Borislav Petkov <b...@alien8.de> writes:

> On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 11:06:15AM +0000, Robin Murphy wrote:
>> Let me add another vote from a native English speaker that "unencrypted" is
>> the appropriate term to imply the *absence* of encryption, whereas
>> "decrypted" implies the *reversal* of applied encryption.
>> 
>> Naming things is famously hard, for good reason - names are *important* for
>> understanding. Just because a decision was already made one way doesn't mean
>> that that decision was necessarily right. Churning one area to be
>> consistently inaccurate just because it's less work than churning another
>> area to be consistently accurate isn't really the best excuse.
>
> Well, the reason we chose "decrypted" vs something else is so to be as
> different from "encrypted" as possible. If we called it "unencrypted"
> you'd have stuff like:
>
>        if (force_dma_unencrypted(dev))
>                 set_memory_encrypted((unsigned long)cpu_addr, 1 << 
> page_order);

TBH, I don't see how

        if (force_dma_decrypted(dev))
                set_memory_encrypted((unsigned long)cpu_addr, 1 << page_order);
       
makes more sense than the above. It's both non-sensical unless there is
a big fat comment explaining what this is about.

Thanks,

        tglx

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