|  | /* | 
|  | * Today's hack: quantum tunneling in structs | 
|  | * | 
|  | * 'entries' and 'term' are never anywhere referenced by word in code. In fact, | 
|  | * they serve as the hanging-off data accessed through repl.data[]. | 
|  | */ | 
|  |  | 
|  | #define xt_alloc_initial_table(type, typ2) ({ \ | 
|  | unsigned int hook_mask = info->valid_hooks; \ | 
|  | unsigned int nhooks = hweight32(hook_mask); \ | 
|  | unsigned int bytes = 0, hooknum = 0, i = 0; \ | 
|  | struct { \ | 
|  | struct type##_replace repl; \ | 
|  | struct type##_standard entries[nhooks]; \ | 
|  | struct type##_error term; \ | 
|  | } *tbl = kzalloc(sizeof(*tbl), GFP_KERNEL); \ | 
|  | if (tbl == NULL) \ | 
|  | return NULL; \ | 
|  | strncpy(tbl->repl.name, info->name, sizeof(tbl->repl.name)); \ | 
|  | tbl->term = (struct type##_error)typ2##_ERROR_INIT;  \ | 
|  | tbl->repl.valid_hooks = hook_mask; \ | 
|  | tbl->repl.num_entries = nhooks + 1; \ | 
|  | tbl->repl.size = nhooks * sizeof(struct type##_standard) + \ | 
|  | sizeof(struct type##_error); \ | 
|  | for (; hook_mask != 0; hook_mask >>= 1, ++hooknum) { \ | 
|  | if (!(hook_mask & 1)) \ | 
|  | continue; \ | 
|  | tbl->repl.hook_entry[hooknum] = bytes; \ | 
|  | tbl->repl.underflow[hooknum]  = bytes; \ | 
|  | tbl->entries[i++] = (struct type##_standard) \ | 
|  | typ2##_STANDARD_INIT(NF_ACCEPT); \ | 
|  | bytes += sizeof(struct type##_standard); \ | 
|  | } \ | 
|  | tbl; \ | 
|  | }) |