tmp_suning_uos_patched/lib/bitmap.c
Alexey Dobriyan 50ac2d694f seq_file: add seq_cpumask(), seq_nodemask()
Short enough reads from /proc/irq/*/smp_affinity return -EINVAL for no
good reason.

This became noticed with NR_CPUS=4096 patches, when length of printed
representation of cpumask becase 1152, but cat(1) continued to read with
1024-byte chunks.  bitmap_scnprintf() in good faith fills buffer, returns
1023, check returns -EINVAL.

Fix it by switching to seq_file, so handler will just fill buffer and
doesn't care about offsets, length, filling EOF and all this crap.

For that add seq_bitmap(), and wrappers around it -- seq_cpumask() and
seq_nodemask().

Signed-off-by: Alexey Dobriyan <adobriyan@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Jackson <pj@sgi.com>
Cc: Mike Travis <travis@sgi.com>
Cc: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2008-08-12 16:07:30 -07:00

1010 lines
30 KiB
C

/*
* lib/bitmap.c
* Helper functions for bitmap.h.
*
* This source code is licensed under the GNU General Public License,
* Version 2. See the file COPYING for more details.
*/
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/ctype.h>
#include <linux/errno.h>
#include <linux/bitmap.h>
#include <linux/bitops.h>
#include <asm/uaccess.h>
/*
* bitmaps provide an array of bits, implemented using an an
* array of unsigned longs. The number of valid bits in a
* given bitmap does _not_ need to be an exact multiple of
* BITS_PER_LONG.
*
* The possible unused bits in the last, partially used word
* of a bitmap are 'don't care'. The implementation makes
* no particular effort to keep them zero. It ensures that
* their value will not affect the results of any operation.
* The bitmap operations that return Boolean (bitmap_empty,
* for example) or scalar (bitmap_weight, for example) results
* carefully filter out these unused bits from impacting their
* results.
*
* These operations actually hold to a slightly stronger rule:
* if you don't input any bitmaps to these ops that have some
* unused bits set, then they won't output any set unused bits
* in output bitmaps.
*
* The byte ordering of bitmaps is more natural on little
* endian architectures. See the big-endian headers
* include/asm-ppc64/bitops.h and include/asm-s390/bitops.h
* for the best explanations of this ordering.
*/
int __bitmap_empty(const unsigned long *bitmap, int bits)
{
int k, lim = bits/BITS_PER_LONG;
for (k = 0; k < lim; ++k)
if (bitmap[k])
return 0;
if (bits % BITS_PER_LONG)
if (bitmap[k] & BITMAP_LAST_WORD_MASK(bits))
return 0;
return 1;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_empty);
int __bitmap_full(const unsigned long *bitmap, int bits)
{
int k, lim = bits/BITS_PER_LONG;
for (k = 0; k < lim; ++k)
if (~bitmap[k])
return 0;
if (bits % BITS_PER_LONG)
if (~bitmap[k] & BITMAP_LAST_WORD_MASK(bits))
return 0;
return 1;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_full);
int __bitmap_equal(const unsigned long *bitmap1,
const unsigned long *bitmap2, int bits)
{
int k, lim = bits/BITS_PER_LONG;
for (k = 0; k < lim; ++k)
if (bitmap1[k] != bitmap2[k])
return 0;
if (bits % BITS_PER_LONG)
if ((bitmap1[k] ^ bitmap2[k]) & BITMAP_LAST_WORD_MASK(bits))
return 0;
return 1;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_equal);
void __bitmap_complement(unsigned long *dst, const unsigned long *src, int bits)
{
int k, lim = bits/BITS_PER_LONG;
for (k = 0; k < lim; ++k)
dst[k] = ~src[k];
if (bits % BITS_PER_LONG)
dst[k] = ~src[k] & BITMAP_LAST_WORD_MASK(bits);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_complement);
/**
* __bitmap_shift_right - logical right shift of the bits in a bitmap
* @dst : destination bitmap
* @src : source bitmap
* @shift : shift by this many bits
* @bits : bitmap size, in bits
*
* Shifting right (dividing) means moving bits in the MS -> LS bit
* direction. Zeros are fed into the vacated MS positions and the
* LS bits shifted off the bottom are lost.
