summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/drivers/net/arcnet/rfc1201.c
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/net/arcnet/rfc1201.c')
-rw-r--r--drivers/net/arcnet/rfc1201.c54
1 files changed, 26 insertions, 28 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/net/arcnet/rfc1201.c b/drivers/net/arcnet/rfc1201.c
index 47750173fd14..4ebfbcbe5de3 100644
--- a/drivers/net/arcnet/rfc1201.c
+++ b/drivers/net/arcnet/rfc1201.c
@@ -81,8 +81,7 @@ static void __exit arcnet_rfc1201_exit(void)
module_init(arcnet_rfc1201_init);
module_exit(arcnet_rfc1201_exit);
-/*
- * Determine a packet's protocol ID.
+/* Determine a packet's protocol ID.
*
* With ARCnet we have to convert everything to Ethernet-style stuff.
*/
@@ -193,10 +192,10 @@ static void rx(struct net_device *dev, int bufnum,
pkt->soft.raw + sizeof(pkt->soft),
length - sizeof(pkt->soft));
- /*
- * ARP packets have problems when sent from some DOS systems: the
- * source address is always 0! So we take the hardware source addr
- * (which is impossible to fumble) and insert it ourselves.
+ /* ARP packets have problems when sent from some DOS systems:
+ * the source address is always 0!
+ * So we take the hardware source addr (which is impossible
+ * to fumble) and insert it ourselves.
*/
if (soft->proto == ARC_P_ARP) {
struct arphdr *arp = (struct arphdr *)soft->payload;
@@ -227,21 +226,22 @@ static void rx(struct net_device *dev, int bufnum,
skb->protocol = type_trans(skb, dev);
netif_rx(skb);
} else { /* split packet */
- /*
- * NOTE: MSDOS ARP packet correction should only need to apply to
- * unsplit packets, since ARP packets are so short.
+ /* NOTE: MSDOS ARP packet correction should only need to
+ * apply to unsplit packets, since ARP packets are so short.
*
- * My interpretation of the RFC1201 document is that if a packet is
- * received out of order, the entire assembly process should be
- * aborted.
+ * My interpretation of the RFC1201 document is that if a
+ * packet is received out of order, the entire assembly
+ * process should be aborted.
*
- * The RFC also mentions "it is possible for successfully received
- * packets to be retransmitted." As of 0.40 all previously received
- * packets are allowed, not just the most recent one.
+ * The RFC also mentions "it is possible for successfully
+ * received packets to be retransmitted." As of 0.40 all
+ * previously received packets are allowed, not just the
+ * most recent one.
*
- * We allow multiple assembly processes, one for each ARCnet card
- * possible on the network. Seems rather like a waste of memory,
- * but there's no other way to be reliable.
+ * We allow multiple assembly processes, one for each
+ * ARCnet card possible on the network.
+ * Seems rather like a waste of memory, but there's no
+ * other way to be reliable.
*/
BUGMSG(D_RX, "packet is split (splitflag=%d, seq=%d)\n",
@@ -299,8 +299,7 @@ static void rx(struct net_device *dev, int bufnum,
} else { /* not first packet */
int packetnum = ((unsigned)soft->split_flag >> 1) + 1;
- /*
- * if we're not assembling, there's no point trying to
+ /* if we're not assembling, there's no point trying to
* continue.
*/
if (!in->skb) {
@@ -401,12 +400,11 @@ static int build_header(struct sk_buff *skb, struct net_device *dev,
return 0;
}
- /*
- * Set the source hardware address.
+ /* Set the source hardware address.
*
* This is pretty pointless for most purposes, but it can help in
- * debugging. ARCnet does not allow us to change the source address in
- * the actual packet sent)
+ * debugging. ARCnet does not allow us to change the source address
+ * in the actual packet sent.
*/
pkt->hard.source = *dev->dev_addr;
@@ -416,10 +414,10 @@ static int build_header(struct sk_buff *skb, struct net_device *dev,
/* see linux/net/ethernet/eth.c to see where I got the following */
if (dev->flags & (IFF_LOOPBACK | IFF_NOARP)) {
- /*
- * FIXME: fill in the last byte of the dest ipaddr here to better
- * comply with RFC1051 in "noarp" mode. For now, always broadcasting
- * will probably at least get packets sent out :)
+ /* FIXME: fill in the last byte of the dest ipaddr here
+ * to better comply with RFC1051 in "noarp" mode.
+ * For now, always broadcasting will probably at least get
+ * packets sent out :)
*/
pkt->hard.dest = 0;
return hdr_size;