On Tue, Aug 23, 2016 at 01:34:05PM -0700, Joe Perches wrote: > On Tue, 2016-08-23 at 21:09 +0100, Al Viro wrote: > > On Tue, Aug 23, 2016 at 11:24:06AM -0700, David Miller wrote: > > ... and then we can file a bug report against the sodding compiler. Note > > that > > struct ethtool_wolinfo { > > __u32 cmd; > > __u32 supported; > > __u32 wolopts; > > __u8 sopass[SOPASS_MAX]; // 6, actually > > }; > > is not going to *have* padding. Not on anything even remotely sane. > > If array of 6 char as member of a struct requires 64bit alignment on some > > architecture, I would really like some of what the designers of that ABI > > must have been smoking. > > try this on x86-64 > > $ pahole -C ethtool_wolinfo vmlinux > struct ethtool_wolinfo { > __u32 cmd; /* 0 4 */ > __u32 supported; /* 4 4 */ > __u32 wolopts; /* 8 4 */ > __u8 sopass[6]; /* 12 6 */ > > /* size: 20, cachelines: 1, members: 4 */ > /* padding: 2 */ > /* last cacheline: 20 bytes */ > };
That would be padding after the structure elements. I think what was meant is that it won't add padding in the middle of the structure due to alignment, ie it isn't doing: struct ethtool_wolinfo { __u32 cmd; /* 0 4 */ __u32 supported; /* 4 4 */ __u32 wolopts; /* 8 4 */ <4 bytes padding here> __u8 sopass[6]; /* 16 6 */ }; which would have 4 bytes of padding in the middle between wolopts and sopass. I would not think it is the compilers job to worry about what is after your structure elements, since you shouldn't be going there. -- Len Sorensen