*/
void __bitmap_shift_right(unsigned long *dst,
const unsigned long *src, int shift, int bits)
{
int k, lim = BITS_TO_LONGS(bits), left = bits % BITS_PER_LONG;
int off = shift/BITS_PER_LONG, rem = shift % BITS_PER_LONG;
unsigned long mask = (1UL << left) - 1;
for (k = 0; off + k < lim; ++k) {
unsigned long upper, lower;
/*
* If shift is not word aligned, take lower rem bits of
* word above and make them the top rem bits of result.
*/
if (!rem || off + k + 1 >= lim)
upper = 0;
else {
upper = src[off + k + 1];
if (off + k + 1 == lim - 1 && left)
upper &= mask;
}
lower = src[off + k];
if (left && off + k == lim - 1)
lower &= mask;
dst[k] = upper << (BITS_PER_LONG - rem) | lower >> rem;
if (left && k == lim - 1)
dst[k] &= mask;
}
if (off)
memset(&dst[lim - off], 0, off*sizeof(unsigned long));
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_shift_right);
/**
* __bitmap_shift_left - logical left shift of the bits in a bitmap
* @dst : destination bitmap
* @src : source bitmap
* @shift : shift by this many bits
* @bits : bitmap size, in bits
*
* Shifting left (multiplying) means moving bits in the LS -> MS
* direction. Zeros are fed into the vacated LS bit positions
* and those MS bits shifted off the top are lost.
*/
void __bitmap_shift_left(unsigned long *dst,
const unsigned long *src, int shift, int bits)
{
int k, lim = BITS_TO_LONGS(bits), left = bits % BITS_PER_LONG;
int off = shift/BITS_PER_LONG, rem = shift % BITS_PER_LONG;
for (k = lim - off - 1; k >= 0; --k) {
unsigned long upper, lower;
/*
* If shift is not word aligned, take upper rem bits of
* word below and make them the bottom rem bits of result.
*/
if (rem && k > 0)
lower = src[k - 1];
else
lower = 0;
upper = src[k];
if (left && k == lim - 1)
upper &= (1UL << left) - 1;
dst[k + off] = lower >> (BITS_PER_LONG - rem) | upper << rem;
if (left && k + off == lim - 1)
dst[k + off] &= (1UL << left) - 1;
}
if (off)
memset(dst, 0, off*sizeof(unsigned long));
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_shift_left);
void __bitmap_and(unsigned long *dst, const unsigned long *bitmap1,
const unsigned long *bitmap2, int bits)
{
int k;
int nr = BITS_TO_LONGS(bits);
for (k = 0; k < nr; k++)
dst[k] = bitmap1[k] & bitmap2[k];
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_and);
void __bitmap_or(unsigned long *dst, const unsigned long *bitmap1,
const unsigned long *bitmap2, int bits)
{
int k;
int nr = BITS_TO_LONGS(bits);
for (k = 0; k < nr; k++)
dst[k] = bitmap1[k] | bitmap2[k];
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_or);
void __bitmap_xor(unsigned long *dst, const unsigned long *bitmap1,
const unsigned long *bitmap2, int bits)
{
int k;
int nr = BITS_TO_LONGS(bits);
for (k = 0; k < nr; k++)
dst[k] = bitmap1[k] ^ bitmap2[k];
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_xor);
void __bitmap_andnot(unsigned long *dst, const unsigned long *bitmap1,
const unsigned long *bitmap2, int bits)
{
int k;
int nr = BITS_TO_LONGS(bits);
for (k = 0; k < nr; k++)
dst[k] = bitmap1[k] & ~bitmap2[k];
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_andnot);
int __bitmap_intersects(const unsigned long *bitmap1,
const unsigned long *bitmap2, int bits)
{
int k, lim = bits/BITS_PER_LONG;
for (k = 0; k < lim; ++k)
if (bitmap1[k] & bitmap2[k])
return 1;
if (bits % BITS_PER_LONG)
if ((bitmap1[k] & bitmap2[k]) & BITMAP_LAST_WORD_MASK(bits))
return 1;
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_intersects);
int __bitmap_subset(const unsigned long *bitmap1,
const unsigned long *bitmap2, int bits)
{
int k, lim = bits/BITS_PER_LONG;
for (k = 0; k < lim; ++k)
if (bitmap1[k] & ~bitmap2[k])
return 0;
if (bits % BITS_PER_LONG)
if ((bitmap1[k] & ~bitmap2[k]) & BITMAP_LAST_WORD_MASK(bits))
return 0;
return 1;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_subset);
int __bitmap_weight(const unsigned long *bitmap, int bits)
{
int k, w = 0, lim = bits/BITS_PER_LONG;
for (k = 0; k < lim; k++)
w += hweight_long(bitmap[k]);
if (bits % BITS_PER_LONG)
w += hweight_long(bitmap[k] & BITMAP_LAST_WORD_MASK(bits));
return w;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_weight);
/*
* Bitmap printing & parsing functions: first version by Bill Irwin,
* second version by Paul Jackson, third by Joe Korty.
