| #ifndef __BACKPORT_LINUX_BUG_H |
| #define __BACKPORT_LINUX_BUG_H |
| #include_next <linux/bug.h> |
| #include <linux/version.h> |
| |
| #if LINUX_VERSION_CODE < KERNEL_VERSION(2,6,38) |
| /* is defined there for older kernels */ |
| #include <linux/kernel.h> |
| /* Backport of: |
| * |
| * commit 7ef88ad561457c0346355dfd1f53e503ddfde719 |
| * Author: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> |
| * Date: Mon Jan 24 14:45:10 2011 -0600 |
| * |
| * BUILD_BUG_ON: make it handle more cases |
| */ |
| #undef BUILD_BUG_ON |
| /** |
| * BUILD_BUG_ON - break compile if a condition is true. |
| * @condition: the condition which the compiler should know is false. |
| * |
| * If you have some code which relies on certain constants being equal, or |
| * other compile-time-evaluated condition, you should use BUILD_BUG_ON to |
| * detect if someone changes it. |
| * |
| * The implementation uses gcc's reluctance to create a negative array, but |
| * gcc (as of 4.4) only emits that error for obvious cases (eg. not arguments |
| * to inline functions). So as a fallback we use the optimizer; if it can't |
| * prove the condition is false, it will cause a link error on the undefined |
| * "__build_bug_on_failed". This error message can be harder to track down |
| * though, hence the two different methods. |
| */ |
| #ifndef __OPTIMIZE__ |
| #define BUILD_BUG_ON(condition) ((void)sizeof(char[1 - 2*!!(condition)])) |
| #else |
| extern int __build_bug_on_failed; |
| #define BUILD_BUG_ON(condition) \ |
| do { \ |
| ((void)sizeof(char[1 - 2*!!(condition)])); \ |
| if (condition) __build_bug_on_failed = 1; \ |
| } while(0) |
| #endif |
| #endif /* < 2.6.38 */ |
| |
| #endif /* __BACKPORT_LINUX_BUG_H */ |