The involved values are all unsigned and thus unsigned int should be
used instead of signed int. Assigning ~0 to a signed int results in -1,
which is confusing and error-prone, while the code is trying to set the
maximum value possible.
The code still works because the C standard defines that unsigned
comparison will be performed in these cases, when comparing an unsigned
int and a signed int.
Signed-off-by: Mikel Astiz <mikel.astiz.oss@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
Signed-off-by: Gustavo Padovan <gustavo@padovan.org>
{
struct hci_conn_hash *h = &hdev->conn_hash;
struct hci_conn *conn = NULL, *c;
- int num = 0, min = ~0;
+ unsigned int num = 0, min = ~0;
/* We don't have to lock device here. Connections are always
* added and removed with TX task disabled. */
{
struct hci_conn_hash *h = &hdev->conn_hash;
struct hci_chan *chan = NULL;
- int num = 0, min = ~0, cur_prio = 0;
+ unsigned int num = 0, min = ~0, cur_prio = 0;
struct hci_conn *conn;
int cnt, q, conn_num = 0;