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Joel Becker authored
A caller knows what kind of extent tree they have. There's no reason they have to call ocfs2_get_extent_tree() with a NULL when they could just as easily call a specific function to their type of extent tree. Introduce ocfs2_dinode_get_extent_tree(), ocfs2_xattr_tree_get_extent_tree(), and ocfs2_xattr_value_get_extent_tree(). They only take the necessary arguments, calling into the underlying __ocfs2_get_extent_tree() to do the real work. __ocfs2_get_extent_tree() is the old ocfs2_get_extent_tree(), but without needing any switch-by-type logic. ocfs2_get_extent_tree() is now a wrapper around the specific calls. It exists because a couple alloc.c functions can take et_type. This will go later. Another benefit is that ocfs2_xattr_value_get_extent_tree() can take a struct ocfs2_xattr_value_root* instead of void*. This gives us typechecking where we didn't have it before. Signed-off-by: Joel Becker <joel.becker@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Mark Fasheh <mfasheh@suse.com>
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