Driver core: reduce duplicated code for platform_device creation

This makes the two similar functions platform_device_register_simple
and platform_device_register_data one line inline functions using a new
generic function platform_device_register_resndata.

Signed-off-by: Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig@pengutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
This commit is contained in:
Uwe Kleine-König 2010-06-21 16:11:44 +02:00 committed by Greg Kroah-Hartman
parent 3e61dfd850
commit 44f28bdea0
3 changed files with 85 additions and 82 deletions

View file

@ -43,10 +43,64 @@ extern struct resource *platform_get_resource_byname(struct platform_device *, u
extern int platform_get_irq_byname(struct platform_device *, const char *);
extern int platform_add_devices(struct platform_device **, int);
extern struct platform_device *platform_device_register_simple(const char *, int id,
const struct resource *, unsigned int);
extern struct platform_device *platform_device_register_data(struct device *,
const char *, int, const void *, size_t);
extern struct platform_device *platform_device_register_resndata(
struct device *parent, const char *name, int id,
const struct resource *res, unsigned int num,
const void *data, size_t size);
/**
* platform_device_register_simple - add a platform-level device and its resources
* @name: base name of the device we're adding
* @id: instance id
* @res: set of resources that needs to be allocated for the device
* @num: number of resources
*
* This function creates a simple platform device that requires minimal
* resource and memory management. Canned release function freeing memory
* allocated for the device allows drivers using such devices to be
* unloaded without waiting for the last reference to the device to be
* dropped.
*
* This interface is primarily intended for use with legacy drivers which
* probe hardware directly. Because such drivers create sysfs device nodes
* themselves, rather than letting system infrastructure handle such device
* enumeration tasks, they don't fully conform to the Linux driver model.
* In particular, when such drivers are built as modules, they can't be
* "hotplugged".
*
* Returns &struct platform_device pointer on success, or ERR_PTR() on error.
*/
static inline struct platform_device *platform_device_register_simple(
const char *name, int id,
const struct resource *res, unsigned int num)
{
return platform_device_register_resndata(NULL, name, id,
res, num, NULL, 0);
}
/**
* platform_device_register_data - add a platform-level device with platform-specific data
* @parent: parent device for the device we're adding
* @name: base name of the device we're adding
* @id: instance id
* @data: platform specific data for this platform device
* @size: size of platform specific data
*
* This function creates a simple platform device that requires minimal
* resource and memory management. Canned release function freeing memory
* allocated for the device allows drivers using such devices to be
* unloaded without waiting for the last reference to the device to be
* dropped.
*
* Returns &struct platform_device pointer on success, or ERR_PTR() on error.
*/
static inline struct platform_device *platform_device_register_data(
struct device *parent, const char *name, int id,
const void *data, size_t size)
{
return platform_device_register_resndata(parent, name, id,
NULL, 0, data, size);
}
extern struct platform_device *platform_device_alloc(const char *name, int id);
extern int platform_device_add_resources(struct platform_device *pdev,