*/
#define CHUNKSZ 32
#define nbits_to_hold_value(val) fls(val)
#define unhex(c) (isdigit(c) ? (c - '0') : (toupper(c) - 'A' + 10))
#define BASEDEC 10 /* fancier cpuset lists input in decimal */
/**
* bitmap_scnprintf - convert bitmap to an ASCII hex string.
* @buf: byte buffer into which string is placed
* @buflen: reserved size of @buf, in bytes
* @maskp: pointer to bitmap to convert
* @nmaskbits: size of bitmap, in bits
*
* Exactly @nmaskbits bits are displayed. Hex digits are grouped into
* comma-separated sets of eight digits per set.
*/
int bitmap_scnprintf(char *buf, unsigned int buflen,
const unsigned long *maskp, int nmaskbits)
{
int i, word, bit, len = 0;
unsigned long val;
const char *sep = "";
int chunksz;
u32 chunkmask;
chunksz = nmaskbits & (CHUNKSZ - 1);
if (chunksz == 0)
chunksz = CHUNKSZ;
i = ALIGN(nmaskbits, CHUNKSZ) - CHUNKSZ;
for (; i >= 0; i -= CHUNKSZ) {
chunkmask = ((1ULL << chunksz) - 1);
word = i / BITS_PER_LONG;
bit = i % BITS_PER_LONG;
val = (maskp[word] >> bit) & chunkmask;
len += scnprintf(buf+len, buflen-len, "%s%0*lx", sep,
(chunksz+3)/4, val);
chunksz = CHUNKSZ;
sep = ",";
}
return len;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bitmap_scnprintf);
/**
* bitmap_scnprintf_len - return buffer length needed to convert
* bitmap to an ASCII hex string
* @nr_bits: number of bits to be converted
*/
int bitmap_scnprintf_len(unsigned int nr_bits)
{
unsigned int nr_nibbles = ALIGN(nr_bits, 4) / 4;
return nr_nibbles + ALIGN(nr_nibbles, CHUNKSZ / 4) / (CHUNKSZ / 4) - 1;
}
/**
* __bitmap_parse - convert an ASCII hex string into a bitmap.
* @buf: pointer to buffer containing string.
* @buflen: buffer size in bytes. If string is smaller than this
* then it must be terminated with a \0.
* @is_user: location of buffer, 0 indicates kernel space
* @maskp: pointer to bitmap array that will contain result.
* @nmaskbits: size of bitmap, in bits.
*
* Commas group hex digits into chunks. Each chunk defines exactly 32
* bits of the resultant bitmask. No chunk may specify a value larger
* than 32 bits (%-EOVERFLOW), and if a chunk specifies a smaller value
* then leading 0-bits are prepended. %-EINVAL is returned for illegal
* characters and for grouping errors such as "1,,5", ",44", "," and "".
* Leading and trailing whitespace accepted, but not embedded whitespace.
*/
int __bitmap_parse(const char *buf, unsigned int buflen,
int is_user, unsigned long *maskp,
int nmaskbits)
{
int c, old_c, totaldigits, ndigits, nchunks, nbits;
u32 chunk;
const char __user *ubuf = buf;
bitmap_zero(maskp, nmaskbits);
nchunks = nbits = totaldigits = c = 0;
do {
chunk = ndigits = 0;
/* Get the next chunk of the bitmap */
while (buflen) {
old_c = c;
if (is_user) {
if (__get_user(c, ubuf++))
return -EFAULT;
}
else
c = *buf++;
buflen--;
if (isspace(c))
continue;
/*
* If the last character was a space and the current
* character isn't '\0', we've got embedded whitespace.
* This is a no-no, so throw an error.
*/
if (totaldigits && c && isspace(old_c))
return -EINVAL;
/* A '\0' or a ',' signal the end of the chunk */
if (c == '\0' || c == ',')
break;
if (!isxdigit(c))
return -EINVAL;
/*
* Make sure there are at least 4 free bits in 'chunk'.
