On Mon, 2025-11-10 at 19:40 +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
net/ceph/messenger_v2.c | 6 ++---- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/net/ceph/messenger_v2.c b/net/ceph/messenger_v2.c index 9e39378eda00..6e676e2d4ba0 100644 --- a/net/ceph/messenger_v2.c +++ b/net/ceph/messenger_v2.c @@ -1535,8 +1535,7 @@ static int prepare_keepalive2(struct ceph_connection *con) struct timespec64 now; ktime_get_real_ts64(&now);
- dout("%s con %p timestamp %lld.%09ld\n", __func__, con, now.tv_sec,
now.tv_nsec);
- dout("%s con %p timestamp %ptSp\n", __func__, con, &now);
ceph_encode_timespec64(ts, &now); @@ -2729,8 +2728,7 @@ static int process_keepalive2_ack(struct ceph_connection *con, ceph_decode_need(&p, end, sizeof(struct ceph_timespec), bad); ceph_decode_timespec64(&con->last_keepalive_ack, p);
- dout("%s con %p timestamp %lld.%09ld\n", __func__, con,
con->last_keepalive_ack.tv_sec, con->last_keepalive_ack.tv_nsec);
- dout("%s con %p timestamp %ptSp\n", __func__, con, &con->last_keepalive_ack);
return 0;
Looks good. Nice cleanup.
Reviewed-by: Viacheslav Dubeyko Slava.Dubeyko@ibm.com
Thanks, Slava.