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Commit c1feab95 authored by Al Viro's avatar Al Viro
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add a string-to-qstr constructor



Quite a few places want to build a struct qstr by given string;
it would be convenient to have a primitive doing that, rather
than open-coding it via QSTR_INIT().

The closest approximation was in bcachefs, but that expands to
initializer list - {.len = strlen(string), .name = string}.
It would be more useful to have it as compound literal -
(struct qstr){.len = strlen(string), .name = string}.

Unlike initializer list it's a valid expression.  What's more,
it's a valid lvalue - it's an equivalent of anonymous local
variable with such initializer, so the things like
	path->dentry = d_alloc_pseudo(mnt->mnt_sb, &QSTR(name));
are valid.  It can also be used as initializer, with identical
effect -
	struct qstr x = (struct qstr){.name = s, .len = strlen(s)};
is equivalent to
	struct qstr anon_variable = {.name = s, .len = strlen(s)};
	struct qstr x = anon_variable;
	// anon_variable is never used after that point
and any even remotely sane compiler will manage to collapse that
into
	struct qstr x = {.name = s, .len = strlen(s)};

What compound literals can't be used for is initialization of
global variables, but those are covered by QSTR_INIT().

This commit lifts definition(s) of QSTR() into linux/dcache.h,
converts it to compound literal (all bcachefs users are fine
with that) and converts assorted open-coded instances to using
that.

Signed-off-by: default avatarAl Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
parent 5f4e6f7f
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