* If not, this hexdigit will overflow 'chunk', so
* throw an error.
*/
if (chunk & ~((1UL << (CHUNKSZ - 4)) - 1))
return -EOVERFLOW;
chunk = (chunk << 4) | unhex(c);
ndigits++; totaldigits++;
}
if (ndigits == 0)
return -EINVAL;
if (nchunks == 0 && chunk == 0)
continue;
__bitmap_shift_left(maskp, maskp, CHUNKSZ, nmaskbits);
*maskp |= chunk;
nchunks++;
nbits += (nchunks == 1) ? nbits_to_hold_value(chunk) : CHUNKSZ;
if (nbits > nmaskbits)
return -EOVERFLOW;
} while (buflen && c == ',');
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bitmap_parse);
/**
* bitmap_parse_user()
*
* @ubuf: pointer to user buffer containing string.
* @ulen: buffer size in bytes. If string is smaller than this
* then it must be terminated with a \0.
* @maskp: pointer to bitmap array that will contain result.
* @nmaskbits: size of bitmap, in bits.
*
* Wrapper for __bitmap_parse(), providing it with user buffer.
*
* We cannot have this as an inline function in bitmap.h because it needs
* linux/uaccess.h to get the access_ok() declaration and this causes
* cyclic dependencies.
*/
int bitmap_parse_user(const char __user *ubuf,
unsigned int ulen, unsigned long *maskp,
int nmaskbits)
{
if (!access_ok(VERIFY_READ, ubuf, ulen))
return -EFAULT;
return __bitmap_parse((const char *)ubuf, ulen, 1, maskp, nmaskbits);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bitmap_parse_user);
/*
* bscnl_emit(buf, buflen, rbot, rtop, bp)
*
* Helper routine for bitmap_scnlistprintf(). Write decimal number
* or range to buf, suppressing output past buf+buflen, with optional
* comma-prefix. Return len of what would be written to buf, if it
* all fit.
*/
static inline int bscnl_emit(char *buf, int buflen, int rbot, int rtop, int len)
{
if (len > 0)
len += scnprintf(buf + len, buflen - len, ",");
if (rbot == rtop)
len += scnprintf(buf + len, buflen - len, "%d", rbot);
else
len += scnprintf(buf + len, buflen - len, "%d-%d", rbot, rtop);
return len;
}
/**
* bitmap_scnlistprintf - convert bitmap to list format ASCII string
* @buf: byte buffer into which string is placed
* @buflen: reserved size of @buf, in bytes
* @maskp: pointer to bitmap to convert
* @nmaskbits: size of bitmap, in bits
*
* Output format is a comma-separated list of decimal numbers and
* ranges. Consecutively set bits are shown as two hyphen-separated
* decimal numbers, the smallest and largest bit numbers set in
* the range. Output format is compatible with the format
* accepted as input by bitmap_parselist().
*
* The return value is the number of characters which would be
* generated for the given input, excluding the trailing '\0', as
* per ISO C99.
*/
int bitmap_scnlistprintf(char *buf, unsigned int buflen,
const unsigned long *maskp, int nmaskbits)
{
int len = 0;
/* current bit is 'cur', most recently seen range is [rbot, rtop] */
int cur, rbot, rtop;
if (buflen == 0)
return 0;
buf[0] = 0;
rbot = cur = find_first_bit(maskp, nmaskbits);
while (cur < nmaskbits) {
rtop = cur;
cur = find_next_bit(maskp, nmaskbits, cur+1);
if (cur >= nmaskbits || cur > rtop + 1) {
len = bscnl_emit(buf, buflen, rbot, rtop, len);
rbot = cur;
}
}
return len;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bitmap_scnlistprintf);
/**
* bitmap_parselist - convert list format ASCII string to bitmap
* @bp: read nul-terminated user string from this buffer
* @maskp: write resulting mask here
* @nmaskbits: number of bits in mask to be written
*
* Input format is a comma-separated list of decimal numbers and
* ranges. Consecutively set bits are shown as two hyphen-separated
* decimal numbers, the smallest and largest bit numbers set in
* the range.
*
* Returns 0 on success, -errno on invalid input strings.
