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* fsdev/p9array.h: convert Doxygen -> kerneldoc formatChristian Schoenebeck2022-03-071-17/+21
| | | | | | | | | API doc comments in QEMU are supposed to be in kerneldoc format, so convert API doc comments from Doxygen format to kerneldoc format. Signed-off-by: Christian Schoenebeck <qemu_oss@crudebyte.com> Reviewed-by: Greg Kurz <groug@kaod.org> Message-Id: <2e2d46a402560f155de322d95789ba107d728885.1646314856.git.qemu_oss@crudebyte.com>
* fsdev/p9array.h: check scalar type in P9ARRAY_NEW()Christian Schoenebeck2021-10-271-0/+6
| | | | | | | | | | Make sure at compile time that the scalar type of the array requested to be created via P9ARRAY_NEW() matches the scalar type of the passed auto reference variable (unique pointer). Suggested-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Christian Schoenebeck <qemu_oss@crudebyte.com> Message-Id: <c1965e2a096835dc9e1d4d659dfb15d96755cbe0.1633097129.git.qemu_oss@crudebyte.com>
* 9pfs: introduce P9ArrayChristian Schoenebeck2021-10-271-0/+154
Implements deep auto free of arrays while retaining common C-style squared bracket access. Main purpose of this API is to get rid of error prone individual array deallocation pathes in user code, i.e. turning something like this: void doSomething(size_t n) { Foo *foos = malloc(n * sizeof(Foo)); for (...) { foos[i].s = malloc(...); if (...) { goto out; } } out: if (...) { for (...) { /* deep deallocation */ free(foos[i].s); } /* array deallocation */ free(foos); } } into something more simple and safer like: void doSomething(size_t n) { P9ARRAY_REF(Foo) foos = NULL; P9ARRAY_NEW(Foo, foos, n); for (...) { foos[i].s = malloc(...); if (...) { return; /* array auto freed here */ } } /* array auto freed here */ } Unlike GArray, P9Array does not require special macros, function calls or struct member dereferencing to access the individual array elements: C-array = P9Array: vs. GArray: for (...) { | for (...) { ... = arr[i].m; | ... = g_array_index(arr, Foo, i).m; arr[i].m = ... ; | g_array_index(arr, Foo, i).m = ... ; } | } So existing C-style array code can be retained with only very little changes; basically limited to replacing array allocation call and of course removing individual array deallocation pathes. In this initial version P9Array only supports the concept of unique pointers, i.e. it does not support reference counting. The array (and all dynamically allocated memory of individual array elements) is auto freed once execution leaves the scope of the reference variable (unique pointer) associated with the array. Internally a flex array struct is used in combination with macros spanned over a continuous memory space for both the array's meta data (private) and the actual C-array user data (public): struct P9Array##scalar_type { size_t len; /* private, hidden from user code */ scalar_type first[]; /* public, directly exposed to user code */ }; Which has the advantage that the compiler automatically takes care about correct padding, alignment and overall size for all scalar data types on all systems and that the user space exposed pointer can directly be translated back and forth between user space C-array pointer and internal P9Array struct whenever needed, in a type-safe manner. This header file is released under MIT license, to allow this file being used in other C-projects as well. The common QEMU license GPL2+ might have construed a conflict for other projects. Signed-off-by: Christian Schoenebeck <qemu_oss@crudebyte.com> Message-Id: <a954ef47b5ac26085a16c5c2aec8695374e0424d.1633097129.git.qemu_oss@crudebyte.com>