On Mon, 10 Nov 2025 19:40:21 +0100, Andy Shevchenko wrote:
Use %ptSp instead of open coded variants to print content of struct timespec64 in human readable format.
Signed-off-by: Andy Shevchenko andriy.shevchenko@linux.intel.com
sound/core/seq/seq_queue.c | 2 +- sound/core/seq/seq_timer.c | 6 +++--- 2 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/sound/core/seq/seq_queue.c b/sound/core/seq/seq_queue.c index f5c0e401c8ae..f6e86cbf38bc 100644 --- a/sound/core/seq/seq_queue.c +++ b/sound/core/seq/seq_queue.c @@ -699,7 +699,7 @@ void snd_seq_info_queues_read(struct snd_info_entry *entry, snd_iprintf(buffer, "current tempo : %d\n", tmr->tempo); snd_iprintf(buffer, "tempo base : %d ns\n", tmr->tempo_base); snd_iprintf(buffer, "current BPM : %d\n", bpm);
snd_iprintf(buffer, "current time : %d.%09d s\n", tmr->cur_time.tv_sec, tmr->cur_time.tv_nsec);
snd_iprintf(buffer, "current tick : %d\n", tmr->tick.cur_tick); snd_iprintf(buffer, "\n"); }snd_iprintf(buffer, "current time : %ptSp s\n", &tmr->cur_time);
tmr->cur_time isn't struct timespec64, but it's struct tmr->snd_seq_real_time.
thanks,
Takashi