[PATCH 01/18] led-triggers: create a trigger for CPU activity

Bryan Wu bryan.wu at canonical.com
Mon Apr 30 01:14:26 EDT 2012


On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 7:07 AM, Richard Purdie
<richard.purdie at linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
> On Tue, 2012-04-17 at 15:52 -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
>> On Tue, 17 Apr 2012 18:53:28 +0800
>> Bryan Wu <bryan.wu at canonical.com> wrote:
>> > +    * ignores CPU hotplug, but after this CPU hotplug works
>> > +    * fine with this trigger.
>> > +    */
>> > +   for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) {
>> > +           struct led_trigger *trig;
>> > +           char *name = per_cpu(trig_name, cpu);
>> > +           struct rw_semaphore *lock = &per_cpu(trig_lock, cpu);
>> > +
>> > +           init_rwsem(lock);
>> > +
>> > +           snprintf(name, MAX_NAME_LEN, "cpu%d", cpu);
>> > +
>> > +           down_write(lock);
>> > +           led_trigger_register_simple(name, &trig);
>>
>> OK, problem.
>>
>> led_trigger_register_simple() calls kzalloc() and
>> led_trigger_register(), both of which can fail.
>> led_trigger_register_simple() just returns void, failing to propagate
>> the error back.  This is bad, and we (ie you ;)) should fix
>> led_trigger_register_simple() before proceeding to use it.  If at all
>> possible.  Please.  Let us not propagate the badness further.  Sorry.
>
> FWIW, this was really the way led_trigger_register_simple() was designed
> to work. It's original use was adding a trigger into other subsystems
> which didn't want a ton of LED code so it had the simple form:
>
> xxx = led_trigger_register_simple(name, &trig);
>

Richard, currently the led_trigger_register_simple() just return void,
so xxx here is wrong.

> where xxx could then be unregistered later equally simply and safely in
> one line. It didn't seem to make sense to pass the error around as it
> didn't really matter to the code it was being used in.
>
> I guess we could return an error pointer and check for that at
> unregister time in led_trigger_unregister_simple().
>

I also agree we don't need take care of failure in the caller as
led_trigger_register_simple() will take care of that.

>>
>> > +           char *name = per_cpu(trig_name, cpu);
>> > +
>> > +           led_trigger_unregister_simple(trig);
>>
>> And what happens if led_trigger_register_simple() had silently failed
>> to register this trigger?  afacit, nothing: your code handles the
>> trig==NULL case OK.  Still, we should be checking for those failures!
>
> FWIW, led_trigger_unregister_simple() will deal with NULL safely.
>

I will update my patches according to Andrew's comments shortly.

Thanks,
-- 
Bryan Wu <bryan.wu at canonical.com>
Kernel Developer    +86.186-168-78255 Mobile
Canonical Ltd.      www.canonical.com
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