[PATCH 3/8] staging: et131x: Use for loop to initialise contiguous registers to zero

Greg KH gregkh at linuxfoundation.org
Sat Aug 30 20:32:16 UTC 2014


On Wed, Aug 20, 2014 at 11:17:53PM +0100, Mark Einon wrote:
> Replace a long list of contiguous writel() calls with a for loop iterating
> over the same values.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Mark Einon <mark.einon at gmail.com>
> ---
>  drivers/staging/et131x/et131x.c | 27 +++------------------------
>  1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 24 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/drivers/staging/et131x/et131x.c b/drivers/staging/et131x/et131x.c
> index fffe763..44cc684 100644
> --- a/drivers/staging/et131x/et131x.c
> +++ b/drivers/staging/et131x/et131x.c
> @@ -1138,6 +1138,7 @@ static void et1310_config_rxmac_regs(struct et131x_adapter *adapter)
>  	u32 sa_lo;
>  	u32 sa_hi = 0;
>  	u32 pf_ctrl = 0;
> +	u32 *wolw;
>  
>  	/* Disable the MAC while it is being configured (also disable WOL) */
>  	writel(0x8, &rxmac->ctrl);
> @@ -1151,30 +1152,8 @@ static void et1310_config_rxmac_regs(struct et131x_adapter *adapter)
>  	 * its default Values of 0x00000000 because there are not WOL masks
>  	 * as of this time.
>  	 */
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask0_word0);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask0_word1);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask0_word2);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask0_word3);
> -
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask1_word0);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask1_word1);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask1_word2);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask1_word3);
> -
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask2_word0);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask2_word1);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask2_word2);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask2_word3);
> -
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask3_word0);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask3_word1);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask3_word2);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask3_word3);
> -
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask4_word0);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask4_word1);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask4_word2);
> -	writel(0, &rxmac->mask4_word3);
> +	for (wolw = &rxmac->mask0_word0; wolw <= &rxmac->mask4_word3; wolw++)
> +		writel(0, wolw);

You are now only writing to all locations 1 time, instead of 4 times,
like before, are you sure that is ok?  Hardware is flaky, sometimes it
wants to be written to multiple times...

greg k-h


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