* Error values:
* %-EINVAL: second number in range smaller than first
* %-EINVAL: invalid character in string
* %-ERANGE: bit number specified too large for mask
*/
int bitmap_parselist(const char *bp, unsigned long *maskp, int nmaskbits)
{
unsigned a, b;
bitmap_zero(maskp, nmaskbits);
do {
if (!isdigit(*bp))
return -EINVAL;
b = a = simple_strtoul(bp, (char **)&bp, BASEDEC);
if (*bp == '-') {
bp++;
if (!isdigit(*bp))
return -EINVAL;
b = simple_strtoul(bp, (char **)&bp, BASEDEC);
}
if (!(a <= b))
return -EINVAL;
if (b >= nmaskbits)
return -ERANGE;
while (a <= b) {
set_bit(a, maskp);
a++;
}
if (*bp == ',')
bp++;
} while (*bp != '\0' && *bp != '\n');
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bitmap_parselist);
/**
* bitmap_pos_to_ord(buf, pos, bits)
* @buf: pointer to a bitmap
* @pos: a bit position in @buf (0 <= @pos < @bits)
* @bits: number of valid bit positions in @buf
*
* Map the bit at position @pos in @buf (of length @bits) to the
* ordinal of which set bit it is. If it is not set or if @pos
* is not a valid bit position, map to -1.
*
* If for example, just bits 4 through 7 are set in @buf, then @pos
* values 4 through 7 will get mapped to 0 through 3, respectively,
* and other @pos values will get mapped to 0. When @pos value 7
* gets mapped to (returns) @ord value 3 in this example, that means
* that bit 7 is the 3rd (starting with 0th) set bit in @buf.
*
* The bit positions 0 through @bits are valid positions in @buf.
*/
static int bitmap_pos_to_ord(const unsigned long *buf, int pos, int bits)
{
int i, ord;
if (pos < 0 || pos >= bits || !test_bit(pos, buf))
return -1;
i = find_first_bit(buf, bits);
ord = 0;
while (i < pos) {
i = find_next_bit(buf, bits, i + 1);
ord++;
}
BUG_ON(i != pos);
return ord;
}
/**
* bitmap_ord_to_pos(buf, ord, bits)
* @buf: pointer to bitmap
* @ord: ordinal bit position (n-th set bit, n >= 0)
* @bits: number of valid bit positions in @buf
*
* Map the ordinal offset of bit @ord in @buf to its position in @buf.
* Value of @ord should be in range 0 <= @ord < weight(buf), else
* results are undefined.
*
* If for example, just bits 4 through 7 are set in @buf, then @ord
* values 0 through 3 will get mapped to 4 through 7, respectively,
* and all other @ord values return undefined values. When @ord value 3
* gets mapped to (returns) @pos value 7 in this example, that means
* that the 3rd set bit (starting with 0th) is at position 7 in @buf.
*
* The bit positions 0 through @bits are valid positions in @buf.
*/
static int bitmap_ord_to_pos(const unsigned long *buf, int ord, int bits)
{
int pos = 0;
if (ord >= 0 && ord < bits) {
int i;
for (i = find_first_bit(buf, bits);
i < bits && ord > 0;
i = find_next_bit(buf, bits, i + 1))
ord--;
if (i < bits && ord == 0)
pos = i;
}
return pos;
}
/**
* bitmap_remap - Apply map defined by a pair of bitmaps to another bitmap
* @dst: remapped result
* @src: subset to be remapped
* @old: defines domain of map
* @new: defines range of map
* @bits: number of bits in each of these bitmaps
*
* Let @old and @new define a mapping of bit positions, such that
* whatever position is held by the n-th set bit in @old is mapped
* to the n-th set bit in @new. In the more general case, allowing
* for the possibility that the weight 'w' of @new is less than the
* weight of @old, map the position of the n-th set bit in @old to
* the position of the m-th set bit in @new, where m == n % w.
*
* If either of the @old and @new bitmaps are empty, or if @src and
* @dst point to the same location, then this routine copies @src
* to @dst.
*
* The positions of unset bits in @old are mapped to themselves
* (the identify map).
*
* Apply the above specified mapping to @src, placing the result in
* @dst, clearing any bits previously set in @dst.
*
* For example, lets say that @old has bits 4 through 7 set, and
* @new has bits 12 through 15 set. This defines the mapping of bit
* position 4 to 12, 5 to 13, 6 to 14 and 7 to 15, and of all other
* bit positions unchanged. So if say @src comes into this routine
* with bits 1, 5 and 7 set, then @dst should leave with bits 1,
* 13 and 15 set.
