When I was browsing the Linux code I encountered the following snippet :
static void __init do_initcalls(void)
{
initcall_t *fn;
for (fn = __early_initcall_end; fn < __initcall_end; fn++)
do_one_initcall(*fn);
}
initcall_t
is a function pointer .
The prototype of do_initcalls
is int do_one_initcall(initcall_t fn)
.
So I thought invoking do_initcalls
would be like do_one_initcall(fn)
but I see it is do_one_initcall(*fn)
. Why is that *fn
instead of only fn
??
do_one_initcall
requires an argument ofinitcall_t
type. Yet you somehow expect to pass ainitcall_t *
argument to it. Why? If it expects ainitcall_t
, you have to pass aninitcall_t
. That's all. There's no way to answer your question without understanding what strange logic made you ask it. Why would yo want to pass ainitcall_t *
to a function that expects ainitcall_t
?