The only remaining users are issuing SIOCGMIIPHY and SIOCGMIIREG,
neither of which deals with userland pointers. Simply calling
->ndo_do_ioctl() is fine; no messing with set_fs() is needed.
It used to mess with SIOCETHTOOL, which would've needed set_fs(),
but that has been killed in "[NET] ethtool ops are the only way"
9 years ago...
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
/* Yes, the mii is overlaid on the ifreq.ifr_ifru */
strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, slave_dev->name, IFNAMSIZ);
mii = if_mii(&ifr);
- if (IOCTL(slave_dev, &ifr, SIOCGMIIPHY) == 0) {
+ if (ioctl(slave_dev, &ifr, SIOCGMIIPHY) == 0) {
mii->reg_num = MII_BMSR;
- if (IOCTL(slave_dev, &ifr, SIOCGMIIREG) == 0)
+ if (ioctl(slave_dev, &ifr, SIOCGMIIREG) == 0)
return mii->val_out & BMSR_LSTATUS;
}
}
#ifndef __long_aligned
#define __long_aligned __attribute__((aligned((sizeof(long)))))
#endif
-/*
- * Less bad way to call ioctl from within the kernel; this needs to be
- * done some other way to get the call out of interrupt context.
- * Needs "ioctl" variable to be supplied by calling context.
- */
-#define IOCTL(dev, arg, cmd) ({ \
- int res = 0; \
- mm_segment_t fs = get_fs(); \
- set_fs(get_ds()); \
- res = ioctl(dev, arg, cmd); \
- set_fs(fs); \
- res; })
#define BOND_MODE(bond) ((bond)->params.mode)