From: Lars Möllendorf lars.moellendorf@plating.de
commit 883f616530692d81cb70f8a32d85c0d2afc05f69 upstream.
Previous versions of `iio_compute_scan_bytes` only aligned each element to its own length (i.e. its own natural alignment). Because multiple consecutive sets of scan elements are buffered this does not work in case the computed scan bytes do not align with the natural alignment of the first scan element in the set.
This commit fixes this by aligning the scan bytes to the natural alignment of the largest scan element in the set.
Fixes: 959d2952d124 ("staging:iio: make iio_sw_buffer_preenable much more general.") Signed-off-by: Lars Möllendorf lars.moellendorf@plating.de Reviewed-by: Lars-Peter Clausen lars@metafoo.de Cc: Stable@vger.kernel.org Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron Jonathan.Cameron@huawei.com Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman gregkh@linuxfoundation.org
--- drivers/iio/industrialio-buffer.c | 6 +++++- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
--- a/drivers/iio/industrialio-buffer.c +++ b/drivers/iio/industrialio-buffer.c @@ -566,7 +566,7 @@ static int iio_compute_scan_bytes(struct const unsigned long *mask, bool timestamp) { unsigned bytes = 0; - int length, i; + int length, i, largest = 0;
/* How much space will the demuxed element take? */ for_each_set_bit(i, mask, @@ -574,13 +574,17 @@ static int iio_compute_scan_bytes(struct length = iio_storage_bytes_for_si(indio_dev, i); bytes = ALIGN(bytes, length); bytes += length; + largest = max(largest, length); }
if (timestamp) { length = iio_storage_bytes_for_timestamp(indio_dev); bytes = ALIGN(bytes, length); bytes += length; + largest = max(largest, length); } + + bytes = ALIGN(bytes, largest); return bytes; }