On Thu, Apr 27, 2017 at 12:21:00PM -0400, Willem de Bruijn wrote: > >> > @@ -720,6 +720,7 @@ void __sock_recv_timestamp(struct msghdr *msg, > >> > struct sock *sk, > >> > empty = 0; > >> > if (shhwtstamps && > >> > (sk->sk_tsflags & SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RAW_HARDWARE) && > >> > + (empty || !skb_is_err_queue(skb)) && > >> > ktime_to_timespec_cond(shhwtstamps->hwtstamp, tss.ts + 2)) { > >> > >> I find skb->tstamp == 0 easier to understand than the condition on empty. > >> > >> Indeed, this is so non-obvious that I would suggest another helper function > >> skb_is_hwtx_tstamp with a concise comment about the race condition > >> between tx software and hardware timestamps (as in the last sentence of > >> the commit message). > > > > Should it include also the skb_is_err_queue() check? If it returned > > true for both TX and RX HW timestamps, maybe it could be called > > skb_has_hw_tstamp? > > For the purpose of documenting why this complex condition exists, > I would call the skb_is_err_queue in that helper function and make > it tx + hw specific.
Hm, like this? if (shhwtstamps && (sk->sk_tsflags & SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RAW_HARDWARE) && + (skb_is_hwtx_tstamp(skb) || !skb_is_err_queue(skb)) && ktime_to_timespec_cond(shhwtstamps->hwtstamp, tss.ts + 2)) { where skb_is_hwtx_tstamp() has return skb->tstamp == 0 && skb_is_err_queue(skb); I was just not sure about the unnecessary skb_is_err_queue() call. -- Miroslav Lichvar