Instead of checking the value in include/net/ip_vs.h, we can just
restrict the range in our Kconfig file. This will prevent values outside
of the range early.
Signed-off-by: Sven Wegener <sven.wegener@stealer.net>
Reviewed-by: Julius Volz <juliusv@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <horms@verge.net.au>
#ifndef CONFIG_IP_VS_TAB_BITS
#define CONFIG_IP_VS_TAB_BITS 12
#endif
-/* make sure that IP_VS_CONN_TAB_BITS is located in [8, 20] */
-#if CONFIG_IP_VS_TAB_BITS < 8
-#define IP_VS_CONN_TAB_BITS 8
-#endif
-#if CONFIG_IP_VS_TAB_BITS > 20
-#define IP_VS_CONN_TAB_BITS 20
-#endif
-#if 8 <= CONFIG_IP_VS_TAB_BITS && CONFIG_IP_VS_TAB_BITS <= 20
+
#define IP_VS_CONN_TAB_BITS CONFIG_IP_VS_TAB_BITS
-#endif
#define IP_VS_CONN_TAB_SIZE (1 << IP_VS_CONN_TAB_BITS)
#define IP_VS_CONN_TAB_MASK (IP_VS_CONN_TAB_SIZE - 1)
config IP_VS_TAB_BITS
int "IPVS connection table size (the Nth power of 2)"
- default "12"
+ range 8 20
+ default 12
---help---
The IPVS connection hash table uses the chaining scheme to handle
hash collisions. Using a big IPVS connection hash table will greatly