Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Louis Mayencourt 845db72261 fconf: Fix misra issues
MISRA C-2012 Rule 20.7:
Macro parameter expands into an expression without being wrapped by parentheses.

MISRA C-2012 Rule 12.1:
Missing explicit parentheses on sub-expression.

MISRA C-2012 Rule 18.4:
Essential type of the left hand operand is not the same as that of the right
operand.

Include does not provide any needed symbols.

Change-Id: Ie1c6451cfbc8f519146c28b2cf15c50b1f36adc8
Signed-off-by: Louis Mayencourt <louis.mayencourt@arm.com>
2020-02-27 16:14:07 +00:00
Antonio Nino Diaz 09d40e0e08 Sanitise includes across codebase
Enforce full include path for includes. Deprecate old paths.

The following folders inside include/lib have been left unchanged:

- include/lib/cpus/${ARCH}
- include/lib/el3_runtime/${ARCH}

The reason for this change is that having a global namespace for
includes isn't a good idea. It defeats one of the advantages of having
folders and it introduces problems that are sometimes subtle (because
you may not know the header you are actually including if there are two
of them).

For example, this patch had to be created because two headers were
called the same way: e0ea0928d5 ("Fix gpio includes of mt8173 platform
to avoid collision."). More recently, this patch has had similar
problems: 46f9b2c3a2 ("drivers: add tzc380 support").

This problem was introduced in commit 4ecca33988 ("Move include and
source files to logical locations"). At that time, there weren't too
many headers so it wasn't a real issue. However, time has shown that
this creates problems.

Platforms that want to preserve the way they include headers may add the
removed paths to PLAT_INCLUDES, but this is discouraged.

Change-Id: I39dc53ed98f9e297a5966e723d1936d6ccf2fc8f
Signed-off-by: Antonio Nino Diaz <antonio.ninodiaz@arm.com>
2019-01-04 10:43:17 +00:00
Sandrine Bailleux 9cc4651c9d Introduce object pool allocator
The object pool allocator provides a simplistic interface to manage
allocation in a fixed-size static array. The caller creates a static
"object pool" out of such an array and may then call pool_alloc() to
get the next available object within the pool. There is also a variant
to get multiple consecutive objects: pool_alloc_n().

Note that this interface does not provide any way to free the objects
afterwards. This is by design and it is not a limitation. We do not
want to introduce complexity induced by memory freeing, such as
use-after-free bugs, memory fragmentation and so on.

Change-Id: Iefc2e153767851fbde5841a295f92ae48adda71f
Signed-off-by: Sandrine Bailleux <sandrine.bailleux@arm.com>
2018-10-11 16:11:18 +02:00