*/
void bitmap_remap(unsigned long *dst, const unsigned long *src,
const unsigned long *old, const unsigned long *new,
int bits)
{
int oldbit, w;
if (dst == src) /* following doesn't handle inplace remaps */
return;
bitmap_zero(dst, bits);
w = bitmap_weight(new, bits);
for (oldbit = find_first_bit(src, bits);
oldbit < bits;
oldbit = find_next_bit(src, bits, oldbit + 1)) {
int n = bitmap_pos_to_ord(old, oldbit, bits);
if (n < 0 || w == 0)
set_bit(oldbit, dst); /* identity map */
else
set_bit(bitmap_ord_to_pos(new, n % w, bits), dst);
}
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bitmap_remap);
/**
* bitmap_bitremap - Apply map defined by a pair of bitmaps to a single bit
* @oldbit: bit position to be mapped
* @old: defines domain of map
* @new: defines range of map
* @bits: number of bits in each of these bitmaps
*
* Let @old and @new define a mapping of bit positions, such that
* whatever position is held by the n-th set bit in @old is mapped
* to the n-th set bit in @new. In the more general case, allowing
* for the possibility that the weight 'w' of @new is less than the
* weight of @old, map the position of the n-th set bit in @old to
* the position of the m-th set bit in @new, where m == n % w.
*
* The positions of unset bits in @old are mapped to themselves
* (the identify map).
*
* Apply the above specified mapping to bit position @oldbit, returning
* the new bit position.
*
* For example, lets say that @old has bits 4 through 7 set, and
* @new has bits 12 through 15 set. This defines the mapping of bit
* position 4 to 12, 5 to 13, 6 to 14 and 7 to 15, and of all other
* bit positions unchanged. So if say @oldbit is 5, then this routine
* returns 13.
*/
int bitmap_bitremap(int oldbit, const unsigned long *old,
const unsigned long *new, int bits)
{
int w = bitmap_weight(new, bits);
int n = bitmap_pos_to_ord(old, oldbit, bits);
if (n < 0 || w == 0)
return oldbit;
else
return bitmap_ord_to_pos(new, n % w, bits);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bitmap_bitremap);
/**
* bitmap_onto - translate one bitmap relative to another
* @dst: resulting translated bitmap
* @orig: original untranslated bitmap
* @relmap: bitmap relative to which translated
* @bits: number of bits in each of these bitmaps
*
* Set the n-th bit of @dst iff there exists some m such that the
* n-th bit of @relmap is set, the m-th bit of @orig is set, and
* the n-th bit of @relmap is also the m-th _set_ bit of @relmap.
* (If you understood the previous sentence the first time your
* read it, you're overqualified for your current job.)
*
* In other words, @orig is mapped onto (surjectively) @dst,
* using the the map { <n, m> | the n-th bit of @relmap is the
* m-th set bit of @relmap }.
*
* Any set bits in @orig above bit number W, where W is the
* weight of (number of set bits in) @relmap are mapped nowhere.
* In particular, if for all bits m set in @orig, m >= W, then
* @dst will end up empty. In situations where the possibility
* of such an empty result is not desired, one way to avoid it is
* to use the bitmap_fold() operator, below, to first fold the
* @orig bitmap over itself so that all its set bits x are in the
* range 0 <= x < W. The bitmap_fold() operator does this by
* setting the bit (m % W) in @dst, for each bit (m) set in @orig.
*
* Example [1] for bitmap_onto():
* Let's say @relmap has bits 30-39 set, and @orig has bits
* 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 set. Then on return from this routine,
* @dst will have bits 31, 33, 35, 37 and 39 set.
*
* When bit 0 is set in @orig, it means turn on the bit in
* @dst corresponding to whatever is the first bit (if any)
* that is turned on in @relmap. Since bit 0 was off in the
* above example, we leave off that bit (bit 30) in @dst.
*
* When bit 1 is set in @orig (as in the above example), it
* means turn on the bit in @dst corresponding to whatever
* is the second bit that is turned on in @relmap. The second
* bit in @relmap that was turned on in the above example was
* bit 31, so we turned on bit 31 in @dst.
*
* Similarly, we turned on bits 33, 35, 37 and 39 in @dst,
* because they were the 4th, 6th, 8th and 10th set bits
* set in @relmap, and the 4th, 6th, 8th and 10th bits of
* @orig (i.e. bits 3, 5, 7 and 9) were also set.
