Hi Konstantin, Bruce, On Tue, Dec 06, 2016 at 11:55:02AM +0000, Bruce Richardson wrote: > On Tue, Dec 06, 2016 at 11:23:42AM +0000, Ananyev, Konstantin wrote: > > Hi Neilo, > > > > > > Hi Neilo, > > > > > > > > > > This commit introduces new rte_{le,be}{16,32,64}_t types and updates > > > > > rte_{le,be,cpu}_to_{le,be,cpu}_*() and network header structures > > > > > accordingly. > > > > > > > > > > Specific big/little endian types avoid uncertainty and conversion > > > > > mistakes. > > > > > > > > > > No ABI change since these are simply typedefs to the original types. > > > > > > > > It seems like quite a lot of changes... > > > > Could you probably explain what will be the benefit in return? > > > > Konstantin > > > > > > Hi Konstantin, > > > > > > The benefit is to provide documented byte ordering for data types > > > software is manipulating to determine when network to CPU (or CPU to > > > network) conversion must be performed. > > > > Ok, but is it really worth it? > > User can still make a mistake and forget to call ntoh()/hton() at some > > particular place. > > From other side most people do know that network protocols headers are > > usually in BE format. > > I would understand the effort, if we'll have some sort of tool that would > > do some sort of static code analysis > > based on these special types or so. > > Again, does it mean that we should go and change uint32_t to rte_le_32 > > inside all Intel PMDs > > (and might be in some others too) to be consistent? > > Konstantin > > > > I actually quite like this patch as I think it will help make things > clear when the user is possibly doing something wrong. I don't think we > need to globally change all PMDs to use the types, though.
I agree, at least APIs should use this, PMDs can do as they want. > One thing I'm wondering though, is if we might want to take this > further. For little endian environments, we could define the big endian > types as structs using typedefs, and similarly the le types on be > platforms, so that assigning from the non-native type to the native one > without a transformation function would cause a compiler error. > > /Bruce If I understand you correctly, this will break hton like functions which expects an uint*_t not a structure. -- Nélio Laranjeiro 6WIND