diff options
author | Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> | 2023-07-12 12:37:07 +0100 |
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committer | Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> | 2023-07-12 12:37:07 +0100 |
commit | b8c442b391d44323a79f6b51c31dba253241c896 (patch) | |
tree | 43659474649f86f1ca54bbae817f2259ac731b1f /include/linux/minmax.h | |
parent | c7a0f10b885164e4804dc144c375076c2e0d39f6 (diff) | |
parent | 6d8ad35d119ca4c9c6fdf83faa733102c4a63f4b (diff) |
Add support for IIO devices in ASoC
Merge series from Herve Codina <herve.codina@bootlin.com>:
Several weeks ago, I sent a series [1] for adding a potentiometer as an
auxiliary device in ASoC. The feedback was that the potentiometer should
be directly handled in IIO (as other potentiometers) and something more
generic should be present in ASoC in order to have a binding to import
some IIO devices into sound cards.
The series related to the IIO potentiometer device is already applied.
This series introduces audio-iio-aux. Its goal is to offer the binding
between IIO and ASoC.
It exposes attached IIO devices as ASoC auxiliary devices and allows to
control them through mixer controls.
On my system, the IIO device is a potentiometer and it is present in an
amplifier design present in the audio path.
Diffstat (limited to 'include/linux/minmax.h')
-rw-r--r-- | include/linux/minmax.h | 64 |
1 files changed, 64 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/include/linux/minmax.h b/include/linux/minmax.h index 396df1121bff..798c6963909f 100644 --- a/include/linux/minmax.h +++ b/include/linux/minmax.h @@ -133,6 +133,70 @@ */ #define max_t(type, x, y) __careful_cmp((type)(x), (type)(y), >) +/* + * Remove a const qualifier from integer types + * _Generic(foo, type-name: association, ..., default: association) performs a + * comparison against the foo type (not the qualified type). + * Do not use the const keyword in the type-name as it will not match the + * unqualified type of foo. + */ +#define __unconst_integer_type_cases(type) \ + unsigned type: (unsigned type)0, \ + signed type: (signed type)0 + +#define __unconst_integer_typeof(x) typeof( \ + _Generic((x), \ + char: (char)0, \ + __unconst_integer_type_cases(char), \ + __unconst_integer_type_cases(short), \ + __unconst_integer_type_cases(int), \ + __unconst_integer_type_cases(long), \ + __unconst_integer_type_cases(long long), \ + default: (x))) + +/* + * Do not check the array parameter using __must_be_array(). + * In the following legit use-case where the "array" passed is a simple pointer, + * __must_be_array() will return a failure. + * --- 8< --- + * int *buff + * ... + * min = min_array(buff, nb_items); + * --- 8< --- + * + * The first typeof(&(array)[0]) is needed in order to support arrays of both + * 'int *buff' and 'int buff[N]' types. + * + * The array can be an array of const items. + * typeof() keeps the const qualifier. Use __unconst_integer_typeof() in order + * to discard the const qualifier for the __element variable. + */ +#define __minmax_array(op, array, len) ({ \ + typeof(&(array)[0]) __array = (array); \ + typeof(len) __len = (len); \ + __unconst_integer_typeof(__array[0]) __element = __array[--__len]; \ + while (__len--) \ + __element = op(__element, __array[__len]); \ + __element; }) + +/** + * min_array - return minimum of values present in an array + * @array: array + * @len: array length + * + * Note that @len must not be zero (empty array). + */ +#define min_array(array, len) __minmax_array(min, array, len) + +/** + * max_array - return maximum of values present in an array + * @array: array + * @len: array length + * + * Note that @len must not be zero (empty array). + */ +#define max_array(array, len) __minmax_array(max, array, len) + /** * clamp_t - return a value clamped to a given range using a given type * @type: the type of variable to use |