[PATCH] nvme: apple: remove some dead code

Dan Carpenter dan.carpenter at linaro.org
Fri Jul 12 08:12:38 PDT 2024


On Fri, Jul 12, 2024 at 03:29:21PM +0100, Eric Curtin wrote:
> On Fri, 12 Jul 2024 at 15:13, Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter at linaro.org> wrote:
> >
> > platform_get_irq() never returns zero so we can remove his dead code.
> > Checking for zero is a historical artifact from over ten years ago.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter at linaro.org>
> 
> There's quite a few return paths in platform_get_irq_optional, are we
> sure it can never be zero?
> 
> Not calling out a specific case here, but it's not so clear to me how
> we can guarantee platform_get_irq() is never zero,
> 

The platform_get_irq() function has a comment which describes how the
error handling should work.

I wrote a blog about this:
https://staticthinking.wordpress.com/2023/08/07/writing-a-check-for-zero-irq-error-codes/

TLDR; platform_get_irq() used to return zero on error but it changed
in 2006.  I believe someone told me the historical situation was
actually worse than I described where the error return wasn't always
zero but depended on the arch so sometimes it was -1...  Then after 2006
zero was success for a while because there was some hardware where zero
was a valid IRQ.  But now zero is not a valid IRQ.  I think Linus has
said that zero is a stupid IRQ number and support for that hardware was
removed.  So now it never returns zero and never will again.

There are still some xxxxxxx_get_irq() which return zero on error, and
those cause quite a bit of mixups.  Last year there was even one which
had a comment similar to platform_get_irq() that said to check for
negatives but it returned zero on failure sometimes.  :P

regards,
dan carpenter




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