set_bit and test_bit provide an efficient way to set and test bits of an unsigned long.
This also fixes the problem that a very old ogm got not recorded as received due to the missing constant definition "1" as unsigned long inside the bit_mark operation - also known as "1UL".
Reported-by: David Miller davem@davemloft.net Signed-off-by: Sven Eckelmann sven@narfation.org --- batman-adv/bitarray.c | 4 ++-- 1 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/batman-adv/bitarray.c b/batman-adv/bitarray.c index 814274f..5dad5e8 100644 --- a/batman-adv/bitarray.c +++ b/batman-adv/bitarray.c @@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ uint8_t get_bit_status(TYPE_OF_WORD *seq_bits, uint32_t last_seqno, /* which position in the selected word */ word_offset = (last_seqno - curr_seqno) % WORD_BIT_SIZE;
- if (seq_bits[word_num] & 1 << word_offset) + if (test_bit(word_offset, &seq_bits[word_num])) return 1; else return 0; @@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ void bit_mark(TYPE_OF_WORD *seq_bits, int32_t n) /* which position in the selected word */ word_offset = n % WORD_BIT_SIZE;
- seq_bits[word_num] |= 1 << word_offset; /* turn the position on */ + set_bit(word_offset, &seq_bits[word_num]); /* turn the position on */ }
/* shift the packet array by n places. */