2 * Today's hack: quantum tunneling in structs
4 * 'entries' and 'term' are never anywhere referenced by word in code. In fact,
5 * they serve as the hanging-off data accessed through repl.data[].
8 /* tbl has the following structure equivalent, but is C99 compliant:
10 * struct type##_replace repl;
11 * struct type##_standard entries[nhooks];
12 * struct type##_error term;
16 #define xt_alloc_initial_table(type, typ2) ({ \
17 unsigned int hook_mask = info->valid_hooks; \
18 unsigned int nhooks = hweight32(hook_mask); \
19 unsigned int bytes = 0, hooknum = 0, i = 0; \
21 struct type##_replace repl; \
22 struct type##_standard entries[]; \
24 struct type##_error *term; \
25 size_t term_offset = (offsetof(typeof(*tbl), entries[nhooks]) + \
26 __alignof__(*term) - 1) & ~(__alignof__(*term) - 1); \
27 tbl = kzalloc(term_offset + sizeof(*term), GFP_KERNEL); \
30 term = (struct type##_error *)&(((char *)tbl)[term_offset]); \
31 strncpy(tbl->repl.name, info->name, sizeof(tbl->repl.name)); \
32 *term = (struct type##_error)typ2##_ERROR_INIT; \
33 tbl->repl.valid_hooks = hook_mask; \
34 tbl->repl.num_entries = nhooks + 1; \
35 tbl->repl.size = nhooks * sizeof(struct type##_standard) + \
36 sizeof(struct type##_error); \
37 for (; hook_mask != 0; hook_mask >>= 1, ++hooknum) { \
38 if (!(hook_mask & 1)) \
40 tbl->repl.hook_entry[hooknum] = bytes; \
41 tbl->repl.underflow[hooknum] = bytes; \
42 tbl->entries[i++] = (struct type##_standard) \
43 typ2##_STANDARD_INIT(NF_ACCEPT); \
44 bytes += sizeof(struct type##_standard); \