Since commit
d1c3a37ceeb1a5ea02991a0476355f1a1d3b3e83 ("mac80211:
clarify alignment docs, fix up alignment") removed the requirement
for a 4-byte aligned payload rt2x00queue_align_payload is obsolete
as mac80211 will align the payload when it passes the frame to the
net stack.
As a result we can remove the call to rt2x00queue_align_payload in the
rx path and since that's the last user we can remove
rt2x00queue_align_payload altogether.
One advantage is that we save some alignment operations for frames
that don't need to be aligned (for example beause they are not passed
to the net stack).
Signed-off-by: Helmut Schaa <helmut.schaa@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ivo van Doorn <IvDoorn@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
(rxdesc.size > header_length) &&
(rxdesc.dev_flags & RXDONE_L2PAD))
rt2x00queue_remove_l2pad(entry->skb, header_length);
- else
- rt2x00queue_align_payload(entry->skb, header_length);
/* Trim buffer to correct size */
skb_trim(entry->skb, rxdesc.size);
void rt2x00queue_align_frame(struct sk_buff *skb);
/**
- * rt2x00queue_align_payload - Align 802.11 payload to 4-byte boundary
- * @skb: The skb to align
- * @header_length: Length of 802.11 header
- *
- * Align the 802.11 payload to a 4-byte boundary, this could
- * mean the header is not aligned properly though.
- */
-void rt2x00queue_align_payload(struct sk_buff *skb, unsigned int header_length);
-
-/**
* rt2x00queue_insert_l2pad - Align 802.11 header & payload to 4-byte boundary
* @skb: The skb to align
* @header_length: Length of 802.11 header
skb_trim(skb, frame_length);
}
-void rt2x00queue_align_payload(struct sk_buff *skb, unsigned int header_length)
-{
- unsigned int frame_length = skb->len;
- unsigned int align = ALIGN_SIZE(skb, header_length);
-
- if (!align)
- return;
-
- skb_push(skb, align);
- memmove(skb->data, skb->data + align, frame_length);
- skb_trim(skb, frame_length);
-}
-
void rt2x00queue_insert_l2pad(struct sk_buff *skb, unsigned int header_length)
{
unsigned int payload_length = skb->len - header_length;