*
* When bit 11 is set in @orig, it means turn on the bit in
* @dst corresponding to whatever is the twelth bit that is
* turned on in @relmap. In the above example, there were
* only ten bits turned on in @relmap (30..39), so that bit
* 11 was set in @orig had no affect on @dst.
*
* Example [2] for bitmap_fold() + bitmap_onto():
* Let's say @relmap has these ten bits set:
* 40 41 42 43 45 48 53 61 74 95
* (for the curious, that's 40 plus the first ten terms of the
* Fibonacci sequence.)
*
* Further lets say we use the following code, invoking
* bitmap_fold() then bitmap_onto, as suggested above to
* avoid the possitility of an empty @dst result:
*
* unsigned long *tmp; // a temporary bitmap's bits
*
* bitmap_fold(tmp, orig, bitmap_weight(relmap, bits), bits);
* bitmap_onto(dst, tmp, relmap, bits);
*
* Then this table shows what various values of @dst would be, for
* various @orig's. I list the zero-based positions of each set bit.
* The tmp column shows the intermediate result, as computed by
* using bitmap_fold() to fold the @orig bitmap modulo ten
* (the weight of @relmap).
*
* @orig tmp @dst
* 0 0 40
* 1 1 41
* 9 9 95
* 10 0 40 (*)
* 1 3 5 7 1 3 5 7 41 43 48 61
* 0 1 2 3 4 0 1 2 3 4 40 41 42 43 45
* 0 9 18 27 0 9 8 7 40 61 74 95
* 0 10 20 30 0 40
* 0 11 22 33 0 1 2 3 40 41 42 43
* 0 12 24 36 0 2 4 6 40 42 45 53
* 78 102 211 1 2 8 41 42 74 (*)
*
* (*) For these marked lines, if we hadn't first done bitmap_fold()
* into tmp, then the @dst result would have been empty.
*
* If either of @orig or @relmap is empty (no set bits), then @dst
* will be returned empty.
*
* If (as explained above) the only set bits in @orig are in positions
* m where m >= W, (where W is the weight of @relmap) then @dst will
* once again be returned empty.
*
* All bits in @dst not set by the above rule are cleared.
*/
void bitmap_onto(unsigned long *dst, const unsigned long *orig,
const unsigned long *relmap, int bits)
{
int n, m; /* same meaning as in above comment */
if (dst == orig) /* following doesn't handle inplace mappings */
return;
bitmap_zero(dst, bits);
/*
* The following code is a more efficient, but less
* obvious, equivalent to the loop:
* for (m = 0; m < bitmap_weight(relmap, bits); m++) {
* n = bitmap_ord_to_pos(orig, m, bits);
* if (test_bit(m, orig))
* set_bit(n, dst);
* }
*/
m = 0;
for (n = find_first_bit(relmap, bits);
n < bits;
n = find_next_bit(relmap, bits, n + 1)) {
/* m == bitmap_pos_to_ord(relmap, n, bits) */
if (test_bit(m, orig))
set_bit(n, dst);
m++;
}
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bitmap_onto);
/**
* bitmap_fold - fold larger bitmap into smaller, modulo specified size
* @dst: resulting smaller bitmap
* @orig: original larger bitmap
* @sz: specified size
* @bits: number of bits in each of these bitmaps
*
* For each bit oldbit in @orig, set bit oldbit mod @sz in @dst.
* Clear all other bits in @dst. See further the comment and
* Example [2] for bitmap_onto() for why and how to use this.
*/
void bitmap_fold(unsigned long *dst, const unsigned long *orig,
int sz, int bits)
{
int oldbit;
if (dst == orig) /* following doesn't handle inplace mappings */
return;
bitmap_zero(dst, bits);
for (oldbit = find_first_bit(orig, bits);
oldbit < bits;
oldbit = find_next_bit(orig, bits, oldbit + 1))
set_bit(oldbit % sz, dst);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bitmap_fold);
/*
* Common code for bitmap_*_region() routines.
* bitmap: array of unsigned longs corresponding to the bitmap
* pos: the beginning of the region
* order: region size (log base 2 of number of bits)
* reg_op: operation(s) to perform on that region of bitmap
*
* Can set, verify and/or release a region of bits in a bitmap,
* depending on which combination of REG_OP_* flag bits is set.
