[linux-pm] [PATCH RFC] introduce pm_call() macro to get rid of most #ifdef CONFIG_PM

Anton Vorontsov cbouatmailru at gmail.com
Sun Mar 2 15:43:08 PST 2008


Currently drivers handle CONFIG_PM this way:

#ifdef CONFIG_PM
drv_suspend() {}
drv_resume() {}
#else
#define drv_suspend NULL
#define drv_resume NULL
#endif

struct driver drv = {
	.suspend = drv_suspend,
	.resume = drv_resume,
};

With this patch, the code above converts into:

drv_suspend() {}
drv_resume() {}

struct driver drv = {
	.suspend = pm_call(drv_suspend),
	.resume = pm_call(drv_resume),
};

GCC will optimize away suspend/resume calls if they're really
not used.

Signed-off-by: Anton Vorontsov <cbouatmailru at gmail.com>
---
 include/linux/pm.h |    7 +++++++
 1 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)

diff --git a/include/linux/pm.h b/include/linux/pm.h
index 015b735..6e0b9c2 100644
--- a/include/linux/pm.h
+++ b/include/linux/pm.h
@@ -114,6 +114,13 @@ typedef struct pm_message {
 	int event;
 } pm_message_t;
 
+#ifdef CONFIG_PM
+#define pm_call(x) (x)
+#else
+/* avoid `defined but not used' warning */
+#define pm_call(x) ((x) - 1 ? NULL : NULL)
+#endif /* CONFIG_PM */
+
 /*
  * Several driver power state transitions are externally visible, affecting
  * the state of pending I/O queues and (for drivers that touch hardware)
-- 
1.5.4.3


More information about the linux-pm mailing list