Staging: et131x: Clean up the receive arrays

We don't use them for anything having stripped out the debug gunge in
the original driver.

Signed-off-by: Alan Cox <alan@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
This commit is contained in:
Alan Cox 2009-10-06 15:49:04 +01:00 committed by Greg Kroah-Hartman
parent 4fbdf811bc
commit 7f59b1bfa3

View file

@ -1076,10 +1076,7 @@ void et131x_reset_recv(struct et131x_adapter *etdev)
void et131x_handle_recv_interrupt(struct et131x_adapter *etdev)
{
PMP_RFD rfd = NULL;
struct sk_buff *packets[NUM_PACKETS_HANDLED];
PMP_RFD freed[NUM_PACKETS_HANDLED];
u32 count = 0;
u32 nfree = 0;
bool done = true;
/* Process up to available RFD's */
@ -1110,24 +1107,10 @@ void et131x_handle_recv_interrupt(struct et131x_adapter *etdev)
etdev->Stats.ipackets++;
/* Set the status on the packet, either resources or success */
if (etdev->RxRing.nReadyRecv >= RFD_LOW_WATER_MARK) {
/* Put this RFD on the pending list
*
* NOTE: nic_rx_pkts() above is already returning the
* RFD to the RecvList, so don't additionally do that
* here.
* Besides, we don't really need (at this point) the
* pending list anyway.
*/
} else {
freed[nfree] = rfd;
nfree++;
if (etdev->RxRing.nReadyRecv < RFD_LOW_WATER_MARK) {
dev_warn(&etdev->pdev->dev,
"RFD's are running out\n");
}
packets[count] = rfd->Packet;
count++;
}