*
* A region of a bitmap is a sequence of bits in the bitmap, of
* some size '1 << order' (a power of two), aligned to that same
* '1 << order' power of two.
*
* Returns 1 if REG_OP_ISFREE succeeds (region is all zero bits).
* Returns 0 in all other cases and reg_ops.
*/
enum {
REG_OP_ISFREE, /* true if region is all zero bits */
REG_OP_ALLOC, /* set all bits in region */
REG_OP_RELEASE, /* clear all bits in region */
};
static int __reg_op(unsigned long *bitmap, int pos, int order, int reg_op)
{
int nbits_reg; /* number of bits in region */
int index; /* index first long of region in bitmap */
int offset; /* bit offset region in bitmap[index] */
int nlongs_reg; /* num longs spanned by region in bitmap */
int nbitsinlong; /* num bits of region in each spanned long */
unsigned long mask; /* bitmask for one long of region */
int i; /* scans bitmap by longs */
int ret = 0; /* return value */
/*
* Either nlongs_reg == 1 (for small orders that fit in one long)
* or (offset == 0 && mask == ~0UL) (for larger multiword orders.)
*/
nbits_reg = 1 << order;
index = pos / BITS_PER_LONG;
offset = pos - (index * BITS_PER_LONG);
nlongs_reg = BITS_TO_LONGS(nbits_reg);
nbitsinlong = min(nbits_reg, BITS_PER_LONG);
/*
* Can't do "mask = (1UL << nbitsinlong) - 1", as that
* overflows if nbitsinlong == BITS_PER_LONG.
*/
mask = (1UL << (nbitsinlong - 1));
mask += mask - 1;
mask <<= offset;
switch (reg_op) {
case REG_OP_ISFREE:
for (i = 0; i < nlongs_reg; i++) {
if (bitmap[index + i] & mask)
goto done;
}
ret = 1; /* all bits in region free (zero) */
break;
case REG_OP_ALLOC:
for (i = 0; i < nlongs_reg; i++)
bitmap[index + i] |= mask;
break;
case REG_OP_RELEASE:
for (i = 0; i < nlongs_reg; i++)
bitmap[index + i] &= ~mask;
break;
}
done:
return ret;
}
/**
* bitmap_find_free_region - find a contiguous aligned mem region
* @bitmap: array of unsigned longs corresponding to the bitmap
* @bits: number of bits in the bitmap
* @order: region size (log base 2 of number of bits) to find
*
* Find a region of free (zero) bits in a @bitmap of @bits bits and
* allocate them (set them to one). Only consider regions of length
* a power (@order) of two, aligned to that power of two, which
* makes the search algorithm much faster.
*
* Return the bit offset in bitmap of the allocated region,
* or -errno on failure.
*/
int bitmap_find_free_region(unsigned long *bitmap, int bits, int order)
{
int pos; /* scans bitmap by regions of size order */
for (pos = 0; pos < bits; pos += (1 << order))
if (__reg_op(bitmap, pos, order, REG_OP_ISFREE))
break;
if (pos == bits)
return -ENOMEM;
__reg_op(bitmap, pos, order, REG_OP_ALLOC);
return pos;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bitmap_find_free_region);
/**
* bitmap_release_region - release allocated bitmap region
* @bitmap: array of unsigned longs corresponding to the bitmap
* @pos: beginning of bit region to release
* @order: region size (log base 2 of number of bits) to release
*
* This is the complement to __bitmap_find_free_region() and releases
* the found region (by clearing it in the bitmap).
*
* No return value.
*/
void bitmap_release_region(unsigned long *bitmap, int pos, int order)
{
__reg_op(bitmap, pos, order, REG_OP_RELEASE);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bitmap_release_region);
/**
* bitmap_allocate_region - allocate bitmap region
* @bitmap: array of unsigned longs corresponding to the bitmap
* @pos: beginning of bit region to allocate
* @order: region size (log base 2 of number of bits) to allocate
*
* Allocate (set bits in) a specified region of a bitmap.
*
* Return 0 on success, or %-EBUSY if specified region wasn't
* free (not all bits were zero).
*/
int bitmap_allocate_region(unsigned long *bitmap, int pos, int order)
{
if (!__reg_op(bitmap, pos, order, REG_OP_ISFREE))
return -EBUSY;
__reg_op(bitmap, pos, order, REG_OP_ALLOC);
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(bitmap_allocate_region);