On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 09:35:37AM +0800, Huang Ying wrote: > > The intention of lib/uuid.c is to unify various UUID related code, and > put them in same place. In addition to UUID generation, it provide some > other utility and may provide/collect more in the future. So do you > think it is a good idea to put generate_rand_uuid/guid into lib/uuid.c > and maybe change the name/prototype to make it consistent with other > uuid definitions?
I had trouble understanding why lib/uuid.c existed, since the only thing I saw was the uuid generation function. After some more looking, I see you also created inline functions which wrapped memcmp(). The problem I have with your abstractions is that it just makes life more complicated for the callers. All of the current places which use generate_random_uuid() merely want to fill in a unsigned char array. This includes btrfs, by the way, which is already using generate_random_uuid in some places, and I'm not sure why they are using uuid_le_gen(), since there doesn't seem to be any need for a little-endian uuid/guid here (it's just used as unique bag of bits which is 16 bytes long), and using uuid_le_gen() means extra memory has to be allocated on the stack, and then an extra memory copy is required. Contrast (in fs/btrfs/root-tree.c): uuid_le uuid; ... uuid_le_gen(&uuid); memcpy(item->uuid, uuid.b, BTRFS_UUID_SIZE); versus, simply doing (fs/btrfs/volumes.c): generate_random_uuid(fs_devices->fsid); see which one is easier? And after the uuid is generated, none of the current callers ever do any manipulation of the uuid, so there's no real point to play fancy typedef games; it just adds more work for no real gain. > > Using UUID vs. GUID I think makes things much clearer, since the EFI > > specification talks about GUID's, not UUID's, and that way we don't > > have to worry about people getting confused about whether they should > > be using the little-endian versus big-endian variant. (And I'd love > > to ask to whoever wrote the EFI specification what on *Earth* were > > they thinking when they decided to diverge from the rest of the > > world....) > > I think that is a good idea. From Wikipedia, GUID is in native byte > order, while UUID is in internet byte order. Well, technially GUID is "intel/little-endian byte order". If someone tried to implement the GPT on a big-endian system, such as PowerPC, they would still have to use the little-endian byte order, even though it's not the native byte order for that architecture. Otherwise devices wouldn't be portable between those systems. (This is why I think the GUID was such a bad idea; everyone basically treats them as 16 byte octet strings, so this whole idea of "native byte order" just to save a few byte swaps at UUID generation time was really, IMHO, a very bad idea.) Regards, - Ted -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/