[PATCH 2/4] arch/arm/mach-at91/clock.c: Add missing IS_ERR test
Julia Lawall
julia at diku.dk
Tue Jan 25 06:18:40 EST 2011
On Tue, 25 Jan 2011, walter harms wrote:
>
>
> Am 25.01.2011 11:43, schrieb Russell King - ARM Linux:
> > On Tue, Jan 25, 2011 at 11:33:16AM +0100, walter harms wrote:
> >> Would it be more easy to return NULL in the error case of clk_get() instead
> >> of ERR_PTR(-ENOENT) ?
> >>
> >> So the default could be return NULL and an architecture depending solution
> >> replacing that.
> >
> > That's not how the API is defined. The API defines error-pointers to be
> > errors, everything should be considered valid. Please don't go down the
> > route of doing something architecturally different from that.
> >
> > What if, say, you couldn't return the struct clk because maybe it could
> > only be controlled by one user? Returning an EBUSY error pointer would
> > indicate this condition. What if the module providing the struct clk
> > hasn't finished initializing - that's another reason for EBUSY rather
> > than ENOENT.
> >
> > Error codes are useful to describe why something failed. NULL pointers
> > can't do that.
> >
>
> On Mon, 24 Jan 2011, Vasiliy Kulikov wrote:
> >
> ...
> > clk_get() is defined per-architecture, sometimes it is NULL only.
> >
>
> So these is a bug ? They should return -ENOENT ?
>
> The interessting question is: what to do with an error ?
>
> Obviously some architecture can live with NULL, so it is not an critical
> error. An the patch shows a code that is simply a return, not even the
> user is informed that something did not work as expected.
>
> From that point of view i would like question if it is useful to have
> a "detailed" error instead of just returning NULL.
Somewhat unrelatedly, I often run into code where error handling code is
needed, but not present, and the function returns void, so nothing is
provided for propagating the error further. I generally consider these
cases to be beyond my expertise to fix...
julia
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