 CET Fabio M. De Francesco wrote:
> > Add cond_guard() macro to conditional guards.
> >
> > cond_guard() is a guard to be used with the conditional variants of locks,
> > like down_read_trylock() or mutex_lock_interruptible().
> >
> > It takes a statement (or statement-expression) that is passed as its
> > second argument. That statement (or statement-expression) is executed if
> > waiting for a lock is interrupted or if a _trylock() fails in case of
> > contention.
> >
> > Usage example:
> >
> > cond_guard(mutex_intr, return -EINTR, &mutex);
> >
> > Consistent with other usage of _guard(), locks are unlocked at the exit of
> > the scope where cond_guard() is called.
> >
> [snip]
> >
> > +#define cond_guard(_name, _fail, args...) \
> > + CLASS(_name, scope)(args); \
> > + if (!__guard_ptr(_name)(&scope)) _fail; \
> > + else { }
> > +
>
> I have converted and tested several functions in drivers/cxl and found that
> there are cases where this macro needs to be called twice in the same scope.
>
> The current implementation fails to compile because any subsequent call to
> cond_guard() redefines "scope".
>
> I have a solution for this, which is to instantiate a differently named
> variable each time cond_guard() is used:
>
> #define __UNIQUE_LINE_ID(prefix) __PASTE(__PASTE(__UNIQUE_ID_, prefix), __LINE__)
> #define cond_guard(_name, _fail, args...) \
> CLASS(_name, __UNIQUE_LINE_ID(scope))(args); \
> if (!__guard_ptr(_name)(&__UNIQUE_LINE_ID(scope))) _fail; \
> else { }
>
> But, before sending v5, I think it's best to wait for comments from those with
> more experience than me.

Ah. So you can't use __UNIQUE_ID as guard does because we need it to be stable
across the two uses. What you have looks fine to me.
We might end up with someone putting multiple calls in a macro but in my
view anyone doing that level of complexity in a macro is shooting themselves
in the foot.

Jonathan


>
> Fabio
>
>
>
>