On 1/10/22 18:51, Alex Bennée wrote:
> We do mention the limitation of single parenthood for
> memory_region_add_subregion but lets also make it clear how aliases
> help solve that conundrum.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.ben...@linaro.org>
> ---
>  docs/devel/memory.rst | 14 +++++++++-----
>  1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/docs/devel/memory.rst b/docs/devel/memory.rst
> index 5dc8a12682..69c5e3f914 100644
> --- a/docs/devel/memory.rst
> +++ b/docs/devel/memory.rst
> @@ -67,11 +67,15 @@ MemoryRegion):
>  
>    You initialize a pure container with memory_region_init().
>  
> -- alias: a subsection of another region.  Aliases allow a region to be
> -  split apart into discontiguous regions.  Examples of uses are memory banks
> -  used when the guest address space is smaller than the amount of RAM
> -  addressed, or a memory controller that splits main memory to expose a "PCI
> -  hole".  Aliases may point to any type of region, including other aliases,
> +- alias: a subsection of another region. Aliases allow a region to be
> +  split apart into discontiguous regions. Examples of uses are memory
> +  banks used when the guest address space is smaller than the amount
> +  of RAM addressed, or a memory controller that splits main memory to
> +  expose a "PCI hole". You can also create aliases to avoid trying to
> +  add the original region to multiple parents via
> +  `memory_region_add_subregion`.
> +
> +  Aliases may point to any type of region, including other aliases,
>    but an alias may not point back to itself, directly or indirectly.
>    You initialize these with memory_region_init_alias().
>  

Reviewed-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <f4...@amsat.org>

Reply via email to